His Art, Her Agony
et over my head. It was probably just another bill collector or a producer rejecting my lat
y popped up on the screen, a video call. I
s voice was tight with urgency, her face
e been in a edit
voice dropping. "His new exh
celebrated conceptual artist who had once been the center of my universe. We h
I asked, my voice
. I clicked it, and
ow it was a picture of Ethan, looking brooding and brilliant in front of his latest installation. But
es o
aptured, moments I thought were only for us. He had twisted them into a public spectacle, a narrative of a tormented artist and his tragic muse. The comments section was
o the floor, the screen dark. I didn't care. I gra
I pounded on his door, he opened it with a glass of wh
'd been expecting me. "Com
m into the spacious, minimalist loft. "Those
g. "Art is supposed to be provocativ
thing for your own fame!" I was shaking, tears o
up with notifications. "They think I'm a villain. My gallery is threatening to pull the
ix this. You're going to issue a public statement. You'll say you were a willing part
f. "Apologize? Never. You d
How is dear old Grandma Susan doing? Still going to church every S
ional woman whose health was already fragile. She knew Ethan and I had married, but she knew nothing of the me
I whispered, my
of the more... sensitive photos. The ones I didn't put in the show. I give you twenty-four hours to
quiet, emotional storytelling. I was drawn to his fire, and he said he found his muse in my soul. Our love was a whirlwind of passion and creativit
noticed by the art world. But I felt exposed, used. It was the first time I realized that for Ethan, the line between our life a
ain, but on a global scale. This was
one I had thrown, began to ring from the floor. The s
where my grandmother l