I stood frozen in the middle of my bedroom, the security footage still playing on my phone. The cat watched me with indifferent yellow eyes, stretching lazily across my pillows. Each strand of fur on my pristine white sheets was like a knife twisting deeper into my chest.
The front door clicked open. I heard Nathan's footsteps, his cheerful whistling echoing through our apartment.
"Aria? Are you home early?"
I didn't answer. My fingers closed around the gold medal I'd retrieved from the floor, its weight suddenly meaningless.
His footsteps grew closer. "Babe? I was just about to—"
He appeared in the doorway, his expression shifting from surprise to horror when he saw me standing there. His eyes darted from my face to the cat on our bed, then to the phone in my hand.
"I can explain," he said immediately, his voice dropping to that soothing tone he used with difficult clients.
I walked past him into the living room, my body moving mechanically. The evidence of their betrayal was everywhere—wine glasses with lipstick stains, takeout containers from restaurants Nathan claimed to hate, a woman's hair tie on the coffee table.
"Explain what exactly?" My voice sounded distant, hollow. "How you brought a cat into our home? Or how you've been fucking Isabella in our bed?"
His face paled. "That's not—it's not what you think."
"I have it on video, Nathan." I turned my phone toward him, Isabella's laughter filling the space between us. "Every moment. Every lie."
He lunged for the phone, but I pulled it away. Something shifted in his eyes—the mask slipping.
"You were spying on me?" he demanded, his voice hardening. "You put cameras in our home without telling me?"
"Our home?" I laughed, the sound brittle. "The home I bought with my competition money? The home you promised would be safe?"
"You're overreacting." Nathan ran a hand through his perfectly styled hair—his tell when lying. "It was just... stress relief. Isabella means nothing to me."
"Nothing?" I gestured toward the bedroom. "You brought a cat into our bedroom knowing what it would do to me. You mocked my scars, my trauma."
"It's just a cat, Aria." His voice took on an edge of exasperation. "It's been twenty years. I thought maybe you'd finally gotten over that ridiculous phobia."
Something shattered inside me. I grabbed the nearest object—a crystal vase he'd given me for our anniversary—and hurled it against the wall. Glass exploded in a glittering arc.
"Get out," I whispered.
"You're being hysterical." He stepped toward me, hands outstretched. "Let's talk about this like adults. You're stressed from the competition—"
"I WON THE COMPETITION!" I screamed, sweeping my arm across the coffee table. The wine glasses crashed to the floor. "I came home to celebrate with you!"
He flinched, stepping back. "Aria, please—"
"Three weeks." My voice dropped to a whisper. "I was gone three weeks, and you couldn't even wait that long."
I moved to the wall where my favorite paintings hung—studies for my competition piece. With trembling hands, I took them down one by one, stacking them carefully by the door.
"What are you doing?" Nathan asked, alarm creeping into his voice.
"Taking what's mine."
"This is insane. You need to calm down." He grabbed my wrist. "Isabella was a mistake. It won't happen again."
I wrenched away from him, my fingernails leaving red crescents in his skin. "Don't touch me."
He stepped back, his expression hardening. "Fine. I'm going out. When I come back, I expect you to be rational."
The door slammed behind him, leaving me alone amid the wreckage of glass and trust. I sank to the floor, my back against the wall, and dialed a number with shaking fingers.
"Professor Williams?" My voice cracked. "I need your help."
His gruff voice answered immediately. "Aria? What's wrong?"
"Everything." I stared at the shattered glass glittering on the floor like fallen stars. "My relationship is over. I need... I need somewhere to go."
A long pause. Then: "The Paris residency. It's yours if you want it. Three years, fully funded."
"When?" I whispered.
"As soon as you can get here."
I ended the call and sat in silence until dawn broke over the Los Angeles skyline. When the law offices opened at eight, I made another call.
"Eleanor Croft's office," a crisp voice answered.
"My name is Aria Blackwood. I need to speak with Ms. Croft about initiating divorce proceedings."
Thirty minutes later, I sat across from Eleanor, her steel-gray eyes assessing me over half-moon glasses.
"I want everything frozen," I said, signing the papers she'd prepared. "Joint accounts, assets, everything."
"And the apartment?" she asked.
I thought of the cat hair embedded in my white carpet, the memory of Isabella's laughter echoing through rooms I'd once loved.
"Sell it," I said. "I never want to set foot in it again."
As I left Eleanor's office, my phone buzzed with a text from Nathan: "We need to talk. I'm sorry. Please come home."
I deleted the message without replying. There was no home to return to anymore—only a crime scene where love had been murdered.
I sat in the corner of Café Lumière, my fingers wrapped around a mug of black coffee. The bitterness matched my mood perfectly. Three days had passed since I'd discovered Nathan's betrayal, and I still hadn't returned to what I once called home. The hotel room I'd booked felt sterile and impersonal—exactly what I needed right now.
Professor Williams' letter of acceptance for the Paris residency lay open on the table before me. Three years in Paris. Three years to rebuild myself from the wreckage Nathan had left behind.
"It's the opportunity of a lifetime," I whispered to myself, tracing the embossed letterhead with my fingertip.
My phone buzzed for the twentieth time that morning. Nathan again. I silenced it without looking at the message and pulled out my laptop instead. The words flowed easily, fueled by a cold, clear anger I'd never felt before.
*Dear Nathan,*
*I've accepted a three-year residency in Paris. Our relationship is over. My lawyer will contact you regarding divorce proceedings.*
*Do not attempt to contact me again.*
*—Aria*
I hit send before I could second-guess myself, then closed my laptop with a decisive click. The weight that had been crushing my chest eased slightly. I took a deep breath—my first real one in days.
"Ms. Blackwood?"
I looked up to see the café owner approaching with a fresh pot of coffee.
"I just wanted to say congratulations on your win. We've had your piece from last year's exhibition hanging in our back room. It's an honor."
I managed a small smile. "Thank you."
"Will you be celebrating with a show at Hayes Advertising? My daughter works in marketing there—she says your husband's planning something big."
My smile froze. "Ex-husband, actually. And no, I won't be showing there anymore."
The café owner's eyes widened slightly, but she recovered quickly. "Well, their loss is Paris's gain, from what I hear."
After she walked away, I stared into my coffee. Hayes Advertising. The agency Nathan had built—with my art, my connections, my soul poured into every campaign. I'd need to collect my work before leaving for Paris.
An hour later, I stood outside the gleaming glass building that housed Hayes Advertising. My security badge still worked—they hadn't had time to deactivate it yet. The receptionist's eyes widened when she saw me.
"Ms. Blackwood! We weren't expecting you today."
"Just collecting some personal items," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me.
I took the elevator to the fifth floor, where my private studio was located. Nathan had insisted I have my own space when I agreed to contribute to his campaigns. "Your talent deserves a sanctuary," he'd said.
When the elevator doors opened, I froze. Through the glass walls of my studio, I could see Isabella. She was sitting at my desk, her feet propped up on the surface, talking animatedly on the phone. My paintings—studies I'd been working on for months—had been replaced with her mediocre imitations.
I pushed open the door without knocking. Isabella looked up, her expression shifting from surprise to smug satisfaction.
"Well, well. Welcome back, Aria." She hung up without saying goodbye to whoever was on the line. "Nathan said you might stop by."
"You're in my studio," I said, my voice dangerously quiet.
She shrugged, twirling a pencil between her fingers. "Not anymore. Nathan thought I'd make better use of it, considering you'll be... unavailable."
I moved to the storage cabinet where I kept my personal sketchbooks and materials. It was empty.
"Looking for something?" Isabella's voice dripped with false concern. "Nathan had your things moved to storage. For safekeeping."
I turned to face her. "Get out of my chair."
"Your chair?" She laughed, the sound like nails on a chalkboard. "Nothing here is yours anymore, Aria. Not the studio, not the agency... not Nathan."
She stood and moved closer, her voice dropping to a whisper. "He chose me because I'm everything you're not. Young. Fertile. Undamaged."
Something snapped inside me. Without a word, I turned and walked out, straight to Nathan's office. His assistant tried to stop me, but I pushed past her and locked the door behind me.
At his computer, I logged in using the password I'd watched him type a hundred times. Five emails, five minutes. To each of Nathan's top clients, I sent the same message:
*As the artist behind the campaigns you've commissioned from Hayes Advertising, I am formally withdrawing all rights to my creative work. Legal action will follow if you continue to use any materials bearing my artistic signature.*
*Regards,*
*Aria Blackwood*
As I hit send on the final email, I heard Nathan's voice in the hallway, his tone frantic. Isabella must have called him.
I smiled for the first time in days. Paris was waiting, but first, I would burn this place to the ground.