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From Wife to Leading Lady Novel Cover

From Wife to Leading Lady

The Metropolitan Museum's grand hall sparkled under crystal chandeliers, but the glittering facade couldn't mask the hollow ache spreading through my chest. I'd excused myself from the charity gala's main ballroom, seeking refuge in the quieter Egyptian wing where ancient artifacts stood as silent witnesses to countless human dramas. That's when I saw them. Max and Vivienne Hall stood in a secluded alcove between two towering sarcophagi, their bodies angled toward each other in a way that spoke of intimacy I hadn't seen from my husband in years. Her hand rested on his forearm—not the casual touch of old friends, but something deeper, more possessive. His head was bent toward hers, close enough that I could see the soft smile playing at the corners of his mouth, the same expression he'd once reserved for me. My breath caught in my throat. The champagne flute in my hand trembled as I watched Vivienne laugh at something he whispered, her fingers trailing down his arm in a gesture so familiar it made my stomach lurch. This wasn't business. This wasn't friendship.
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Chapter 2

I sat in Max's leather chair for what felt like hours, the Cartier receipt crumpled in my fist. My mind replayed every dismissal, every cold shoulder, every time he'd made me feel unreasonable for wanting more from our marriage. The pendant I'd admired—that he'd deemed "too extravagant" for me—now adorned Vivienne's neck. The truth burned like acid in my throat.

When I heard the front door close and his footsteps in the hallway, I didn't move. For once, I wanted him to find me, to see the evidence in my hand, to face what he'd done.

"Reagan?" Max paused in the doorway, his expression shifting from surprise to annoyance. "What are you doing in my study?"

I uncurled my fingers, smoothing the receipt on his desk. "Business gesture," I said quietly, pushing it toward him. "Is that what you call it?"

His eyes flickered down, then back to my face, his jaw tightening almost imperceptibly. That micro-expression told me everything his words wouldn't.

"You're going through my things now?" His voice was cold, accusatory.

"Don't." I stood up, finding strength in my anger. "Don't you dare turn this around on me. You bought her the pendant—the exact one I admired—after telling me it was too extravagant."

"It was a thank you for her help with the Singapore deal," he replied, loosening his tie with practiced nonchalance. "Nothing more."

"Stop lying!" My voice cracked as five years of suppressed emotions burst free. "A business gesture doesn't happen in dark corners of museums. A business gesture doesn't involve whispering and touching. A business gesture doesn't come with sapphire pendants that you've denied your wife!"

Max's careful composure slipped, his eyes flashing with something between guilt and irritation. "What do you want from me, Reagan? I've given you everything—"

"You've given me nothing!" The words exploded from me. "A house that feels like a museum. A mother-in-law who treats me like an intruder. A husband who's more present with his ex-fiancée than with me."

"That's not fair," he snapped, color rising in his face.

"Neither is this marriage." The truth of my words hit me like a physical blow. "I've been playing a part for five years, trying to be the perfect Burke wife, and I'm done. I'm going back to acting."

The silence that followed was deafening. Max stared at me as if seeing me for the first time.

"Acting?" he finally said, incredulous. "You can't be serious. You left that life behind."

"No, I gave it up. There's a difference." I stepped around him toward the door. "And now I'm taking it back."

\*\*\*

Three days later, a summons arrived—not a call or text, but an actual handwritten note delivered by the Burke family driver. Mrs. Burke requested my presence at the family estate. Demanded it, really.

I found her in the conservatory, perfectly poised among her prized orchids, not a silver hair out of place. Her cold blue eyes assessed me as I entered, finding me wanting as always.

"Sit down, Reagan," she said, gesturing to the chair across from her. "We need to discuss your recent behavior."

I remained standing. "My behavior?"

"Max tells me you're entertaining some fantasy about returning to...acting." She spoke the word like it was distasteful. "I had hoped you'd outgrown such childish ambitions."

"They're not childish, and it's not a fantasy." I kept my voice level despite the fury building inside me. "It's my profession."

"Your profession," she corrected coldly, "is being a Burke wife. A role you've barely managed to perform adequately these past five years."

Her words were designed to cut, and they did. But this time, instead of bleeding, I felt something harden inside me.

"If you pursue this selfish indulgence," she continued, adjusting her pearl bracelet, "you will bring shame to this family. The Burkes do not parade themselves on screen for public consumption."

"I'm not a Burke," I said quietly. "Not really. No ceremony, remember?"

She looked at me sharply. "Don't be melodramatic. You have the name, the accounts, the status. Without this family, you're nobody."

"Then I'll be nobody." I turned to leave, but her next words stopped me cold.

"All financial support will cease immediately if you continue this foolishness. Consider that carefully, Reagan."

I looked back at her, this woman who had made me feel small for years, and felt something like pity. "Some things matter more than money, Mrs. Burke."

\*\*\*

The rain hammered against my umbrella as I hurried through Manhattan's crowded streets toward the gleaming office building where Marcus Chen's talent agency occupied the thirty-second floor. My heart pounded with each step—part nervousness, part exhilaration.

By the time I reached his office, my designer shoes were ruined, my carefully styled hair plastered to my face. But I didn't care. For the first time in years, I felt alive.

Marcus's expression when his assistant showed me in was priceless—shock, followed by careful neutrality. Five years ago, I'd terminated our contract with a brief email after my engagement to Max.

"Reagan Perry," he said, leaning back in his chair. "I heard you became a trophy wife."

"I tried," I admitted, dripping rainwater onto his expensive carpet. "I failed spectacularly."

A hint of a smile touched his lips. "And now you want to come back. Just like that? After five years?"

"Yes." I met his gaze steadily. "I'm ready, Marcus."

"The industry doesn't work that way. You can't just disappear and expect—"

"I don't expect anything," I interrupted. "I'm prepared to work for it. But I need an agent who believes in me. If that's not you anymore, I'll understand."

Marcus studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he gestured to the chair across from him.

"Tell me why I should take you back," he said.

I took a deep breath and began to fight for my future.

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