
He Tried to Kill Me for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The key turned in the lock, and I pushed open the door to our penthouse, expecting the usual silence. Instead, voices drifted from the living room—female voices, one high and brittle, the other soft and wheedling.
My stomach dropped as I recognized them.
"I don't understand why she's being so difficult," my mother was saying. "Kian is such a good provider."
I stepped into the living room, and the conversation halted abruptly. Three pairs of eyes turned toward me—my mother Margaret, sitting ramrod straight on the sofa; Kian, who looked like he'd been cornered; and there, perched elegantly in my favorite armchair, was Ariana.
My aunt. The woman whose name had been whispered in my ear during the most intimate moment of my marriage.
"Eleanor," Kian stood, adjusting his glasses nervously. "Your mother and aunt were just—"
"Checking on you," Ariana finished smoothly, rising from the chair with fluid grace. "We're worried about you, darling."
The diamond pendant gleamed at her throat—the forty-five-thousand-dollar necklace that should have been my anniversary gift.
"Worried about me?" I repeated, my voice surprisingly steady despite the rage building inside me.
"Kian told us about your... behavior," my mother said, her hands twisting in her lap. "The bank accounts, the credit cards. Eleanor, marriage requires forgiveness."
"Forgiveness?" I echoed hollowly.
"Your husband made one little mistake," Ariana said, touching the diamond at her throat. "You can't throw away a marriage over something so trivial."
I stared at her, at the necklace that represented everything wrong with my marriage. "Trivial?"
"Kian needs someone who understands him," my mother continued, as if I hadn't spoken. "Someone who puts his career first. You've always been so selfish, Eleanor."
The word hit like a physical blow. Selfish? For wanting to be seen? For refusing to be a placeholder?
"Eleanor," Kian stepped forward, his voice taking on that patronizing tone I'd grown to hate. "We can work through this. Together."
"Together?" I laughed, the sound harsh even to my own ears. "Like how you worked through your obsession with my aunt?"
Ariana's lips curved into a smirk that didn't reach her eyes. She stood and glided toward me, expensive perfume enveloping me as she leaned close.
"You know," she whispered, her breath warm against my ear, "he only married you because you reminded him of a diluted version of me. A safe substitute."
Something snapped inside me.
"You can't keep a man like that with a personality like yours," she continued, her voice dripping with false sympathy.
My hand moved before I could think. The slap echoed through the room, sharp and decisive. Ariana's head whipped to the side, her perfectly manicured hand flying to her cheek.
The room went silent.
"Eleanor!" my mother gasped.
Ariana's eyes widened, then narrowed dangerously. "You little—"
"Get out," I said, my voice deadly calm. "Both of you. Now."
"Eleanor, don't be ridiculous," my mother began.
"I said get out!" I pointed to the door. "Or I'm calling building security."
Kian stepped forward, but I turned on him. "You too. This intervention is over."
They left, my mother sputtering indignantly, Ariana shooting me venomous glances over her shoulder. Kian lingered in the doorway, his expression unreadable.
"Eleanor," he began.
"Close the door on your way out," I said, turning away from him.
* * *
The gallery opening was a riot of color and sound after the suffocating silence of the penthouse. Isabella had insisted I come, saying I needed to remember who I was before Kian.
"Ele! Over here!" she waved from across the room.
I made my way through the crowd, accepting a glass of champagne from a passing server. The art surrounding me was bold, abstract—nothing like the safe, classical pieces Kian had insisted on hanging in our home.
"Who designed this space?" I asked Isabella, admiring the way the lighting highlighted each piece without overwhelming it.
"Saint Gordon," she replied. "He's brilliant. Here he is now."
A tall man with warm eyes approached us, his smile genuine as he extended his hand. "Eleanor Barnes. I remember your work from the Westwood show three years ago."
I blinked in surprise. "You remember my work?"
"Of course." His smile widened. "That piece about fractured light—it stayed with me."
We talked for hours, about art and architecture, about how light could transform space. Not once did he mention Kian or ask about my marriage. Instead, he spoke to me as if I were still the artist I'd once been.
"The thing about structure," he said, gesturing to the gallery walls, "is that it's meant to support, not confine."
Something shifted inside me as I looked at him—really looked at him—and realized what had been missing in my marriage. Respect. Recognition. The feeling that someone was actually seeing me.
"You know," Saint said quietly, "I've never seen anyone who understands light quite like you do."
For the first time in months, I felt like Eleanor Barnes again.
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