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The wife I forgot to love Novel Cover

The wife I forgot to love

She loved him completely. He asked for a divorce anyway. Helena Graves spent two years being the perfect wife for a man who had already chosen someone else. When Damian handed her the divorce papers she signed them, packed her things, and walked out without a single word of protest. No begging. No tears. Just the quiet dignity of a woman who finally understood she had been loving someone who was not fully there. But walking away was only the beginning. Now Helena is rebuilding. A career she buried for a marriage. A life that is finally, completely her own. And the world is starting to notice her in ways her husband never did. The problem is so is Damian. He chose Camila. He was certain. But certainty has a way of cracking when the woman you underestimated starts becoming someone impossible to ignore. And Camila, polished and calculating, will do anything to make sure the door between them stays closed forever. One woman rising. One man unravelling. And one question neither of them can escape. Can you earn back the love you forgot you had?
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Chapter 17

The production ran Tuesday to Friday that week.

Helena had settled into the rhythm of it the way she settled into most things that mattered. Quietly and completely. She knew where to find her corner between takes. She knew which crew members to ask for what. She knew that Jordan liked silence before the first take of the day and that the best time to ask her anything was immediately after a scene went well and not immediately before one.

She was learning the language of the place. That was how she thought about it. Every set had its own language and she was becoming fluent in this one faster than she had expected.

Adrian was there again on Tuesday.

She noticed him when she arrived. He was at the catering table talking to one of the sound crew, gesturing with his coffee cup about something that was making the other man laugh. He had that quality she had noticed the first time. The ease of someone who took up exactly the right amount of space and not a fraction more.

He saw her come in and lifted his chin in the brief acknowledging way of people who have spoken once and are now on nodding terms. Helena nodded back and went to find Jordan.

They did not speak again until the lunch break.

Helena was sitting outside on the low wall at the side of the warehouse where a few of the crew came to eat when it was not raining. She had her lunch and her script and the particular quiet of someone who was content in their own company. The sun was doing something half-hearted with the clouds and the air had that cool sharp quality of a city morning that had not yet decided to warm up.

Adrian came out and sat on the wall a few feet from her.

"You do not have to sit here," he said. "There are chairs inside."

"I know," Helena said. "I like it out here."

"So do I." He opened whatever he was eating and looked out at the narrow street behind the warehouse. A delivery truck was doing a slow careful reversal into a loading bay across the road. They watched it for a moment together.

"How is the scene going," he said. "The one from Monday."

"Jordan wants to run it again this afternoon," Helena said. "She says it is good but there is one more layer in it and she wants to find it."

"There is always one more layer with Jordan," Adrian said. "She once made me do seventeen takes of a two line scene because she said she could see me thinking."

Helena looked at him. "Seventeen."

"Seventeen," he confirmed. "By take twelve I genuinely could not remember what thinking felt like. Which was apparently the point." He paused. "Take fourteen was the one she used."

Helena almost laughed. It was the second time he had almost made her laugh and she noticed that again the way she had noticed it the first time. Not with alarm. Just with the quiet interest of someone filing something away.

"Where did you train," she said.

"Formally you mean." He considered this. "Three years at a conservatory. Then a long time doing things that were not very good in rooms that were not very full. Then slowly things that were better." He looked at her. "You."

"No formal training," she said.

"I know," he said. "Jordan told me."

"Jordan tells you a lot of things about me," Helena said.

"Jordan talks about work constantly," he said. "You are work right now. That is not personal it is just how she operates." He looked at the delivery truck which had completed its reversal and was now being unloaded by two men in high visibility jackets. "She also said you do not have formal training the way some people say it as a criticism and some people say it as a fact. She says it the second way."

Helena was quiet for a moment.

"What does that mean practically," she said.

"It means you did not learn any bad habits," Adrian said simply. "Formal training gives you tools but it also gives you ways of manufacturing things that should not be manufactured. You do not have those. What you do is direct because there is nothing in the way of it." He looked at her. "That is rarer than the training."

Helena looked at her lunch.

She thought about two years of performing contentment at a kitchen table. Of manufacturing a version of herself that fit inside a space that was slowly getting smaller. Of saying fine and meaning something else entirely.

Turns out she had been training for a long time.

She did not say that out loud.

"What are you working on in your scenes," she said instead.

And Adrian told her. And she listened properly the way she listened to things that interested her. And he talked about his character with the particular animated focus of someone who loved the work and was not embarrassed about loving it. And she asked questions and he answered them and asked his own and she answered those.

By the time the break was over they had talked for forty minutes and it had felt like ten.

She stood up and brushed off her jacket.

"Same time tomorrow," Adrian said. Not a question. Not quite a statement. Just a thing sitting in the air between them.

Helena picked up her script.

"Maybe," she said.

She went back inside.

Jordan was waiting with notes and a look that said the afternoon was going to be long and productive and there was no point in arguing with either of those things. Helena put everything else aside and went to work.

The afternoon scene ran four times before Jordan found the layer she was looking for. Helena did not find it by thinking about it. She found it by stopping thinking about it entirely and just standing in the moment and letting the scene do what it needed to do. By the fourth take something opened up in the last thirty seconds that had not been there before. A quality of stillness that was not performed stillness but actual stillness. The kind that comes when a person has nothing left to hide behind.

Jordan called cut.

She looked at the monitor for a long moment.

Then she said, "That is the one."

Four words. Helena stood on the mark and breathed and felt the particular satisfaction of having found a thing she did not know how to look for directly. You could not chase that quality. You could only create the conditions for it and then get out of its way.

She packed up at the end of the day slowly. Crew were moving around her breaking things down and she moved through it quietly gathering her things.

Adrian was near the exit pulling on his jacket when she walked past.

"The last take," he said without looking up from his zip. "Whatever you did differently in that one. That was it."

Helena stopped. "You were watching."

"I was waiting for my car," he said. "Hard not to watch." He looked up. "Jordan was right about you."

Helena did not know what to say to that so she said nothing.

Adrian smiled briefly. The easy uncomplicated smile she was getting used to. "Goodnight Helena."

"Goodnight," she said.

She walked out into the evening.

She was good at that now. Going to work and meaning it. Finishing a day and feeling like she had left something real behind her.

It was one of the best things she had learned about herself lately and she did not intend to stop.

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