
After My Husband’s Mistress Painted Me the Villain
Chapter 2
The internet didn’t just whisper; it screamed. My phone, still lying on the rug where I’d dropped it, lit up with a notification that felt like a summons from the executioner.
*@MarinaBoydOfficial: The intermission is over. Hello, Hollywood. I’m coming home.*
The photo was a black-and-white close-up of her eye—perfectly made up, staring straight through the lens with the kind of predatory confidence that swallowed lesser stars whole. The timestamp was three minutes ago.
The coincidence was a physical blow to my stomach. Warren’s identity leaked. Marina’s return announced. The timeline of their past mapped onto the wreckage of my present. I wasn’t just paranoid; I was the punchline.
I marched back to the office door. I didn’t knock this time. I twisted the handle and shoved.
Warren was pacing, his phone pressed to his ear. He froze when I entered, his eyes widening not in guilt, but in annoyance. He tapped the screen to end the call without saying goodbye.
"I’m working, Jessica."
"You're lying," I said. My voice was steadier than my hands, which were clenched into fists at my sides to stop the trembling. "I saw the video, Warren. The snow. The ring. *Winter’s End*."
He sighed, a long, weary exhalation that smelled of scotch. "The internet is a sewer. You know that better than anyone."
"Did you propose to her?" The question hung in the air, sharp and jagged. "Did you retire the day she left?"
He walked over to the window, staring out at the dark driveway. His silhouette was rigid. "It was a lifetime ago. Before us. Before I put a ring on *your* finger."
"It was five years ago," I countered, stepping closer. The scent of old paper and ink usually comforted me; now it smelled like deception. "We’ve been married for three. Was I just the consolation prize? The safe bet because the muse walked away?"
He spun around, his face hardening. "You are being hysterical. This is exactly why I don't discuss my past with you. You don't have the stomach for the complexities of this industry."
"I am your wife!"
"Then act like it," he snapped. "Stop chasing ghosts and let me deal with this mess."
He crossed the room in three long strides, not to comfort me, but to usher me out. The door slammed in my face. Then, the distinct, metallic *click* of the lock.
I stood in the hallway, staring at the wood grain, feeling the vibration of the slam in my teeth.
I should have left. I should have packed a bag. But the conditioning of a lifetime—be good, be perfect, be worth keeping—kicked in with terrifying efficiency. If there was chaos, I had to create order. If there was coldness, I had to create heat.
I went to the kitchen.
Two hours later, the dining room table was a masterpiece of denial. Roast chicken with lemon and rosemary sat in the center, the skin golden and crisp. I had polished the silverware until it gleamed under the dim chandelier. I poured two glasses of his favorite Cabernet, the liquid dark as blood in the crystal.
I was fixing the centerpiece—white lilies, his favorite—when the heavy oak door down the hall finally opened.
Warren emerged. He had changed. The comfortable cardigan was gone, replaced by a charcoal suit jacket. He smelled of fresh cologne—sandalwood and ambition.
"Dinner is ready," I said, forcing a smile that felt like it might crack the skin of my cheeks. "I made the rosemary chicken."
He didn't look at the table. He was checking his watch, then his phone. A text chimed. His eyes lit up—a spark of adrenaline I hadn’t seen in years.
"I can't stay," he said, grabbing his keys from the counter. "Urgent meeting. My old publisher. Damage control for this leak."
"At nine o'clock at night?"
"The news cycle doesn't sleep, Jessica." He was already moving toward the front door, his energy kinetic, urgent.
"Warren," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "Please. Just sit down. Just for ten minutes."
He paused, hand on the doorknob. For a second, he looked at me—really looked at me. But he didn't see his wife. He saw an obstacle.
"Don't wait up," he said.
The door closed. The silence that followed was heavy, pressing against my eardrums.
I sat at the head of the table. The steam from the chicken began to thin, then vanish. The clock on the wall ticked—*tock, tock, tock*—mocking the stillness.
Twenty minutes later, my phone buzzed again.
I didn't want to look, but my fingers moved on their own. It wasn't a text. It was a push notification from *TMZ*.
**SCREENWRITER LEGEND WARREN WEST SPOTTED AT LAX ARRIVALS.**
I tapped the link. The photo was grainy, taken with a long lens, but unmistakable. Warren was standing at the international arrivals gate. He wasn't meeting a publisher. He was wrapping his arms around a woman in a white trench coat. Marina Boyd.
His face was buried in her neck. His posture was one of desperate relief, a man who had been holding his breath for five years and was finally exhaling.
The phone rang in my hand, startling me so badly I nearly dropped it into the wine glass. The screen flashed: **MOTHER**.
I answered, desperate for a voice that wasn't screaming inside my head. "Mom?"
"I saw the photos," Linda said. No hello. No 'are you okay.' Her voice was tight, clipped.
"He left me here," I choked out, the tears finally spilling over, hot and humiliating. "He lied to me and went to get her."
"Stop crying," she commanded. "Listen to me, Jessica. You are going to wash your face. You are going to stay in that house. You do not post anything. You do not leave."
"Mom, he's with her!"
"Men have pasts," she hissed. "And powerful men have powerful pasts. If you make a scene now, if you play the jealous, hysterical wife, you will lose everything. The internet already thinks you're a joke. Don't prove them right."
"I can't—"
"Endure it," she cut me off. "Swallow it down. Dignity is silence, Jessica. Silence."
The line went dead.
I lowered the phone. across the table, the empty chair stared back at me. I picked up my wine glass and hurled it at the wall. The crystal shattered, spraying red wine across the beige wallpaper like a gunshot wound. It was the only sound in the house, and it wasn't nearly loud enough.
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