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After My Husband Saved His Mistress Over His Dying Sister Novel Cover

After My Husband Saved His Mistress Over His Dying Sister

The notification on my phone screen was clinical, precise, and devastating. *Reservation Cancelled: Le Jardin, Table for Two. 7:00 PM.* Five years. Five years of marriage reduced to a digital dismissal. I sat in my car in the driveway, the engine cooling with a metallic tick that sounded like a dying clock. The house—our house—loomed ahead, windows glowing with a warmth that I knew didn't exist inside. My hand went to the stethoscope on the passenger seat, my fingers tracing the cold metal of the diaphragm. It was a habit, a grounding technique I’d perfected during residency. Touch the steel. Find the pulse.
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Chapter 1

The notification on my phone screen was clinical, precise, and devastating. *Reservation Cancelled: Le Jardin, Table for Two. 7:00 PM.*

Five years. Five years of marriage reduced to a digital dismissal. I sat in my car in the driveway, the engine cooling with a metallic tick that sounded like a dying clock. The house—our house—loomed ahead, windows glowing with a warmth that I knew didn't exist inside. My hand went to the stethoscope on the passenger seat, my fingers tracing the cold metal of the diaphragm. It was a habit, a grounding technique I’d perfected during residency. Touch the steel. Find the pulse. Ignore the pain.

I didn't slam the car door. I didn't storm inside. I walked in with the silent tread of a surgeon entering a sterile field.

The living room smelled of expensive Merlot and Adrianna’s perfume—a cloying gardenia scent that clung to the back of my throat. They were on the velvet sofa. Richard’s tie was loosened, his jacket discarded on the floor like a shedding skin. Adrianna Wright, his "childhood friend," was curled into his side, her shoes off, her bare feet tucked under his thigh.

They looked like a portrait of domestic intimacy. I was the intruder.

"You're early," Richard said. He didn't look up from the wine glass he was swirling. His tone wasn't apologetic; it was an accusation.

"It’s our anniversary, Richard," I said, my voice steady, though my heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. "The reservation was for seven."

Adrianna shifted, pressing her face into Richard’s shoulder. She let out a soft, whimpering sound, like a wounded animal. "I’m so sorry, Vanessa. It’s my fault. The vertigo... it just hit me out of nowhere. I felt so lonely, and the room started spinning..."

"She couldn't be alone tonight," Richard said, finally looking at me. His eyes were hard, devoid of the affection that had tricked me into this marriage five years ago. "You know how fragile she gets."

I looked at Adrianna. Her skin was flushed, not pale. Her pupils were normal, reactive to the low light. There was no diaphoresis, no tremor in the hand holding her own glass of wine.

"Vertigo usually precludes alcohol consumption," I noted, dropping my keys on the console table. The sound was a sharp *clack* in the quiet room.

Adrianna flinched, burying herself deeper into my husband. "Richard, I feel sick again."

"That’s enough, Vanessa," Richard snapped, his arm tightening around her. "Stop diagnosing everyone. We’re just talking. Go upstairs if you’re going to be bitter."

As Richard turned his head to whisper something soothing into Adrianna’s hair, she looked up at me. The pained expression dissolved instantly. The corners of her mouth lifted—a sharp, triumphant smirk that vanished as soon as Richard shifted back. It was a micro-expression, lasting less than a second, but I saw it.

It was a challenge.

I didn't fight. I couldn't. The merger between the Holmes and Stone pharmaceutical empires was the only thing keeping my family’s legacy afloat, and Richard knew it. I was the collateral in a business deal masquerading as a marriage.

"Happy anniversary, Richard," I whispered, turning my back on them.

I retreated to my study, the one room in the house where Adrianna’s perfume hadn't penetrated. I unlocked the bottom drawer of my desk and pulled out my trauma kit. I began to organize the vials of epinephrine and the portable defibrillator pads, checking expiration dates that were still months away. Click. Snap. Zip. The mechanical sounds of the equipment soothed the chaos in my mind. This was my reality: prepared for disaster, waiting for the crash.

***

A week later, the crash came.

The morning was grey, the Seattle sky pressing down on the city like a bruised thumb. I was in the foyer, checking my pager, when the landline screamed. It was a jarring, archaic sound.

I picked it up. "Dr. Holmes."

"Vanessa! Oh God, Vanessa!" It was Mrs. Gable, the housekeeper at the Stone family estate, ten miles out in the suburbs. Her voice was fractured by panic. "You have to come! She collapsed. She’s on the floor. She’s not breathing right!"

"Who?" I demanded, my hand already reaching for the keys to my modified SUV. "Mrs. Gable, who is down?"

"Miss Stone! It’s Miss Stone! She clutched her chest and just... went down!"

Liberty.

My sister-in-law. The only person in Richard’s family who treated me with kindness. Liberty, with her congenital heart defect and her gentle smile.

"Is she conscious?" I barked, switching the phone to my shoulder as I grabbed the heavy, reinforced medical bag I kept by the door for rural calls.

"No! She’s turning blue, Vanessa! The ambulance said twenty minutes—there’s a pileup on the bridge!"

"Twenty minutes is too long," I said, the cold clarity of the ER descending over me. "Unlock the front gate. I’m coming. Keep her flat. Do not give her water."

I slammed the phone down.

My SUV was parked in the driveway, equipped with lights and sirens authorized for volunteer emergency response. I didn't wait for Richard. I didn't check if he was even home. Every second was oxygen Liberty’s brain wasn't getting.

I threw the trauma bag into the passenger seat. It contained a portable external pacemaker—the only thing that could bridge the gap if her heart had entered a complete block. I cranked the engine, the powerful roar of the vehicle vibrating through the steering wheel.

I wasn't the neglected wife anymore. I wasn't the woman who tolerated smirks and lies. I was Dr. Holmes, and I was going to save her life.

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