APKDock Logo
Chapters
share
My Fiancé Gave My Masterpiece to His Mistress Novel Cover

My Fiancé Gave My Masterpiece to His Mistress

Elena is a gifted artist whose world shatters when her trusted fiancé commits a dual betrayal. He steals her greatest masterpiece and gifts it to his hidden mistress, allowing her to claim the work as her own. Robbed of her creative achievement and heartbroken by his deception, Elena refuses to stay silent. She embarks on a difficult journey to take back her artistic legacy and demand justice from the two people who conspired to ruin her career.
Chapters
share

Chapter 2

I went back to the studio on a Tuesday.

I told myself it was practical. I had things there — a spare jacket, a set of brushes I'd left on his worktable, a book I'd been meaning to finish. I wasn't going back for answers. I already had those.

The building was quiet in the middle of the afternoon. I took the freight elevator up alone and let myself in with the key I hadn't returned. The studio smelled the same — turpentine, linseed oil, the faint sweetness of old wood. The big lamp was off. The easel stood empty.

I found my jacket on the hook by the door. I found the brushes on the worktable, exactly where I'd left them. I moved through the space efficiently, not looking at anything longer than I had to.

Then I turned toward the east wall.

The frame was there. The heavy oak frame I'd bought at a salvage place in Red Hook, the one with the small chip in the lower left corner that I'd always meant to repair. It hung exactly where it always had.

But the canvas was gone.

I stood in front of the empty frame for a moment. Just stood there. The wire on the back was still taut. The hanging hardware was intact. Someone had removed the painting carefully, deliberately. Not in a hurry.

I checked the storage closet first. My other canvases were still there, shoved against the wall at their careless angles. I went through every stack, pulling them forward one by one. Landscapes. Studies. A series of small figure works from my last year of school. I went through all of it.

*Meridian* was not there.

I checked behind the shelving unit. I checked the flat files under the worktable. I moved through the studio the way you search for something you already know is gone — methodically, because stopping means accepting it.

I ended up at his desk.

His laptop was open, the screen still lit. He'd left in a hurry, or he hadn't thought to close it. I touched the trackpad and the screensaver dissolved.

The browser was open. A confirmation page.

*National Young Artists Showcase — Submission Confirmed.*

I leaned closer. The entry details loaded in a neat column. Title: *Meridian.* Medium: Oil on canvas. Dimensions that matched exactly. And there, in the submission image — my painting. My brushwork. The composition I'd spent four months building in my senior year, the one that had kept me in the studio until three in the morning more nights than I could count.

Artist name: Capri Mendez.

I looked at the image more carefully. She — or he, or both of them — had painted over my signature in the lower right corner. The brushstrokes were careful. Deliberate. Someone had taken their time.

I straightened up. I picked up my jacket and my brushes. I walked to the door.

Then I stopped and called him.

He answered on the third ring. I could hear street noise behind him, the sound of a coffee order being called out. He'd been out this whole time.

'Laura.' His voice had that particular edge — not quite annoyed, but close. The tone of a man who has been interrupted.

'I'm at your studio,' I said. 'I found the Showcase registration.'

A pause. Not long. 'Okay.'

'You entered *Meridian* under her name.'

'Laura —'

'You painted over my signature.'

'Look.' His voice shifted into something smoother, more reasonable. The tone he used when he was explaining something to a student who'd missed the point. 'You weren't doing anything with it. It's been sitting in that studio for years. You walked away from painting — you walked away from all of it. The painting was going to waste.'

I didn't say anything.

'Capri needs this win,' he said. 'She's been through a lot. You have no idea what she's dealing with. You have everything, Laura. Your family, your connections, your whole life set up. She has nothing. This matters to her in a way it just — it doesn't matter to you the same way anymore. You gave that up.'

'You gave it up for me,' I said. 'You told me London would end us. You told me to stay.'

Another pause. Shorter this time.

'I'm not doing this right now,' he said. And he hung up.

I stood in the hallway outside his studio door and looked at my phone for a moment. The call timer had stopped at one minute and forty-three seconds.

I put the phone in my pocket. I took the freight elevator down. I drove back to my mother's house in the kind of silence that doesn't feel empty — it feels like something settling. Like sediment dropping to the bottom of still water, leaving everything above it clear.

---

I didn't sleep that night.

I lay in the guest bed and looked at the ceiling and felt the clarity move through me like cold water. Not grief. Not the hot, ragged thing I'd expected. Something quieter and more permanent.

At two in the morning I got up.

The fresh canvas was still leaning against the wall where my mother had left it. I looked at it for a long moment. Then I moved the desk to the side, set the canvas on the small easel I found in the closet, and opened the supply box I'd brought from the studio.

I didn't plan what I was going to paint. I just started.

The first mark was tentative. The second wasn't. By the third I'd stopped thinking about it and started feeling my way through the dark the way I used to — by instinct, by the logic of the image itself, by the particular pressure of what needed to come out.

I worked through the night. The room smelled like oil paint and turpentine and something older underneath — the particular smell of a house I'd grown up in. Outside the window, the sky went from black to the deep blue that comes just before grey.

At some point I heard footsteps in the hallway. Soft, unhurried. My mother, on her way to the kitchen.

The footsteps slowed outside the door. Stopped.

I kept painting.

After a long moment, the footsteps moved away. The kitchen light came on under the door, then went off again. Her bedroom door closed with a quiet click.

I looked at the canvas. It wasn't finished. It wasn't close to finished. But it was something — the beginning of a shape I could feel but not yet see, the way a painting always starts.

I picked up a smaller brush and kept going.

You may also like

Betrayed on April Fool's Day, I abandoned my husband Novel Cover
9.3
On a day meant for pranks, a wife’s life crumbles when her husband's treachery is exposed as a harsh reality rather than a joke. Forced to walk away from their shared history, she must navigate the wreckage of a failed marriage. Her departure sparks a tense investigation into the dark secrets and ulterior motives he hid so well. This mystery follows her journey through a web of lies as she risks everything to uncover the truth behind his betrayal.
From Prison To My Billionaire's Embrace Novel Cover
9.6
After catching her husband with her best friend on a tragic anniversary, a woman’s quest for vengeance lands her in prison for eighteen months. While her betrayers thrive, she undergoes a deep transformation. Five years later, she has rebuilt her life with a powerful new love. When her ex-husband reappears and condescendingly offers her charity, he has no idea that her new partner possesses enough wealth to ruin him effortlessly.
My Mother's Ashes, My Fury Unleashed Novel Cover
8.7
Trapped in a sadistic marriage, my husband Collin and his mistress Jaime subjected me to months of psychological and physical torture. After Collin let my mother die and Jaime caused me to miscarry, they desecrated my mother’s remains before my eyes. Following my mother's final advice, I contacted my powerful uncle and fled to London. Now, I have returned as the CEO of Collin's failing firm, ready to dismantle his life and claim my revenge.
Regret: Rejecting His Billionaire Supreme Mate Novel Cover
8.3
After securing pack rights abroad, I returned to find my husband, Austyn, had betrayed me. He gave my daughter’s gift to another child and stood by as a teacher abused our girl. Austyn publicly rejected our bond, labeling me insane while flaunting his mistress in my jewels. He forgot that I am the Supreme Alpha who funded his life. When his son hurt my child, my restraint broke. My gold eyes revealed the truth: his reign is over.
Saved by The Billionaire  Novel Cover
7.5
One impulsive decision completely shatters Anna’s world. After a night of passion with a mysterious stranger who vanishes by dawn, she discovers she is pregnant. Her once-supportive family and friends turn their backs, leaving her to face a harsh reality in total isolation. This abandonment marks the start of a miserable downward spiral, yet it also sets the stage for an unexpected journey that she never could have anticipated for her future.
Signed To The Ruthless CEO  Novel Cover
8.2
After a betrayal by her ex and stepsister, Valerie wakes from a drunken night with no memory of the stranger who claimed her. Months later, she joins Noir Group, only to find her boss is the ruthless Ellan Noir. To fund her friend's heart surgery, she signs a contract of total submission to him. When she discovers Ellan is her past shadow and she is pregnant, Valerie seeks revenge, yet a tragic medical crisis soon puts their child's life at risk.