
Leaving Love for Freedom
Chapter 3
The gallery felt like a sanctuary as I walked through its modest space, my heels clicking softly against the polished concrete floor. After years of hiding my art in closets and spare rooms, seeing my paintings displayed on pristine white walls felt surreal—like stepping back into a version of myself I'd almost forgotten existed.
"Your use of light is extraordinary," Elena Martinez, the gallery owner, said as she adjusted the spotlight on my landscape series. "These pieces have such emotional depth. You should be proud."
I touched my wedding ring, a habit that had become more pronounced since Vincenzo's betrayal. "Thank you. It feels strange, having people see my work again."
"Art is meant to be shared, Maria. Don't let anyone convince you otherwise."
I moved toward the back corner where my most precious piece hung—my mother's painting of a woman dancing in the rain, her face tilted toward the sky in pure joy. It was the only artwork she'd left me when she died, and I'd finally found the courage to include it in the exhibition, despite its immense personal value.
The late afternoon sun streamed through the gallery's large windows, casting warm golden light across the canvases. For the first time in months, I felt connected to something larger than my crumbling marriage. This was who I'd been before I became Mrs. Vincenzo White—an artist with dreams and vision.
"Maria!"
The voice cut through my peaceful reverie like broken glass. I turned to see Kaiya Bell entering the gallery, flanked by two perfectly coiffed friends who looked like they'd stepped out of a fashion magazine. She wore a flowing white sundress that emphasized her youth, her honey-blonde hair catching the light as she surveyed the space with predatory interest.
"What a charming little space," she said, her voice carrying that practiced sweetness that made my skin crawl. "Vincenzo mentioned you were playing artist again."
Playing artist. The dismissive phrase hit me like a slap, but I forced my expression to remain neutral. "Kaiya. I didn't expect to see you here."
"Oh, we were just in the neighborhood after brunch." She gestured to her companions, who giggled on cue. "The girls were dying to see what you've been working on during your... sabbatical."
They moved through the gallery like a pack of wolves, their designer heels clicking against the floor in sharp staccato. I watched as they paused before each painting, whispering among themselves with barely concealed amusement.
"This one's interesting," one of Kaiya's friends said, pointing at my abstract piece about loneliness. "Very... emotional."
"Maria's always been so sensitive," Kaiya replied, her tone dripping with false sympathy. "Vincenzo says she feels everything so deeply. It's actually quite exhausting for him."
My hands clenched into fists at my sides, but I remained silent. They were baiting me, and I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of a reaction.
The trio made their way toward the back corner, where my mother's painting hung in its place of honor. My chest tightened as Kaiya approached it, her eyes narrowing with calculation.
"Oh my," she breathed, studying the canvas. "This one's different from the others. More... valuable looking."
"That was my mother's," I said quietly, moving closer. "It's not for sale."
"How sentimental." Kaiya picked up a glass of red wine from the refreshment table, swirling it thoughtfully. "You know, Vincenzo told me about your mother. Such a tragic story, dying so young and leaving you all alone."
She stepped closer to the painting, wine glass in hand, studying the brushstrokes with exaggerated interest. Her friends flanked her, creating a barrier between me and my mother's work.
"The technique is quite dated, isn't it?" one of them observed. "Very... last century."
Kaiya laughed, a sound like breaking crystal. "Well, some people cling to the past, don't they? Even when it's time to move on."
As she gestured dismissively, her elbow knocked against her wine glass. The movement looked casual, almost accidental, but I caught the flash of satisfaction in her eyes as the glass tilted.
Time slowed as the red wine arced through the air, a crimson stream that seemed to hang suspended before gravity claimed it. The liquid splashed across my mother's painting in a violent burst of color, the wine soaking into the canvas and obliterating years of careful brushwork.
"Oh no!" Kaiya gasped, her hand flying to her mouth in mock horror. "I'm so sorry! It was completely accidental!"
I stared at the destruction, my mother's dancing figure now obscured by spreading stains of wine. The woman's joyful face was barely visible beneath the red that dripped down the canvas like blood.
"You—" I started, my voice breaking.
"I feel terrible," Kaiya continued, her eyes bright with false tears. "These things happen in crowded spaces, don't they? Perhaps it wasn't the best idea to display something so precious in such a... public venue."
My phone was in my hands before I realized I'd reached for it, my fingers shaking as I dialed Vincenzo's number. He answered on the third ring, his voice distracted.
"Maria? I'm in a meeting—"
"She destroyed it," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "Kaiya destroyed my mother's painting."
Silence stretched between us before he sighed heavily. "What happened?"
"She spilled wine all over it. On purpose. Vincenzo, it's ruined."
"I'll be right there."
Twenty minutes later, Vincenzo strode into the gallery wearing his charcoal business suit, his expression unreadable. He took in the scene—the wine-stained painting, Kaiya's tear-streaked face, my rigid posture—and I waited for him to demand answers, to defend me, to show even a shred of the man I'd married.
Instead, he walked directly to Kaiya and placed a protective arm around her shoulders.
"Darling, are you alright?" he murmured, his voice soft with concern. "You look upset."
"I feel awful," she sobbed into his chest. "It was such a terrible accident. I keep replaying it in my mind."
I watched in stunned disbelief as my husband comforted his mistress while my mother's painting dripped wine onto the gallery floor.
"Maria," he said finally, turning to me with cool eyes. "Perhaps you should have considered the risks before displaying something so valuable in such a crowded space. These accidents happen when proper precautions aren't taken."
The words hit me like physical blows. Not only was he refusing to hold Kaiya accountable, he was blaming me for the destruction of my most precious possession.
"Accident?" I repeated, my voice hollow.
"Of course it was an accident," Kaiya said, lifting her head from Vincenzo's chest with red-rimmed eyes. "I would never deliberately harm something so meaningful to you, Maria. I'm not that kind of person."
But I saw it then—the tiny smile that played at the corners of her mouth when she thought no one was looking. The satisfaction in her eyes as she surveyed the damage she'd caused.
Vincenzo guided Kaiya toward the exit, his arm still protectively around her. "We should go, darling. You've been through enough today."
They left me standing before my mother's ruined painting, wine still dripping steadily onto the floor. Elena approached with paper towels and quiet condolences, but her words felt distant and meaningless.
That night, I sat in my empty house, staring at the wine-stained canvas I'd carefully transported home. The dancing woman was barely visible now, her joy obliterated by deliberate cruelty. I traced the edges of the damage with trembling fingers, remembering my mother's hands guiding mine as she taught me to hold a brush.
The house felt tomb-like around me, filled with the ghosts of a marriage that had died long before Vincenzo served me divorce papers. But sitting there in the darkness, something crystallized inside me—a clarity born from the ashes of my last illusion.
I opened my laptop and booked a flight to Paris, departing in three days. Then I enrolled in the advanced art program I'd been researching, my fingers steady as I filled out the application. Finally, I began packing my most precious belongings—my hidden sketchbooks, my art supplies, the few pieces of my mother's jewelry that Vincenzo didn't know about.
As I folded my clothes into suitcases, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years: anticipation for the future. The woman who would have begged Vincenzo to choose her over his intern was gone, destroyed as completely as my mother's painting.
In her place stood someone who finally understood her worth—and was ready to fight for it.
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