

Chapter 1 of Voice Stolen by Mistress
I stared at the manila folder on Michael's desk, its edges crisp and neat like everything else in his office. The Seattle rain tapped against the floor-to-ceiling windows, creating a rhythm that used to comfort me. Not today. Today, each drop felt like a countdown to something I couldn't name but deeply feared.
Michael sat across from me, his posture perfect in his tailored charcoal suit. Three years ago, that same posture had made me feel safe—the embodiment of control when my world had none. Now, as he slid the folder toward me, his clinical detachment sent ice through my veins.
"Lily," he said, his voice carrying the same measured tone he'd used in our therapy sessions long ago. "This is necessary. Scarlett Rose needs a comprehensive image rehabilitation after her drug scandal, and a relationship with her therapist—a respected psychiatrist—is the perfect narrative."
My fingers instinctively found my grandmother's Tiffany necklace, the delicate silver chain warm against my skin. The pendant's familiar weight anchored me as the room seemed to tilt. Divorce papers. My husband was asking me to sign divorce papers.
I opened my mouth, desperate to speak, to protest, to beg—but the familiar constriction seized my throat. The mutism that had plagued me since childhood closed around my voice like a fist. Only with Michael had I found my voice again, and now he was using that same voice to silence me.
"It's just temporary," he continued, uncapping an expensive fountain pen—the one I'd given him for our second anniversary. "Purely for show. The public needs to believe I'm available for this narrative to work."
He pushed the pen toward me, his wedding band catching the soft light from his desk lamp. "Your anxiety is understandable, but unwarranted. This is a paper transaction, nothing more."
Tears slid down my cheeks. Paper transaction. As if our marriage certificate had been just another document in his filing cabinet. As if I were just another case to be managed.
"Lily," he sighed, a flicker of impatience crossing his face. "This emotional response is disproportionate to the situation. We've discussed catastrophic thinking in your therapy."
My therapy. Not our marriage. Not our life together. My therapy—the foundation of everything between us, apparently.
"Scarlett needs this," he said, leaning forward, his tone softening with practiced empathy. "Her career is hanging by a thread. You understand what it's like to need someone, don't you?"
The manipulation was so skillful I almost missed it—the subtle reminder of my dependence, the implication that I owed him this sacrifice. I clutched my necklace tighter, feeling the delicate silver links press into my palm. The necklace was my talisman, the last gift from the only person who had loved me before Michael. My grandmother would have told me to run.
But where would I go? Who would I be without Michael? The world outside these walls had no place for a woman who couldn't speak, whose only identity existed in the pages she wrote under another name.
"Sign here," Michael said, tapping a manicured finger on the signature line. "And here."
My hand trembled as I took the pen, its weight unbearable. Each letter of my name felt like carving away a piece of myself. L-i-l-y H-a-r-r-i-s-o-n. Soon to be just Lily again. Nameless. Voiceless.
As I finished the final stroke, a single tear fell onto the document, blurring the ink slightly. Michael frowned, quickly sliding the paper away before it could be damaged further.
"There," he said, his smile not reaching his eyes as he tucked the papers back into the folder. "That wasn't so difficult, was it?"
It was the easiest thing in the world to sign away your heart when you believed it was an act of love. But as Michael rose and straightened his tie, I felt something shift inside me—the first hairline fracture in the foundation of my world.
The divorce was on paper. But the betrayal? That was written in blood.
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