
My Husband’s Mistress Livestreamed His Betrayal at the Gala
Chapter 4
The lease on the loft in Tribeca cost more than my first car, but the echo in the empty room sounded like potential. There were no mahogany desks here, no portraits of dead ancestors judging my productivity. Just me, a folding table, and the glow of my laptop screen at 1:00 AM.
"You're squinting," a voice came from the doorway.
Caleb walked in, balancing three cartons of takeout and a bottle of cheap wine. He kicked the door shut with his heel, the sound echoing off the bare brick walls. He didn't look at the lack of furniture; he looked at me.
"I secured the sustainable fashion account," I said, the words tasting sweeter than any vintage champagne I'd ever sipped at a Bryant gala. "And the non-profit. They didn't want Mrs. Bryant. They wanted Jenna."
Caleb set the food on the floor and sat cross-legged opposite me. He pulled a napkin from the bag and a charcoal pencil from his pocket. "Then they need a logo that doesn't scream 'corporate merger.'"
He sketched while I ate, his hand moving with a fluid confidence that mesmerized me. In three minutes, he turned the initials 'JS' into something architectural—strong lines, open spaces. It looked like a structure that could weather a storm.
"It's perfect," I whispered.
"It's just a start," he said, his eyes locking onto mine. "Like us."
***
The invitation to the unspoken mandatory event of the season—the Titan Industry Awards—sat on my desk like a subpoena. Maximus had sent a text earlier: *Wear the blue gown. Be at the entrance at 7:00 sharp. Don't embarrass the firm.*
I arrived at 7:15.
I stepped out of the hired town car, not in the demure blue silk Maximus preferred, but in crimson. It was a violent, unapologetic red that hugged every curve and clashed beautifully with the red carpet. The flashbulbs erupted like a lightning storm.
Maximus was waiting at the top of the stairs, checking his watch. When he saw me, his jaw tightened so hard I could see the muscle feathering beneath his skin. He took a step down, his hand extending to guide me—to control me.
"You're late," he hissed through a frozen smile, his fingers digging into my elbow. "And you're wearing red. You know I hate red."
I pulled my arm away. The movement was small, but under the scrutiny of three hundred cameras, it was a declaration of war.
"I'm not here as your wife, Maximus," I said, my voice carrying over the shutter clicks. "I'm here as the CEO of JS Communications."
A reporter thrust a microphone toward us. "Mrs. Bryant! Are the rumors true? Is there trouble in paradise?"
I turned to the camera, chin lifted. "I can't speak to paradise. But I can tell you that I am focusing entirely on my new business and my freedom."
Maximus looked as if I’d slapped him. He opened his mouth to spin the narrative, to charm the lens, but a commotion at the security checkpoint cut him off.
"He loves me! Let me through!"
Sapphire Chavez was trying to breach the velvet rope. She looked frantic, her mascara running, screaming Maximus's name like a prayer. Security guards swarmed her, lifting her off the ground as she kicked and shrieked.
The cameras swung away from us to capture the mess. Maximus stood alone in his tuxedo, the master of the universe looking suddenly small, abandoned, and inextricably linked to the chaos. I didn't stay to watch. I turned my back on him and walked into the venue alone.
***
The high of the gala crashed the moment I opened my apartment door the next morning.
Caleb was standing in my living room. He wasn't smiling. On the counter lay the *New York Post*. The headline screamed: *WAR OF THE ROSES: JENNA BRYANT DECLARES INDEPENDENCE WHILE MISTRESS MELTDOWN ROCKS GALA.*
He looked up, his eyes dark with a mixture of hurt and realization. "You didn't tell me who you were."
"I told you I was Jenna," I said, dropping my keys. They clattered loudly in the silence.
"You're Jenna Bryant," he corrected, his voice flat. "The wife of a billionaire. The center of a media circus. I thought... I thought we were just two people starting over. Am I just a prop, Jenna? Something to make him jealous?"
The accusation hit me harder than Sapphire’s insults ever could. My knees gave out, and I sank onto the sofa, the armor I’d worn for ten years finally shattering.
"No," I choked out, tears burning my eyes. "I didn't tell you because I wanted to be just Jenna. For once in my life, I wanted someone to look at me and not see the money, or the scandal, or the husband."
I looked up at him, letting him see the terror I hid from the cameras. "I was terrified that if you knew the mess I come with, you'd walk away. I'm not a prop, Caleb. I'm a woman trying to survive a burning building."
Caleb stared at me for a long moment. The tension in his shoulders slowly unspooled. He walked over and sat beside me, not touching me yet, just sharing the space.
"I don't care about the money," he said quietly. "And I don't care about the ex. But I can't build anything real on a foundation of secrets."
He reached out, his rough, warm hand covering my trembling one. "If we do this, Jenna, I need all of it. The messy parts too."
I turned my hand over, interlacing our fingers. "Okay," I whispered. "No more masks."
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