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My Husband’s Mistress Bought Our Wedding Night Novel Cover

My Husband’s Mistress Bought Our Wedding Night

The champagne was cold and the room was perfect. Three hundred people in black tie, the kind of crowd that gets photographed from the waist up and quoted in Page Six by morning. Crystal chandeliers throwing light across the Plaza's Grand Ballroom like something out of a movie. White roses everywhere — Kian's family had ordered white roses, which I thought was a little on the nose for a woman being sold into a contract, but nobody asked me. I stood at the microphone in a dress that cost more than my first car and smiled at people whose names I had memorized from a briefing sheet my mother emailed me three days ago. The Hargroves. The Delacroix family. Senator Whitfield and his wife, whose first name I kept blanking on. I smiled at all of them. I had been smiling for four hours.
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Chapter 4

The show was called Rising Star, which I thought was a little obvious, but nobody in reality television was paying me to name things yet.

I entered as contestant number seven. No backstory package about my marriage, no tearful confessional about starting over — I had made that very clear to the producers before I signed anything. What they got was my name, my age, and a performance. That was the deal.

My first number was a song I had arranged myself. Stripped it down to an acoustic guitar and my voice, cut everything that wasn't necessary. Three minutes and forty seconds. I had run it so many times in the Silver Lake studio that I stopped hearing it as a song and started hearing it as a series of technical problems I had already solved.

I walked out under the lights and I sang it.

The audience vote came back highest of the episode. Diane texted me one word: *Problem.*

I was in the green room, still in stage makeup, when the production assistant found me.

'We just confirmed the celebrity investor panel for next week's taping,' she said, and she had the specific energy of someone delivering news they are not sure how to deliver. 'Kian Wagner is one of the judges.'

I looked at her in the mirror.

'Okay,' I said.

She waited, like there was supposed to be more.

There wasn't.

I had thirty minutes before the next taping. I touched up my eyeliner, checked my notes on the song I was performing, and walked onto the stage.

---

The second episode, I did a piece that I had been building for three weeks. It was harder than the first — more range, more stillness required in the middle section, the kind of performance that only works if you stop trying to make it work. Paul had drilled that into me. *Stop deciding. Just be in it.*

I was in it.

I knew it was landing from the first eight bars. The room had that particular quality of silence that means people have forgotten to check their phones. I finished and the applause came up fast and loud.

Then Kian hit the buzzer.

The sound cut through the room like something physical. I stood at the microphone and watched the red light on his panel go dark and I kept my face exactly where it was.

'Technical inconsistency in the bridge,' he said. 'The pitch drifted in the second phrase.'

The judge to his left — a veteran producer named Marcus who had mixed albums I had grown up listening to — turned and looked at Kian with an expression that was almost impressed by its own confusion. The judge to Kian's right said nothing but wrote something on her notepad.

I thanked the panel. I walked off stage. In the wings, I stood for exactly ten seconds with my eyes closed, and then I went to find water.

He did it again in episode three. *Breath support inconsistent in the final chorus.* Marcus actually laughed — not meanly, just the involuntary laugh of a man who could not locate the problem being described. The audience murmured. The clip of Kian's face when he hit the buzzer — jaw tight, eyes forward, the particular blankness of a man performing certainty — started circulating on social media before the episode finished airing.

I watched it on my phone in the parking lot afterward.

I looked fine in it. That was the thing. I looked like someone who had heard worse and kept moving, because I had, and I had.

---

Episode four was live.

Twelve million viewers. I knew the number because Myles had told me that morning, not to pressure me but because he thought I should know the size of the room I was walking into. That was how he operated — full information, no cushioning, complete trust that I could handle it.

I performed first. I will not describe it here because the performance was not the story of that episode. The story of that episode was what happened at the judges' table afterward.

Kian opened his mouth to speak. He had his notepad in front of him and his pen in his hand and the particular composure of a man who has decided in advance what he is going to say.

Myles got there first.

He didn't raise his voice. That was the thing that made the clip go viral within the hour — he never raised his voice. He sat in his chair with his elbows on the table and he took Kian's critique from episode two and episode three and he dismantled both of them, point by point, in the conversational tone of someone explaining something to a person who is capable of understanding it if they choose to. He cited timestamps. He cited the audio mix. He cited Marcus, who nodded once without being asked.

'If there's a technical inconsistency in that performance,' Myles said, 'I'd genuinely like someone to show me where it is. Because I've been doing this for twelve years and I can't find it.'

The room was very quiet.

Kian's pen was still in his hand. He set it down on the notepad. His jaw was tight. His face gave nothing away, which was its own kind of answer.

The audience started clapping before the segment was over.

---

The post-episode press line was short — four reporters, two cameras, the standard questions. I had done enough of these by now to know the rhythm.

The third reporter was the one who asked it.

'Paisley, how does it feel to be caught between two powerful men like this? Wagner on the panel, Thompson as your mentor — does that dynamic affect your focus?'

I looked at the camera. Not at the reporter — at the lens, the way Gwen had taught me, the way I had practiced until it stopped feeling like a confrontation.

'I'm here to work,' I said. 'That's all.'

The reporter waited for more.

There wasn't more. That was the whole answer.

I found out later the clip hit two million views before midnight. My follower count tripled by morning. The comments were full of people who had, until that week, known me only as a footnote in someone else's story — *Wagner's contractual wife, the one he left at the engagement party* — and were now, for the first time, looking directly at me.

I was in the Silver Lake studio at eleven PM when Myles texted: *They're talking about you. Not him. You.*

I read it. I put my phone face-down on the floor.

Then I ran the song again from the top.

I had seventy-eight million dollars left to earn, and the room was finally paying attention.

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