
Beneath the Billionaire's Lies
Chapter 5
My hands trembled as I picked up another damaged canvas, the slash marks across it like wounds on my own body. Three hours until the exhibition opening. Three hours to salvage what remained of my career, my identity, my last connection to the person I was before Daniel Sterling entered my life.
"This one's completely soaked through," Mia said, holding up what had been my favorite piece—an abstract representation of freedom I'd painted during one of Daniel's extended business trips. Now it dripped with turpentine, the colors bleeding together in toxic rivers.
"Put it aside," I instructed, my voice steadier than I felt. "Focus on the ones we might be able to save."
We worked methodically, sorting through the carnage. Five paintings were beyond repair, their canvases slashed to ribbons. Four more had been doused with chemicals that had eaten through the paint layers to the primer beneath. The remaining six showed varying degrees of damage—knife scores that hadn't penetrated all the way through, paint surfaces partially bubbled but not completely destroyed.
"We need more supplies," I said, mentally cataloging what we'd need. "Fresh canvas, gesso, acrylics for quick drying..."
"I can run to the art supply store on 23rd," Mia offered, already reaching for her jacket.
"Use my credit card," I said, handing it to her. "Get everything on this list." I scribbled furiously on the back of a gallery flyer, trying to think through the fog of shock and rage that clouded my mind.
As Mia rushed out, I turned back to the devastation. Alone now, I allowed myself one moment of weakness. I sank to my knees among the ruins of my work and pressed my palms against my eyes, fighting back the tears that threatened to spill.
"You won't break me," I whispered to the empty gallery, to Victoria, to Daniel, to whoever had wielded the knife and chemicals. "I won't let you."
Taking a deep breath, I stood and began the painstaking work of salvage. For canvases with slashes that hadn't cut all the way through, I carefully sewed the edges together from behind with needle and thread from the emergency kit I always kept in my supply bag. My fingers, usually so steady with a paintbrush, fumbled with the tiny needle. By the third stitch, I had pricked myself twice, tiny droplets of blood staining the back of the canvas.
I didn't stop.
For paintings where the surface had bubbled but not completely deteriorated, I gently scraped away the damaged areas, revealing patches of untouched color beneath. It was like archaeological work—uncovering fragments of my original vision from beneath the destruction.
Mia returned, arms laden with supplies, and we worked side by side in focused silence. I mixed new paints to match the original colors, carefully rebuilding the damaged sections stroke by stroke. Where entire sections were beyond repair, I incorporated the damage into new elements—a slash became the edge of a wing, a chemical burn transformed into a storm cloud.
Hours blurred together. My back ached from bending over canvases spread across the floor. My hands cramped from the repetitive motion of brush strokes. The skin around my nails cracked and bled from constant exposure to turpentine and other solvents.
Still, I didn't stop.
"Evelyn," Mia's voice broke through my concentration. "It's almost time. People will start arriving in thirty minutes."
I looked up, disoriented. The gallery was transformed—not back to what it had been, but into something new. Ten paintings now hung on the walls, their wounds visible but integrated into the artwork itself. They were raw, honest in a way my original pieces hadn't been. They spoke of violence and resilience, of destruction and rebirth.
"We did it," I breathed, standing slowly, my muscles protesting the movement after hours hunched over my work.
"They're... different," Mia said hesitantly. "But powerful."
I nodded, surveying our night's work. The exhibition wasn't what I had planned, but perhaps it was more truthful. I had titled the show "Fragments" before; now the name had taken on a literal meaning.
"Go clean up," I told Mia. "I'll finish hanging the last two."
As she disappeared into the small bathroom, my phone buzzed with a notification. I pulled it from my pocket, wincing as the screen light hit my tired eyes.
It was an Instagram alert—a post from an account I didn't recognize. With growing horror, I opened it to find photos of the gallery as we had found it hours ago—canvases slashed, paint bubbling, destruction everywhere. The caption read: "EXCLUSIVE: Sterling wife stages 'vandalism' of own exhibition for publicity? Sources say troubled artist Evelyn Carter was seen entering gallery alone hours before 'discovering' damage. #PublicityStunt #DesperateForAttention"
The account had tagged every major art publication in New York.
My hands shook so badly I nearly dropped the phone. This wasn't just destruction—it was character assassination. Whoever had done this had not only vandalized my work but had planned to frame me for it.
And I had played right into their hands by not calling the police.
The bell above the gallery door chimed, and I quickly shoved my phone into my pocket, plastering a professional smile on my face as I turned to greet the first arrivals.
The evening passed in a blur. I explained the "evolution" of the exhibition to puzzled critics and collectors, describing a last-minute artistic revelation rather than an act of sabotage. Some seemed intrigued by the raw emotion of the altered pieces. Others exchanged skeptical glances, no doubt having seen the social media posts.
By midnight, the last guests had departed, leaving me alone with Mia in the quiet gallery.
"Will you be okay?" she asked, concern evident in her young face.
"Of course," I lied, summoning a smile that felt like broken glass on my lips. "Go home, Mia. You've done more than enough."
After she left, I sank onto a bench in the center of the gallery, surrounded by the remnants of my artistic vision. Exhaustion pressed down on me like a physical weight, but sleep felt impossible.
I pulled out my phone instead, dreading what I might find but needing to know the damage. The Instagram post had multiplied, shared across platforms, commented on by art world insiders and anonymous trolls alike. Most seemed to believe the "publicity stunt" narrative—after all, who would vandalize their own exhibition only to frantically repair it the same night?
Then I saw it—a notification for a new article from ArtForum, written by Julian Croft, one of the most influential critics in the industry. With trembling fingers, I opened the link.
The headline made my stomach drop: "Evelyn Carter Sterling: When Desperation Eclipses Talent."
I forced myself to read on, each word a fresh cut:
"What we witnessed tonight was not art but the death throes of a career that never truly began. Carter's hastily repaired canvases reveal not only a lack of technical skill but a fundamental absence of artistic integrity. These desperate little doodles with zero substance might garner sympathy from the undiscerning eye, but they cannot hide the truth: without the Sterling name, Evelyn Carter would be nothing more than another mediocre painter cluttering the already overcrowded New York art scene."
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering to the floor. Dawn light was beginning to filter through the gallery windows, illuminating the paintings that had cost me a night of sleep, blood, and tears—paintings that had just been dismissed as "desperate little doodles" by one of the most respected voices in art.
I had lost everything. My marriage. My friends. And now, my last refuge—my art, my voice, my truth.
A single tear escaped, trailing down my cheek as I sat alone in the wreckage of my dreams. I didn't bother to wipe it away.
In the soft morning light, surrounded by the evidence of my resilience and my defeat, I finally allowed myself to acknowledge the truth I had been running from: This was not a series of coincidences or bad luck.
This was warfare.
And I had been fighting with paintbrushes while my opponent wielded knives.
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