
After My Husband’s Mistress Painted Me the Villain
Chapter 3
The red wine stain on the beige wallpaper had dried into a jagged scar, a Rorschach test of my failing marriage. I sat in the wingback chair, the silence of the house so absolute it hummed in my ears. When the front door finally clicked open at 3:00 AM, the sound was like a bone snapping.
Warren walked in. He didn’t look like a man who had been at a business meeting. He looked like a man who had been resurrected. There was a flush to his cheeks, a looseness in his tie that spoke of intimacy, not negotiation. But it was the smell that strangled me—not whiskey or smoke, but the cloying, sweet scent of gardenias. *Her* scent. It clung to his lapel, an invisible brand of ownership that screamed louder than any tabloid headline.
"You waited up," he said. It wasn’t a question; it was an accusation.
I stood, my legs stiff from hours of immobility. "I saw the photos, Warren. LAX. You didn't go to a meeting. You went to her."
He sighed, rubbing his face with a hand that I noticed was no longer wearing his wedding ring. He must have slipped it into his pocket. "Jessica, go to bed. I’m not doing this tonight."
"You left me here," I said, my voice trembling despite my best efforts to turn it into steel. "You left me to choke on the rumors while you played knight in shining armor for the woman who broke your heart five years ago."
"I was helping an old friend navigate a media circus. Something you wouldn't understand, given your limited experience with actual fame."
"Friend?" I stepped into his space, inhaling the toxic gardenia perfume. "You retired for her. You proposed to her. And now you’re running back to her the second she snaps her fingers."
"And I married *you*!" He shouted, the sudden volume making me flinch. "I came home to *you*. Isn't that enough?"
"No! Not when you look at me like a consolation prize! Not when you smell like her!"
He laughed then, a cold, sharp sound that scraped against my ribs. "Oh, grow up, Jessica. You're pathetic, you know that? Always needing reassurance, always whining for a script, for attention, for love. You’re a bottomless pit of need."
He leaned down, his face twisting into a sneer I didn't recognize. "No wonder your parents don't like you. No wonder you don't have a single true friend in this industry. You suck the energy out of a room just by standing in it."
The words hit me with the force of a physical blow. I gasped, air rushing into lungs that suddenly felt too small. Before I could respond, he brushed past me, heading for the guest room. The door slammed, and the lock clicked.
I retreated to the bedroom, my sanctuary turned prison. I pulled my journal from under the mattress, my hands shaking so badly I could barely hold the pen. *He hates me,* I wrote, the ink bleeding into the paper. *He sees me exactly as I fear I am.* I wrote until my hand cramped, purging the poison of his words onto the page, but the stain remained.
The next morning, I wore sunglasses to hide the swollen ruin of my eyes. I sat across from David Chen in a coffee shop that smelled of burnt beans and desperation. David, my agent, was the only person who looked at me without pity or disdain.
"You look like hell, Jess," he said gently.
"I feel like it. I need work, David. Real work."
He hesitated, tapping a folder on the table. "There's a project. A big one. *Maze of Circumstances*. It’s a psychological thriller. They're casting for the sister—neurotic, fragile, hiding a secret. It’s small, but it has teeth."
"I want it."
"Jessica, the press is going to be brutal. Maybe you should take a beat."
"I don't need a beat," I said, gripping my cold brew until the plastic cup crunched. "I need to be someone other than Warren West's wife. Get me the audition."
Driving home, a flicker of resolve warmed my chest. I would get the part. I would prove him wrong. I wasn't empty. I wasn't useless.
The house was quiet when I returned. Warren’s car was in the drive, but the hallway was empty. I made a pot of coffee—a peace offering, or perhaps just a habit I couldn't break—and walked toward his office.
The door was ajar.
"Warren?" I pushed it open gently. The room was empty, but the air was thick with his presence. The vintage fountain pen lay uncapped on the mahogany desk.
I walked over to set the coffee down, intending to leave immediately. But my gaze snagged on the stack of fresh paper in the center of the desk. It wasn't a procedural drama. It wasn't a novel.
It was a screenplay.
**MAZE OF CIRCUMSTANCES**
My breath hitched. The film David had mentioned. The big budget thriller.
My eyes drifted down to the writer’s credit.
*Written by Warren West.*
He wasn't retired. He had never been retired; he had just been waiting. But it was the line beneath the title that stopped my heart completely, freezing the blood in my veins.
*Dedication: For M, my only muse.*
The coffee cup slipped from my fingers. It hit the Persian rug with a dull thud, hot liquid soaking into the wool, but I didn't feel the splash. I stared at the letter *M*, realizing with sickening clarity that while I was fighting for a supporting role in his life, she had always been the lead.
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