

Chapter 1 of When My Husband’s Mistress Told Me to Handle Him
The notification sound on my phone was a mosquito in a quiet room. Then another. Then dozens, a swarm I couldn't ignore. I glanced up from the studio contracts spread across our marble kitchen island, expecting maybe a text from our assistant about Nolan's schedule. The screen lit up with an image that made my coffee turn to acid in my stomach.
Paparazzi photos. High-definition, crystal-clear shots of my husband, Nolan Griffin, with his arms wrapped around Renata Salazar at JFK Airport. Their faces pressed together in what could only be described as a passionate kiss. Not a goodbye peck. Not a moment of friendly affection. A kiss that spoke of history, of hunger, of secrets.
My hands went very still. The phone buzzed again: a text from Marcus Webb, one of our investors. "Ellie, have you seen...?" Then another from Jade Okafor, our newest filmmaker: "Are you okay?" The notifications kept coming, each one another person discovering the public dismantling of my marriage in real time.
I didn't move. The contracts before me — deals I'd spent weeks negotiating, relationships I'd carefully cultivated — blurred slightly as I stared at the image. Nolan and Renata. Renata and Nolan. I had seen them together before, of course. In the early days, when I was just the quiet girl from the publishing house who admired him from afar. I'd watched them fight, watched them love, watched him leave her for me. Or so I'd thought.
The phone rang. A number I didn't recognize. Then another. Journalists, probably. Publicists from the streaming platform that was bankrolling Nolan's adaptation. Friends who thought they were being kind. I didn't answer a single call.
Hours passed. The apartment remained silent except for the occasional ping of my phone and the distant sounds of Manhattan traffic twenty floors below. I read every article, every tweet, every comment. I watched the scandal spread like wildfire across social media, the hashtags changing as the narrative evolved. #NolanCheats. #RenataRevenge. #ElliesResponse. My name, my life, my marriage — all of it dissected by strangers.
When the door finally clicked open that evening, I was still sitting at the kitchen island, the contracts now stacked neatly to one side. Nolan stepped inside, his keys landing on the marble counter with a sharp clink. He looked tired, his usually perfect hair slightly disheveled, but his eyes were clear. Calculating. He didn't look guilty. He looked inconvenienced.
"Ellie," he said, as if I were a business associate he was meeting for the first time that day. He didn't ask if I'd seen the photos. He didn't apologize. He simply sat down across from me, pulled out his phone, and began scrolling through messages with a frown.
"We have a situation," he said finally, looking up at me. His voice was calm. Reasonable. The voice he used when explaining plot points to studio executives. "The streaming deal is in jeopardy. They're talking breach of contract. The morality clause." He ran a hand through his hair. "We need to handle this.
I waited for him to say more. To say anything about how I might be feeling. About the fact that our marriage was now a public spectacle. About the woman he'd just been photographed kissing. The silence stretched between us, and I realized with a cold clarity that he wasn't going to.
"What do you need from me?" I asked, my voice steady.
He nodded, as if I'd finally gotten to the point. "A video statement. From you. Something warm, something that shows we're united. That this was all a misunderstanding. The press will eat it up. You can talk about how solid our marriage is, how we're working through this private matter together. Then you'll need to call the streaming executives directly. They trust you. Your voice is... soothing to them. Remind them of everything we've done for the project.
He wasn't asking. He was telling me what my role would be in managing his crisis. As if I were his publicist. His damage control. His wife was an afterthought, a footnote to the real issue: his reputation, his deal, his career.
"I understand," I said quietly.
The next morning, I sat in our living room, the camera set up on a tripod, the lighting soft and forgiving. I wore a simple blouse, nothing flashy, nothing that would distract from the message. I looked directly into the lens and spoke with a warmth I felt nowhere inside me.
"Hi everyone. I wanted to address the photos that came out yesterday. Nolan and I are united in our commitment to each other and our family. The photos were taken out of context, part of a private conversation that was misinterpreted. Our marriage is strong, and we appreciate your respect for our privacy during this time.
I called the streaming executives afterward, my voice honey-sweet over the phone. I reminded them of Nolan's track record, of the millions his name had already generated for their platform. I promised them this would blow over. I saved his deal.
That night, after Nolan had fallen asleep, I locked myself in our bathroom. The tears came then, hot and violent, tearing through me like shrapnel. I pressed my fist against my mouth to muffle the sobs, my other hand gripping the sink until my knuckles went white. In the mirror, through the blur of tears, I saw my face — and then, suddenly, I saw him. Not Nolan, but Cal. My stepfather. The man who had smiled at neighbors while breaking my mother piece by piece behind closed doors. The same charming smile. The same coldness underneath.
I had married my mother's nightmare. I had become her.
The tears stopped abruptly, as if a faucet had been turned off. Something inside me went very quiet. I looked at my reflection — at the woman I had become, the woman I had allowed myself to be reduced to — and made a decision.
The next morning, I made coffee in my ceramic mug, the one I'd bought at a street market during my first week in Manhattan. I sat at the kitchen table, watching the steam rise, while Nolan slept in our bedroom. I didn't reach for my phone. I didn't draft a resignation or pack a bag. I sat with the stillness of a woman who had just made a choice so absolute it required no movement at all.
I would not leave. Not yet. I would stay, and I would dismantle him from the inside.
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