
After My Husband Took Our Son to His Mistress
Chapter 5
The client's voice rose to a shrill pitch as she jabbed a manicured finger at the hem of the gown I'd spent hours altering.
"This is unacceptable! I can't wear this to the gala next week!"
I bit my tongue, forcing myself to remain calm. "Mrs. Dubois, I've made the adjustments exactly as you requested—"
"As I requested?" She laughed sharply. "I asked for subtle changes, not for you to ruin my designer dress!"
Elena had stepped out to meet with a fabric supplier, leaving me alone with this woman who seemed determined to find fault with everything I did. The other seamstresses avoided eye contact, their needles moving rapidly as they pretended not to listen.
"Perhaps if you'd explained more clearly what you wanted," I began, but she cut me off.
"Are you blaming me?" Her eyes narrowed dangerously.
Before I could respond, a deep voice intervened from the doorway.
"Is there a problem here?"
I turned to see a tall man with dark hair and kind eyes standing in the doorway. He wore a simple but elegant suit that spoke of understated confidence rather than ostentatious wealth.
"Lucian," Mrs. Dubois's tone immediately softened. "I'm just having a little... disagreement with your new employee."
Lucian Harvey—I recognized him from fashion magazines—stepped forward with an easy smile. "Mrs. Dubois, perhaps I could take a look?"
As he moved past me, his gaze caught on something. "What's that?"
I followed his eyes to my sketch pad, which was partially visible from the pocket of my apron. I'd been sketching designs during lunch breaks, something I'd never shown anyone.
"Nothing," I said quickly. "Just some doodles."
"May I?" he asked, his voice gentle but persistent.
Reluctantly, I pulled out the pad and handed it to him. He studied the first page—a design inspired by the copper silk I'd seen in the fabric district—with genuine interest.
"Remarkable," he murmured, then flipped to the next page. "And this one..."
Unlike Damon, who had never once looked at my designs with anything other than polite disinterest, Lucian studied each sketch with intense focus, as if seeing something precious.
"Why are you hiding this talent in the back room?" he asked finally, looking up at me with genuine confusion.
* * *
The rain fell in sheets outside my apartment window, drumming against the cobblestones below. I'd spent the afternoon at the atelier, still floating on Lucian's words and the opportunity he'd offered me to showcase some designs at the upcoming exhibition.
As I turned the corner toward my building, I saw him.
Damon stood beside a black sedan, his expensive suit darkened by rain. He hadn't bothered with an umbrella—something the old Angelina would have rushed to correct.
"Angelina," he called, his voice carrying despite the rain.
I stopped, my arms tightening around the grocery bags I'd been carrying. For a moment, I simply stared at him, this man who had been my husband for seven years but who suddenly seemed like a stranger.
"Get in the car," he said, stepping forward. "We're going home."
I noticed the way his eyes took in my appearance—the simple trench coat I'd altered myself, the absence of designer labels, the fact that I looked nothing like the polished trophy wife he'd created.
"I'm not going anywhere," I replied, my voice steady despite the sudden pounding of my heart.
"Don't be ridiculous." His tone hardened. "This little tantrum has gone on long enough."
"It wasn't a tantrum, Damon." I met his gaze directly. "I didn't run away. I left. There is a difference."
His expression flickered—surprise, perhaps, at this new version of me who didn't bend to his will.
* * *
"Shiloh is sick," he said abruptly, changing tactics. "He needs his mother."
The words hit me like a physical blow. My son—my baby—sick and wanting me.
"He's been asking for you," Damon continued, watching my face carefully. "You should hear him crying at night."
Tears welled in my eyes as I imagined Shiloh's small face, flushed with fever. But then I remembered his words at the parent-teacher day: "I wish Dad would take Auntie Marlowe instead of you."
I reached into my bag and pulled out the vintage robot toy, its metal surface cool against my palm.
"Give him this," I said, holding it out to Damon. "And tell him I love him enough to fix myself so I can be the mother he deserves, not the one you all made me."
Damon stared at the toy, confusion crossing his features.
"What are you talking about?"
I stepped past him toward my building's entrance. "Goodbye, Damon."
As I unlocked the door and stepped inside, I heard him call after me. But for the first time in seven years, his voice no longer held power over me.
I closed the door and turned the lock, the sound echoing with finality.
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