
Model Defeats Abusive Spouse
Chapter 2
The call came at seven in the morning, jolting me from sleep.
"Shay, you need to see this." Marcus's voice crackled with excitement through the phone. "Get to Fifth and Main. Now."
I threw on clothes and drove through the early morning traffic, my heart hammering. When I turned the corner onto Main Street, I slammed on the brakes.
There I was. Fifty feet tall, draped in flowing emerald fabric, my face radiant with confidence I barely recognized as my own. The billboard read: "CURVES THAT COMMAND ATTENTION - BELLA FASHION."
A car honked behind me. I pulled over, staring up at my own image. Three months ago, I'd been stirring pasta sauce while Chase compared me to his mistress. Now my face smiled down at the entire city.
My phone buzzed. A text from Marcus: "Congratulations. This is just the beginning."
I drove home in a daze, but the euphoria shattered the moment I walked through the door. Chase stood in the kitchen, his face twisted with rage.
"What the hell is that thing?" he snarled, jabbing his finger toward the window as if the billboard were visible from our house.
"It's my job," I said quietly, setting my keys on the counter.
"Your job?" His voice rose to a shout. "Do you have any idea what you've done to me? To our family?"
I poured myself coffee with steady hands, though my insides churned. "What are you talking about?"
"The Hendersons saw it. My biggest clients, Shay. They called this morning asking if that was my wife on the billboard." He ran his hands through his hair, pacing like a caged animal. "I had to pretend I didn't know what they were talking about."
"You were embarrassed of me."
"Of course I was embarrassed!" The words exploded from him. "My wife, half-naked on a billboard for every pervert in the city to stare at. What does that say about me?"
I turned to face him, something cold and hard settling in my chest. "It says your wife has a career. It says she's successful."
"Successful?" He laughed bitterly. "Taking your clothes off for money isn't success, Shay. It's desperation."
"I kept my clothes on. It was a fashion shoot."
"Don't split hairs with me." His eyes narrowed. "This ends now. You call them today and quit."
The old me would have nodded, apologized, promised to make it right. But that woman was gone, buried somewhere between his cruelty and my newfound strength.
"No."
The word hung in the air between us. Chase's face went white, then red.
"What did you say?"
"I said no." My voice grew stronger. "I'm not quitting."
He stepped closer, his presence looming. "You'll do what I tell you to do. I'm your husband."
"And I'm your wife, not your employee." I met his glare without flinching. "This is the first time in years I've felt proud of myself. I'm not giving that up."
"Proud?" He spat. "You should be ashamed. A mother, displaying herself like some common—"
"Like what, Chase?" The words came out sharp as glass. "Like some common what?"
He clenched his jaw, smart enough not to finish that sentence.
"I'm keeping my job," I said firmly. "End of discussion."
That afternoon, my phone rang. Chase's mother.
"Shay, dear, I think we need to talk." Her voice dripped false sweetness. "About this... modeling situation."
I closed my eyes. "Hello, Margaret."
"I'm concerned about you, sweetheart. And about Ethan. What kind of example are you setting?"
The calls started coming daily after that. Always around dinner time, always when Chase was home to hear. Margaret's voice would fill the kitchen through the speakerphone, listing my failures as a wife and mother.
"A good woman puts her family first," she'd say. "She doesn't seek attention from strange men."
"She doesn't embarrass her husband in front of his colleagues."
"She certainly doesn't parade around half-dressed for money."
Chase would nod along, his arms crossed, a satisfied smirk playing at his lips. But I stopped defending myself. I'd learned to let her words wash over me like rain.
Meanwhile, Evie's social media posts grew more pointed. Photos of herself with captions like "Confidence comes from within, not from desperate attempts at relevance." And "Some women age gracefully. Others just age."
Each post had thousands of likes, hundreds of comments calling her "goals" and "queen." I screenshotted every one.
But the real blow came when my phone buzzed with a notification from the modeling agency. The Bella Fashion campaign had exploded. They wanted me for their national campaign.
The contract sat on my kitchen table: $50,000 for six months of work.
I stared at the number. Chase made $8,000 a month at his firm. This single contract would pay me more than he earned in half a year.
When he came home and saw the papers, his face went ashen.
"This can't be right," he whispered, scanning the figures.
"It is." I signed my name with a flourish.
For the first time in our marriage, I was worth more than him. And we both knew it.
You may also like





