
My Husband Threw Me Away for His First Love
Chapter 2
I stood on the sidewalk outside a sleek glass building in Midtown. The wind whipped my hair across my face. My phone buzzed in my bare hand. It was an email from the hiring manager of the boutique design firm. *Interview canceled. Position filled.*
I stared at the glowing screen. My appointment was in thirty minutes. It was the third cancellation this week.
I opened my banking app. A red banner flashed across the top of my screen. *Accounts frozen. Pending audit.*
I didn't panic. I didn't even frown. I just smiled a little. The air was freezing, but my chest felt remarkably calm. Irene was moving fast. She was the future Mrs. Nichols now. She had the name, the ring, and the power. She didn't want me anywhere near her new life. She wanted me erased.
Later that night, I sat at Rosie’s kitchen island. She paced the floor like a caged cat. Her heels clicked sharply against the hardwood.
“She’s systematically wiping you out,” Rosie snapped. Her knuckles were white around her wine glass. “Your bank accounts are locked. Your contacts won't return emails. I made a few calls today. Irene is using her new social clout to blacklist you everywhere in Manhattan.”
I took a sip of my black tea. It was warm and soothing. “I know.”
Rosie stopped and stared at me. Her eyes were wide. “Alyssa, she’s not just punishing you. She’s starving you out. She’s making sure you can’t come back.”
“I know,” I said again. I set my mug down and met her gaze perfectly. “That’s exactly what I’m counting on.”
Rosie blinked. The anger drained from her face, replaced by a slow dawn of realization. “You want her to do this.”
“If Irene wants to play the vicious queen, I will let her,” I said quietly. “Kane thinks she’s a saint. He thinks she’s the girl with the Band-Aid from his childhood. I need him to see her claws. But first, he needs to see me bleed.”
Two days later, I took a cheap bus to upstate New York. With no money and no connections, I took the only job I could find. It was a nameless extra role on a low-budget independent film.
The cold was brutal. The wind howled through the bare trees, cutting right to my bones. I stood in the snow in a threadbare 1920s wool coat. It offered absolutely no warmth. My toes were completely numb inside my thin boots. I thought about the heated marble floors of the Nichols penthouse. I pushed the memory away.
At noon, a PA handed out cheap boxed lunches. I sat on a frozen wooden bench alone. I ate a cold turkey sandwich wrapped in stiff plastic. My hands were red and chapped.
Diana Whitmore, the director, walked past with a heavy clipboard. She was a sharp-eyed woman wrapped in a thick parka. She stopped. She looked down at me for a long time.
“You don’t belong here,” she said bluntly. Her eyes scanned my posture. “You hold yourself like someone who runs things. Not an extra freezing for minimum wage.”
I gave her a polite, empty smile. “I’m just happy to work, Ms. Whitmore.”
Diana frowned. She wanted to ask more. She sensed the lie. But my face gave her nothing to work with. She shook her head and walked away.
I took another bite of my cold sandwich. At night, I shared a dingy motel room with three other extras. The heater barely rattled out any warm air. The shower was always cold. I slept in my coat. But I didn't complain. I endured it. I waited.
During a ten-minute break the next day, I walked behind the catering tent. The snow crunched loudly under my boots. I pulled out my phone and dialed Marcus Chen.
Marcus used to be my manager in the entertainment industry. He was a good man. He still cared about me. More importantly, he still talked to people who talked to Kane’s inner circle.
“Alyssa?” Marcus answered. He sounded shocked. “I’ve been trying to reach you all week. I heard about the design firms. What is going on?”
I kept my voice low. I let a tiny, perfectly calculated tremor slip into my tone. “It’s fine, Marcus. I’m fine.”
“You don’t sound fine. Where are you?”
“Upstate,” I said softly. I rubbed my frozen hands together. “I’m working as an extra on Diana Whitmore’s new film. It’s a bit cold, but it’s honest work.”
“An extra?” Marcus gasped. “Alyssa, you’re brilliant. You shouldn't be freezing on an indie set. Let me make some calls. I can get you something better.”
“No, please,” I urged gently. “Don’t tell anyone. I don't want Kane to know. I just wanted to hear a friendly voice.”
“Alyssa…”
“I have to go back to set, Marcus. They’re calling me.”
I hung up before he could argue. I slipped the phone back into my pocket.
I mapped it out in my head. Marcus would tell his partner tonight. His partner would tell David, Kane’s lead publicist, over drinks tomorrow. David would tell Kane immediately. It would take exactly forty-eight hours.
Irene thought she was destroying me. She didn't realize she was just building my stage.
I turned around and walked back out into the biting wind. The snow was falling harder now, sticking to my eyelashes. I took my spot in the background. I lowered my head, wrapped my thin coat tighter around my shoulders, and waited for the show to begin.
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