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After My Husband’s Mistress Painted Me the Villain Novel Cover

After My Husband’s Mistress Painted Me the Villain

The blue light of the smartphone screen was the only thing alive in the living room. It cast a corpse-like pallor over my hands, trembling slightly as my thumb flicked upward, scrolling through the autopsy of my career. *“Jessica Barnes has the emotional range of a damp sponge.”* *“Watching her try to cry is physically painful. Can we cancel her already?”* *“She’s just a pretty vase. Empty. Useless.”* Each comment was a needle, finding the exact nerves that had been exposed since the sixth grade. The air in the room grew heavy, turning into a solid weight against my chest. I wasn't just reading text; I was hearing them—a cacophony of sneers that sounded suspiciously like the girls who used to lock me in the gym locker. My breath hitched, a jagged, shallow gasp that wouldn't fill my lungs. I dropped the phone on the sofa and bolted for the kitchen.
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Chapter 1

The blue light of the smartphone screen was the only thing alive in the living room. It cast a corpse-like pallor over my hands, trembling slightly as my thumb flicked upward, scrolling through the autopsy of my career.

*“Jessica Barnes has the emotional range of a damp sponge.”*

*“Watching her try to cry is physically painful. Can we cancel her already?”*

*“She’s just a pretty vase. Empty. Useless.”*

Each comment was a needle, finding the exact nerves that had been exposed since the sixth grade. The air in the room grew heavy, turning into a solid weight against my chest. I wasn't just reading text; I was hearing them—a cacophony of sneers that sounded suspiciously like the girls who used to lock me in the gym locker. My breath hitched, a jagged, shallow gasp that wouldn't fill my lungs.

I dropped the phone on the sofa and bolted for the kitchen.

I needed friction. I needed to erase something. I grabbed the rough side of the sponge and the bleach spray, attacking a microscopic stain of coffee on the granite island. *Scrub. Scrub. Scrub.* The chemical sting hit my nostrils, burning the panic out of my sinuses. My knuckles turned white, the skin on my hands raw and red under the assault, but I didn't stop until the granite felt hot to the touch. It was the only way to quiet the noise—to make the outside world clean and orderly, even if the inside was a chaotic mess of inadequacy.

When my heart rate finally slowed to a dull thud, a thought crystallized in the silence. I couldn't fix the internet, but I could fix the work. I just needed the right words.

I washed the bleach from my hands, drying them on a towel until the skin felt tight, and walked toward the heavy oak door at the end of the hall. Warren’s office.

I hesitated, my fingers twisting the gold band on my ring finger—a nervous tic that had carved a callous into my skin over the last three years. The door was usually locked, a boundary I respected with religious fervor, but tonight desperation made me bold. I turned the handle. It gave way.

The room smelled of aged paper, expensive whiskey, and the sharp, metallic scent of ink. Warren sat behind his mahogany desk, bathed in the warm glow of a banker’s lamp. He didn't look up. The scratching of his vintage fountain pen against paper was rhythmic, aggressive, like a metronome counting down my time.

"Warren?" My voice was thin, barely scratching the air.

The pen didn't stop. "I'm working, Jessica."

"I know. I'm sorry." I stepped fully into the room, hugging my arms around my waist. "I just... have you seen the reviews? For the show?"

"I don't read tabloids," he said, his tone flat. He dipped the pen into the inkwell, a precise, practiced motion.

"They're tearing me apart," I whispered. "They say I'm stiff. That I can't emote. I was thinking... if I had better material. Something real." I took a breath, the request lodging in my throat like a stone. "Could you write me a scene? Just a monologue. Something small to put on my reel. To show them I can act."

The scratching stopped. The silence that followed was louder than the shouting online.

Warren finally looked up. His eyes, usually a warm hazel, were cold, reflecting the lamplight like polished stones. He set the pen down with deliberate care.

"Jessica," he said, the way a parent addresses a slow child. "We discussed this. I am retired. The industry is a slaughterhouse, and I hung up my apron years ago."

"I know, but—"

"But nothing." He leaned back, steepled his fingers, and sighed. "And let's be honest with each other, shall we? A new script won't fix the problem. You can't write depth into a puddle. You’re a commercial actress, darling. You have a look. Stick to it. Don't torture yourself trying to be Streep."

The words were spoken so calmly, so rationally, that it took a moment for the cruelty to register. He wasn't just refusing; he was confirming every nasty comment I’d read downstairs.

"I see," I managed, my voice trembling. "I'm sorry to disturb you."

I backed out, closing the door on his sanctuary. He had already picked up his pen before the latch clicked.

Back in the living room, I sank onto the sofa, defeated. My phone buzzed. Not a text, but a notification from a friend: *"Jess, don't freak out. But you need to see this."*

It was a link to a TikTok video. The caption read: **THE GHOST WRITER REVEALED. #WintersEnd #Scandal**

I pressed play. A frantic, high-energy narrator was comparing handwriting samples on a green screen.

*"Okay, film geeks, look at this,"* the voice said. *"This is a leaked love letter from 2018 signed by 'W.' And this is the original handwritten manuscript for the masterpiece 'Winter's End.' Look at the distinct loop on the 'y' and the cross on the 't'. It’s a match. The genius who wrote Marina Boyd’s Oscar-winning role isn't a ghost. It’s Warren West."*

My blood ran cold. Warren? My Warren? He told me he wrote procedural dramas before he retired.

The video cut to a grainy, shaky clip. It was dated five years ago. Snow was falling on a film set—the set of *Winter's End*. A man in a thick coat was kneeling in the slush. Warren.

He was holding a ring box up to a woman wrapped in a white fur coat. Marina Boyd. The audio was muffled by the wind, but the body language was screaming. She was laughing, wiping tears, nodding.

The narrator’s voice returned. *"He proposed on wrap day. And guess what? The day Marina announced she was leaving Hollywood to 'find herself' is the exact same day Warren West announced his retirement. Coincidence? I think not."*

The phone slipped from my numb fingers, landing face up on the rug. On the screen, the loop played over and over. Warren kneeling in the snow. Warren looking at Marina with a hunger I had never, not once, seen directed at me.

He hadn't retired because he was tired of the industry. He had retired because his muse had left the stage. I wasn't his wife. I was the intermission.

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