Chapter 2

The hospital discharged me three days later. My face was bandaged, and the doctor's words about permanent scarring echoed in my mind as I took a rideshare back to the Malibu house Jackson and I shared but rarely occupied together. I hadn't heard from him since that devastating phone call. Not a visit. Not a text. Nothing.

The oceanfront property should have felt like paradise, with its floor-to-ceiling windows and panoramic views. Instead, it felt like a beautiful, hollow tomb where I'd buried my dreams and self-worth. I touched the bandage on my cheek gently as I walked through the door, steeling myself for what needed to be done.

The house was quiet except for Jackson's voice drifting from his home office. He was on a call, probably with his agent or director, his tone animated in a way it never was with me anymore. I waited in the kitchen, clutching my leather tote bag containing the divorce papers my lawyer had prepared overnight.

When his call ended, I walked toward the office. Each step felt like moving through molasses, my body resisting what my mind had already decided. Jackson didn't look up when I entered, his attention fixed on his phone as he scrolled through what looked like script pages.

"I need you to sign these," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.

He glanced up briefly, his eyes barely registering my bandaged face before returning to his screen. "What are they?"

"Divorce papers."

That got his attention, but only for a moment. He frowned slightly, as if I'd mentioned a minor inconvenience like a scheduling conflict.

"Now isn't a good time, Sophia. I'm prepping for tomorrow's shoot."

"It never is a good time," I replied, dropping the papers on his desk. "But I'm done waiting for you to see me."

He sighed, the sound heavy with impatience rather than regret. "Is this about the hospital thing? Look, I was in the middle of a crucial scene—"

"This is about four years of being your secret," I cut him off. "This is about you telling me that being attacked with acid is 'the price of being your wife.' This is about me finally understanding my worth."

He barely seemed to register my words, his eyes already drifting back to his phone as it buzzed with a new notification. Without looking at the papers, he reached for a pen.

"If this is what you want," he muttered, scrawling his signature across the marked lines without reading a single clause.

I watched him sign away our marriage with the same casual disregard he might give to an autograph for a fan. The finality of it should have devastated me, but instead, I felt something unexpected: relief.

"That's it?" I asked, gathering the papers.

He shrugged, already absorbed in his phone again. "That's it. Are we done here? I have lines to memorize."

I left without another word, knowing he wouldn't notice my absence any more than he'd noticed my presence these past years.

* * *

The next morning, I listed our West Hollywood condo for sale. The realtor seemed surprised at my asking price—well below market value—but I needed a quick sale and clean break. I systematically deleted contacts from my phone: Jackson's publicist, his manager, the network of industry people who had known about our marriage but participated in the charade of my invisibility.

Chloe Garcia was the only name I kept. We'd met years ago when we were both struggling actresses. Now she was an assistant at one of the major talent agencies, and from our occasional lunches, I knew she was as disillusioned with the industry's predatory practices as I was.

I found a modest loft in a converted industrial building downtown, far from the glossy Hills where Jackson's world revolved. The space was raw, unfinished—like me. I moved in with just my clothes, my laptop, and the leather tote bag that had become my armor. Each morning, I traced the silvery scar forming on my cheek, a permanent reminder of what blind devotion had cost me.

Three weeks after signing the papers, I called Chloe.

"I need someone who understands the industry but hates what it's become," I told her over coffee in my half-furnished loft. "I'm starting a talent agency. One that actually protects its clients."

Chloe's eyes widened. "You're serious?"

"Dead serious. I've secured investors. I have the capital." I didn't mention that the capital came from selling the condo and liquidating the joint investment account Jackson had forgotten existed. "I need someone sharp, someone ethical. You in?"

She didn't hesitate. "When do we start?"

The next day, we toured a vacant office space in a mid-rise building. The previous tenant had left suddenly, unable to meet rent after losing their biggest client. It seemed fitting—a space abandoned by failure that we would transform into success.

"Chen & Co. Talent Agency," I said, standing in the empty reception area, imagining what it could become. "Where talent is valued, not exploited."

Chloe nodded, already making notes on her tablet. "We'll need to poach some clients, carefully. Start with the ones being underserved."

As we stood there planning our empire, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years: purpose. The acid had scarred my face but clarified my vision. Jackson Hayes had made me invisible, but in that invisibility, I had seen everything—every exploitation, every abuse of power, every broken promise. Now I would use that knowledge to build something that mattered.

What I didn't know then was how quickly our paths would cross again, or how different I would be when they did.

Chapter 3

Two years after walking away from Jackson, I sat at my desk in the downtown office of Chen & Co., reviewing a file that had landed on my desk that morning. The name on the cover caught my attention immediately: Ryan Mitchell.

I remembered him from my acting days—talented, principled, and completely blacklisted after refusing to play by Hollywood's corrupt rules. His headshot showed a man with kind eyes and a genuine smile, nothing like the manufactured charm I'd grown accustomed to in Jackson's world.

"He specifically asked for you," Chloe said, leaning against my doorframe. "Said he heard what you're building here and wants to be part of it."

I tapped my silver pen against the desk, a habit I'd developed when deep in thought. "Set up a meeting. Tomorrow if possible."

* * *

The Silver Lake café was worlds away from the Beverly Hills spot where I'd been attacked. No pretension, no paparazzi lurking in bushes—just mismatched furniture, local art on the walls, and coffee that didn't cost half a day's salary.

Ryan arrived five minutes early, dressed in a simple blue button-down that brought out the intensity of his eyes. He spotted me immediately, his gaze briefly registering the silvery scar on my cheek before meeting my eyes without pity or discomfort—just recognition.

"Thank you for meeting me," he said, sliding into the chair across from me. "I've been following what you're doing. It's... revolutionary."

I smiled, still not entirely comfortable with praise. "Revolutionary might be stretching it. We're just trying to do things differently."

"In this industry, different is revolutionary." He wrapped his hands around his coffee mug. "Three agencies have approached me in the last month. I turned them all down."

"But you called us," I observed, my pen tapping rhythmically against my notepad.

Ryan's eyes followed the movement of my pen before returning to my face. "Because you understand what it costs to stand up for yourself in this town."

Something in his voice made me stop tapping. "Tell me what happened to you."

He took a deep breath. "I was up for the lead in Morrow's last film. Career-making role. Final callback went great, but afterward, Morrow invited me to a 'private party' to 'seal the deal.' When I got there..." His jaw tightened. "Let's just say the price of admission was more than I was willing to pay."

"So you walked out," I said softly.

"I did more than walk out. I reported him." Ryan's laugh was hollow. "Next day, my agent dropped me. Casting directors stopped returning calls. I became 'difficult.'"

I felt a surge of respect for this man who had done what I hadn't—stood up for himself, consequences be damned.

"Why acting?" I asked. "After everything, why keep fighting for a place in this world?"

"Because I love the craft," he answered without hesitation. "Because stories matter. And because I refuse to let the corrupt gatekeepers win." He leaned forward. "The question is, why are you fighting? You could have disappeared after what happened."

My hand instinctively rose to my scar. "Because I was invisible for too long."

Our eyes met in perfect understanding, and something shifted between us—a recognition of shared wounds and shared purpose.

* * *

Three months later, I stood in the back of a small screening room at the Sundance Film Festival, watching Ryan command the screen in the indie drama I'd helped secure for him. The director had been reluctant at first—Ryan's "difficult" reputation preceded him—but I'd leveraged every contact and called in every favor to make it happen.

The film ended to enthusiastic applause. As the lights came up, I saw industry people I recognized—people who had once ignored my calls—approaching Ryan with business cards and effusive praise.

"You did this," Ryan said later at the after-party, finding me by the windows overlooking the snow-covered mountains. "You made them see me again."

"You made yourself seen," I corrected him. "I just opened the door."

He smiled, a genuine warmth that reached his eyes. "Then we make a good team."

My phone buzzed in my purse. I pulled it out to find a text from Chloe: *Variety just posted their review. They're calling Ryan 'the comeback story of the year' and Chen & Co. 'the agency changing Hollywood's power dynamics.'*

I showed Ryan the message, and his face lit up. He impulsively took my hand, squeezing it in celebration. The simple touch sent an unexpected warmth through me—comfort, connection, something I hadn't felt in years.

As industry elites circled around us, eager to associate with the festival's breakout star and his unorthodox agent, I realized we'd crossed a threshold. We were visible now, impossible to ignore.

What I didn't know then was that our visibility would soon catch the attention of the one person I'd been trying to forget—and that the carefully constructed new life I'd built was about to collide with the one I'd left behind.

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