
Chapter 1 of LEGO Artist's Comeback
I sat cross-legged on the floor of my SoHo studio, surrounded by thousands of meticulously sorted LEGO bricks. The afternoon light streamed through the tall windows, casting a warm glow over my workspace as I separated blues from greens with practiced precision. This ritual always calmed me—creating order from chaos, one small piece at a time.
Click. Click. Click.
The smooth 2x4 brick between my fingers was a comforting anchor as I contemplated the structure taking shape in my mind. This would be my most ambitious BrickMaster piece yet—a phoenix rising from shattered fragments, each broken piece carefully reconstructed into something more beautiful than before.
The metallic scrape of mail sliding through the slot broke my concentration. I glanced up, not expecting anything important. Bills, perhaps. A catalog.
Instead, a cream-colored envelope with gold embossing caught my eye, looking jarringly out of place among the practical simplicity of my studio. I wiped my hands on my worn jeans and crossed the room, already feeling a strange heaviness in my chest as I picked it up.
The paper was thick, expensive—the kind that announced its cost with every touch. I turned it over, seeing the embossed initials: R.M. & V.W.
Ryan Mitchell and Victoria Whitmore.
My fingers went still. I hadn't heard that name—his name—in almost a year. Not since the day he'd stood over the shattered remains of my largest LEGO sculpture, the one that had taken me six months to build, the one that told our story. Not since he'd called me a "plastic-obsessed dreamer" before walking out of my life and into Victoria Whitmore's waiting arms.
I should have thrown the envelope away unopened. Instead, I slid my finger under the seal and pulled out a wedding invitation adorned with delicate watercolor illustrations of the Hamptons shoreline.
Tucked inside was a handwritten note on monogrammed stationery: "Come witness the success you could never achieve."
I read it twice, feeling the familiar twist of pain that Ryan had always been so skilled at inflicting. Even now, he couldn't resist the opportunity to remind me of what he perceived as my failure. The irony almost made me laugh—if only he knew who I really was. If only he knew that while he was chasing Victoria's money, my BrickMaster pieces were selling for millions in galleries around the world.
But he didn't know. No one did. And maybe that was the problem.
* * *
Two weeks later, I stood at the edge of an enormous white tent on the Hamptons shoreline, watching waves crash against the private beach while waiters in crisp uniforms circulated with champagne. I'd chosen my outfit carefully—simple black pants, a well-made but unbranded blouse, comfortable flats. Nothing that would draw attention, nothing that would mark me as either wealthy or poor. Just invisible.
The wedding décor screamed money in the particular way that only the newly rich could manage—everything was Tiffany-inspired, from the robin's egg blue accents to the crystal chandeliers hanging from the tent ceiling. I recognized the aesthetic immediately; Ryan had always been obsessed with luxury brands, with the symbols of wealth rather than its substance.
I accepted a glass of champagne and drifted through the crowd, observing. No one paid me any attention. I was just another face, another guest, certainly not someone worth noticing in this gathering of Manhattan's social elite. Just as I preferred it.
"Oh my God, is that her? The LEGO girl?"
The stage-whisper carried across the cocktail hour chatter, followed by poorly concealed snickers. I didn't turn around, just kept my eyes fixed on the ocean beyond the tent.
"Sarah! Sarah Chen!"
Victoria Whitmore's voice cut through the ambient noise like a diamond through glass—sharp, bright, and designed to draw every eye in the vicinity. I turned slowly, my fingers instinctively reaching for the small LEGO disassembly tool in my pocket.
Victoria stood in the center of a admiring circle, resplendent in her designer wedding gown. Around her neck gleamed what appeared to be a stunning diamond necklace with an intricate pendant—Tiffany-inspired, of course. Her smile was wide, predatory, as she beckoned me closer with a manicured hand.
"Everyone, this is Ryan's ex," she announced to the gathering crowd. "The failed artist who plays with children's toys."
More laughter rippled through the guests. From the corner of my eye, I could see Ryan watching with that same smug smile I remembered so well, the one that said he was exactly where he believed he deserved to be.
Victoria's hand went to her necklace, drawing all eyes to it. "Do you like it, Sarah? Custom-made, fifty thousand dollars. A wedding gift from my fiancé."
I felt my lips curve into a small smile as my fingers closed around the disassembly tool in my pocket. They had no idea what was coming.
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