
The Viral Revenge
Chapter 1
The studio lights glared too bright.
I could feel their heat on my skin, could see the red light on the camera blinking like a warning I should have heeded.
But I sat there anyway, perched on the edge of our gray couch, my hands folded in my lap like a good girlfriend. Like the perfect girlfriend Marcus had been molding me into for two years.
"Real Talk Thursday" had become his signature. Forty-seven thousand people were watching live, their comments scrolling past faster than I could read. Heart emojis. Fire emojis. "You're so brave, Marcus." "We love your honesty."
Marcus leaned forward, his expression carefully arranged into what I now recognized as his "vulnerable" face. The slight furrow between his brows. The way his voice dropped half an octave, intimate and confessional.
"I need to talk about something really difficult today," he said, and my stomach twisted. We hadn't discussed any special segment. "It's about my relationship. About Selene."
He turned to look at me, and the camera followed. Forty-seven thousand pairs of eyes suddenly pinned me in place.
"I love you," he said, and the words felt like a threat. "But I can't keep doing this. You've become... toxic. Controlling. Jealous of my success."
I what??
-
The words hit me like physical blows.
My mouth opened, but no sound emerged.
"I've been walking on eggshells for months," Marcus continued, his voice cracking perfectly on cue. "Trying to be what you need while staying authentic to my community. But I can't sacrifice my mental health anymore. I need to prioritize myself."
The comments exploded. "Oh my god." "I knew something was off." "You deserve better, Marcus." "Red flag girlfriend."
I wanted to scream that this was a lie, that he'd never mentioned any of this before, that just this morning we'd laughed over coffee and he'd kissed my forehead and told me he loved me. But my throat had closed completely. My hands were shaking in my lap. I felt like I was watching myself from outside my body, a painting hung in a gallery for everyone to critique.
"This isn't easy," Marcus said, and actual tears were sliding down his cheeks now. "But honesty is what my community deserves. What we all deserve. I'm ending this relationship. Not out of anger, but out of love for myself and respect for the truth."
The livestream chat was a blur. Supportive messages for Marcus. A few confused questions about my side. Mostly condemnation. The narrative was already written, and I hadn't spoken a single word.
"I'm asking for privacy during this difficult time," Marcus concluded, looking directly into the camera with wounded eyes. "Thank you all for your support. It means everything."
He ended the stream, but I remained frozen on the couch, still visible in the frame for those final seconds before the screen went black. Two point three million views would see that image of me: the toxic girlfriend, devastated and exposed.
Marcus stood immediately, his tears evaporating like they'd never existed. He pulled out his phone, already scrolling through comments, a satisfied smile playing at his lips.
"Marcus," I finally managed, my voice barely a whisper. "What did you just do?"
He didn't even look up. "What I should have done weeks ago. This is good content, Selene. Really good content."
I stumbled to our bedroom and locked the door. Behind it, I could hear Marcus on a call, his voice bright and animated.
"Rachel, did you see the numbers? This is insane... Yeah, we can pivot to the healing journey narrative next week... No, she'll be fine. She knew what she was getting into when she dated someone with a platform."
She knew what she was getting into.
Had I? Had I known that love would become performance, that my private pain would become his public triumph? That the person I trusted most would script my humiliation like a season finale?
Hours passed. The bedroom grew dark. My phone buzzed incessantly with notifications until the battery died. When I finally emerged, Marcus was sitting on the couch, still on his phone.
"You have three days to move out," he said without looking up. His voice was cold, transactional. "I need to start filming my recovery content, and having you here ruins the aesthetic."
I moved through the apartment like a ghost, gathering clothes, art supplies, toiletries. My hands operated on autopilot while my mind spiraled. How had I not seen this coming? How had I been so blind?
Then I saw it. Marcus's iPad on the kitchen counter, screen still illuminated. A notes app was open, and the title made my blood freeze: "Breakup Stream - DRAFT."
I picked it up with trembling hands. The script was detailed. Every beat, every pause, every tear calculated. "Look down here, vulnerable." "Pause for effect." "Invoke community support." The date at the top: five days before tonight.
Five days. He'd planned this for five days while kissing me goodnight, while holding my hand, while telling me he loved me.
Something inside me cracked, then hardened. My hands steadied as I photographed every page of the script. Then I packed the last of my things and left.
Alex opened their door at 2 AM without questions, just pulled me into a hug while I finally let myself break. But even as I sobbed into their shoulder, a different part of my mind was already working. Already planning. Already seeing the exhibition that would rise from these ashes.
Marcus wanted to make art out of my pain? Fine. Let me show him what a real artist could do.
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