
Ending a Toxic Hollywood Marriage
Chapter 2
I stared at the unmarked manila envelope on my kitchen counter, its very presence an intrusion in my meticulously organized home. My fingers trembled slightly as I reached for it—the only outward sign of the storm raging inside me. The seal broke with a soft tear, and several glossy photographs slid onto the marble surface.
Ryan and Isabella. Tangled limbs. Hotel sheets. Positions that left nothing to the imagination.
I should have felt something—rage, perhaps, or the searing pain of betrayal. Instead, a strange, clinical calm washed over me as I examined each image with the same detached precision I'd use reviewing contract clauses.
"Pay me $500,000 or I go public—then resign as Ryan's manager." The note was typed on expensive stationery, Isabella's flowery signature a mocking flourish at the bottom.
I almost laughed. After seven years of managing Ryan's indiscretions, after burying my brother alone yesterday, after watching my husband announce his engagement to another woman—this was supposed to break me?
I gathered the photos methodically, sliding them back into the envelope. From my home office, I retrieved an unmarked file from the bottom drawer of my filing cabinet. Inside were seven years of documented betrayals: hotel receipts, credit card statements, screenshots of messages sent to my phone by vengeful one-night stands. I added Isabella's blackmail attempt to the growing collection, noting the date in my precise handwriting.
Evidence. Insurance. Ammunition.
The wall clock read 2:47 a.m. when my phone erupted with Marcus Thorne's distinctive ringtone. I answered on the second ring, voice steady despite having not slept in nearly forty-eight hours.
"Maya, this is unacceptable," Marcus barked without preamble. "I cannot have my lead actor embroiled in a bigamy scandal three weeks before principal photography."
"I understand your concern, Marcus." I moved to my laptop, already pulling up contingency files. "Let me arrange a video conference with the key stakeholders."
Twenty minutes later, I sat before my screen, hair pulled back, fresh suit jacket over my wrinkled blouse. No one would know I'd been wearing the same clothes since Leo's funeral.
"Gentlemen, ladies," I began, addressing the grid of sleepy, angry faces. "I appreciate your joining this emergency meeting."
"This is a disaster," the studio head interrupted. "The family-friendly superhero franchise cannot have a lead who's potentially committed a felony."
"Ryan Sterling is not a bigamist," I stated flatly. "Our marriage was legal but has been effectively over for some time. The timing of his... announcement was unfortunate, but legally, there are no grounds for concern."
"The script requires him to be America's sweetheart," Marcus countered. "Not America's adulterer."
"Then we rewrite." I leaned forward. "We pivot. Make him the anti-hero with a complicated past. The audience will relate more to flawed characters anyway. Your test screenings already show they find the current version too perfect, too unrelatable."
The writer began to protest, but I sliced through his objections with precision. "Three days. Give me three days with your team in New York. We'll have a new draft that turns this publicity nightmare into character depth."
By dawn, I'd secured the rewrite, saved Ryan's role, and instructed my assistant to book flights to New York. I hadn't mentioned his name once in our conversation. He was simply the product I continued to manage, nothing more.
At 9 a.m., I sat across from Alan Weiss, my entertainment attorney of ten years, in the sterile conference room of my high-rise office. His eyes held a mixture of professional concern and personal pity I chose to ignore.
"The blackmail attempt is actually helpful," Alan said, reviewing the photos I'd shown him. "It demonstrates malicious intent. We can file for a protective order immediately."
"And the divorce?" I sipped my third coffee, the liquid bitter and cold.
"Maya." Alan set down his pen. "Are you certain you want to proceed with this now? The timing—"
"The timing is perfect," I interrupted. "He's distracted by his new... family. He'll sign whatever I put in front of him to avoid complications."
My phone buzzed with a text from Leo's widow: *Why weren't you at the memorial service this morning?*
I set the phone face-down on the table, ignoring the stab of guilt. There would be time for grief later. Right now, I needed to be the Maya Chen who fixed problems, who managed crises, who never, ever broke.
"Draft the papers," I told Alan, my voice steady even as something inside me finally, irrevocably shattered. "I want them ready by the time I return from New York."
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