
My Husband Let His Mistress Destroy My Reputation
Chapter 3
The morning sunlight streamed through the bedroom window, casting a golden glow across the empty side of the bed. Paxton stretched lazily, his hand reaching instinctively for me—only to find cold sheets.
"Ashlyn?" he called, his voice still rough with sleep. "Breakfast?"
Silence answered him.
I imagined him sitting up, rubbing his eyes, expecting to smell coffee and hear the sizzle of eggs in the kitchen. Instead, he found only emptiness.
He padded barefoot to the kitchen, probably expecting to see me there, measuring ingredients for his favorite smoothie. The one I'd perfected over months—just the right ratio of protein powder, spinach, and berries.
"Babe?" His voice carried a note of irritation now. "Ashlyn!"
The apartment remained silent. He'd notice my key on the counter then, placed deliberately beside the meal prep containers I'd filled yesterday morning.
I could picture his face—not worried or hurt, but annoyed. Inconvenienced.
His phone buzzed as he scrolled through his contacts. Marcus Chen, his business partner at the dance studio.
"She's throwing a tantrum," he'd text. "Ran back to her parents. She'll be back in a few days when she cools off."
Marcus would reply with something cautious, something that suggested this might be more serious than Paxton wanted to admit.
But Paxton wouldn't listen. He never did.
---
A week passed in the comfort of my parents' home. Seven days of peaceful mornings, uninterrupted nights, and meals eaten without criticism or indifference.
The doorbell rang on Thursday afternoon. I was curled up on the couch with a book—something I hadn't had time for in months.
"I'll get it," I called, setting my novel aside.
A delivery man stood on the porch, holding an enormous bouquet of flowers—roses, lilies, and baby's breath arranged in an ostentatious crystal vase.
"Delivery for Ashlyn Brooks," he said cheerfully.
I took the heavy arrangement, my heart skipping despite myself. Maybe Paxton had finally understood. Maybe he'd apologized sincerely.
The card read: "Stop acting childish. -P"
No "I'm sorry." No "I miss you." Just an order disguised as an apology.
Something hot and fierce surged through me. This wasn't remorse—it was manipulation. Even now, he couldn't see his part in this.
I walked straight to the kitchen trash bin and dropped the entire arrangement inside, crystal vase and all. The sound of shattering glass was oddly satisfying.
"Ashlyn?" Mom appeared in the doorway. "What happened?"
"Nothing," I said, wiping my hands on a dish towel. "Just some garbage."
---
Across town, Eliana Woods sauntered into Paxton's dance studio, her designer heels clicking against the hardwood floor. She carried a bag from Sushi Zen—Paxton's favorite.
"I brought lunch," she announced, finding him alone in the office. "Thought you might be hungry."
Paxton looked up from his computer, where he'd been scrolling through social media. No posts from me. No messages.
"Eliana." He smiled, leaning back in his chair. "This is unexpected."
She perched on the edge of his desk, deliberately close. "I heard your girlfriend ran away. Such a shame."
"Ashlyn's just... taking some time," he said, though his eyes followed Eliana's movements as she bent to adjust her skirt.
"Such a boring small-town girl," Eliana said dismissively. "You deserve someone more exciting. Someone who understands your world."
Paxton laughed, but something twisted in his chest. "She's not that bad."
"Oh, please." Eliana rolled her eyes. "You were always complaining about her. How she couldn't keep up with your schedule, how she embarrassed you at events."
He frowned slightly. "I never said she embarrassed me."
"Whatever." Eliana waved her hand. "Forget her. We have more important things to discuss. Like our next session."
She leaned closer, her perfume enveloping him. "I was thinking... private lessons. Just you and me."
Paxton's pulse quickened, but then his gaze fell on the chaotic stack of papers on his desk—bills, schedules, competition entries. Ashlyn had always organized everything so neatly.
"Can you help me sort through these?" he asked, gesturing to the mess.
Eliana's smile faltered. "Why would I do that?"
"It would really help me out," he said, already imagining her efficient hands sorting papers the way I used to.
She stood abruptly. "I didn't come here to be your secretary, Paxton."
"But Ashlyn always—" He stopped himself, realizing what he'd been about to say.
Eliana's eyes narrowed. "Maybe that's why she left."
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