
I Exposed His Mistress on Live Television
Chapter 2
The moment the cameras stopped rolling after the first episode, Grayson's facade crumbled. His eyes, which had glistened with perfectly timed tears on camera, now burned with something darker as he cornered me backstage.
"What the hell do you think you're doing?" His voice was low, dangerous, nothing like the wounded lover he'd portrayed on stage.
I straightened my spine despite the pain radiating through my abdomen. "Telling the truth."
"You're destroying me." He stepped closer, his cologne—expensive, subtle—washing over me. Once, that scent had meant safety. Now it just made me nauseous. "Victor Hale will bury you if you keep talking."
"Let him try." I met his gaze steadily. "I have nothing left to lose."
Something flickered across his face—fear, perhaps, or the realization that the girl who had once worshipped him no longer existed.
"You don't understand what these people are capable of," he hissed, gripping my wrist. His fingers dug into my skin, and I wondered if he could feel how thin I'd become, how close to the bone.
"I understand perfectly." I pulled my arm free. "After Victor assaulted me, he made sure I knew exactly what would happen to your studio if I spoke up."
Grayson's face paled. "What are you talking about?"
"He blackmailed me into those nude scenes in 'Midnight Crossing,'" I said quietly. "The ones you told everyone I was desperate to do for attention."
His mouth opened, but no sound came out.
"I did them because Victor threatened to pull funding from your first film." My voice remained steady despite the memories clawing at my throat. "I did them because I believed you were worth saving."
---
"Welcome back to Exes Tell All!" The host's voice rang through the studio as we settled into our positions for the second episode. The audience applauded on cue, though I noticed several uncomfortable glances in my direction.
"Last time, we got some... surprising revelations," the host continued, her smile not quite reaching her eyes. "Grayson, how are you processing everything Lily shared?"
Grayson's expression shifted seamlessly into wounded confusion. "I'm trying to understand why she'd make up such serious accusations."
"They're not accusations," I said before I could stop myself. "They're facts."
"Well," Grayson said, his smile returning, "let's focus on the good memories. Remember our birthdays together?"
The audience perked up at this apparent detour from the heavy subject matter.
"I remember my twenty-fifth birthday," Grayson continued, his tone light but his eyes cold. "I was working three jobs to pay rent, and Lily here decided to surprise me with a birthday cake."
He turned to the audience with a conspiratorial smile. "A supermarket cake. The kind with pre-printed 'Happy Birthday' that you can get for $12.99."
Laughter rippled through the crowd.
"I was so touched," he continued, his voice dripping with mockery. "I thought, wow, she really knows how to make a guy feel special."
The audience's laughter grew louder. I sat perfectly still, feeling each chuckle like a needle in my chest.
"Tell them why you bought that cake, Grayson," I said quietly.
His smile faltered slightly.
"You tell them," he challenged, gesturing grandly toward me.
I reached into my purse and pulled out a faded envelope. Inside were three receipts, yellowed with age but still legible.
"This one," I said, holding up the first receipt, "is from Nordstrom. $850 for a tailored suit—your first one."
Grayson's expression shifted uncertainly.
"This one is from Guitar Center. $1,200 for my vintage Gibson Les Paul. I sold it the day before your birthday."
The audience had fallen silent.
"And this," I said, holding up the third receipt, "is from UCLA Medical Center. $10,000 for egg donation procedures."
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
"I couldn't afford a better cake," I continued, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands, "because I'd just used my college grant money to buy you that suit. And sold my guitar. And donated my eggs to scrape together $10,000 for your very first indie film project."
Grayson's face had gone completely white.
"You never told me—" he began.
"You never asked," I cut him off. "You were too busy planning your big premiere to notice what I was sacrificing."
The host sat frozen, clearly unsure how to proceed with the script that had suddenly been torn apart.
"That cake cost $12.99," I said, looking directly into the camera. "But the price I paid for it was much higher."
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