
After My Husband Pushed Me Down the Stairs
Chapter 3
The scalpel trembled in my hand as I made the final incision. The patient's anatomy was perfectly normal, but my vision kept swimming in and out of focus.
"Dr. Sullivan?" My surgical nurse's voice seemed distant. "Are you alright?"
"I'm fine," I lied, blinking hard to clear my vision. "Just a moment of dizziness."
I stepped back from the operating table, relinquishing control to my assistant surgeon. "Finish up, Dr. Reeves."
In the scrub room, I gripped the sink edge, my knuckles white against the porcelain. This wasn't the first episode this week. And it wasn't just dizziness—there was the persistent nausea, the fatigue, the tenderness...
No. It couldn't be.
I locked myself in my private office and pulled out the pregnancy test I'd hidden in my desk drawer three days ago. My hands shook as I read the instructions—as if I needed them. As if I hadn't administered hundreds of these tests to patients over the years.
The two minutes waiting for results stretched into eternity. When I finally looked down at the plastic stick, two pink lines stared back at me with devastating clarity.
Six weeks pregnant.
The room spun around me. I sank into my chair, one hand instinctively moving to my still-flat abdomen.
"No," I whispered. "Not now. Not with him."
A child would be the ultimate chain. The final, unbreakable bond to Cayson. He would never let me leave—not with his heir growing inside me.
I thought of my father, lying motionless in his hospital bed. Of Ira, drowning in debt. Of the divorce papers Cayson had torn to shreds.
And I thought of Elowyn's smug face as she flaunted her relationship with my husband.
"This changes nothing," I told myself, though my voice trembled. "Except now I have even more reason to get out."
I slipped the test into a tissue and wiped it clean of fingerprints. From my bookshelf, I pulled down a worn copy of Gray's Anatomy—hollowed out years ago to hide prescription pads from medical students. Now it would hide something far more precious.
The positive test disappeared into the cavity, concealed behind medical knowledge that had once seemed so pure to me.
---
"Dr. Sullivan!" The nurse's frantic voice cut through the hospital's controlled chaos. "There's a patient demanding to see you in Exam Room 3."
I glanced up from my charts. "Does she have an appointment?"
"No, she just showed up. Says it's an emergency."
Of course she did.
I pushed through the exam room door to find Elowyn perched on the edge of the examination table, her designer dress riding up her thighs.
"Finally," she sighed dramatically. "I've been in agony for hours."
"What seems to be the problem?" I asked, keeping my voice clinical.
"Cramps. Terrible cramps." She winced, clutching her stomach. "I need a thorough examination."
I pulled on gloves, maintaining professional distance. "Lie back."
As soon as my hands touched her abdomen, she screamed—a piercing wail that echoed through the exam room and into the hallway beyond.
"You're hurting me!" she shrieked, eyes wide with manufactured pain. "Stop it!"
"I haven't even begun the examination," I said quietly.
"Liar!" Elowyn's voice rose higher. "You're doing this because of Cayson! You're trying to hurt me!"
The door burst open as nurses rushed in, followed by a security guard.
"She's trying to kill me!" Elowyn sobbed, pointing at me with a perfectly manicured finger. "She's jealous of Cayson and she's trying to hurt me!"
---
"Sit down, Juliet." Victoria Hartwell's voice was tight as she closed her office door.
I sank into the chair across from her desk, already knowing what was coming.
"This is unacceptable," she said, sliding a document across the polished surface. "Elowyn Kelly is threatening to sue not just you, but the entire hospital."
"She's lying," I said flatly.
"Perhaps." Victoria's eyes were tired. "But she has witnesses. And she's the wife of our largest donor."
"He's not her husband yet," I corrected automatically.
"It doesn't matter." Victoria pushed a pen toward me. "We need this incident resolved quickly and quietly."
I stared at the document—a formal apology for "unprofessional conduct."
"If I don't sign?"
Victoria's expression hardened. "Then I'll have no choice but to suspend your privileges pending investigation."
My hand trembled as I took the pen. Every signature I'd ever put on medical charts, on prescriptions, on patient records—they'd all been acts of healing. This would be the first time my signature would be used to wound myself.
"I'm sorry," I wrote, the words burning like acid on the page.
Victoria nodded, taking the document with visible relief. "This never happened, Juliet."
As I walked out of her office, my phone vibrated with a text from Elowyn: "One down, doctor. Your husband is next."
I clutched my stethoscope, the familiar weight suddenly feeling like a noose around my neck.
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