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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 4

The progress bar on the pacemaker screen mocked me. *45%... 50%...*

Under my palms, Liberty’s chest wall was a rigid cage. I pumped harder, the cartilage of her sternum grinding with a sickening *crunch* that vibrated up my arms. Sweat stung my eyes, blurring the sight of her cyanotic lips.

"Come on, Libby," I gritted out, my voice a raw whisper. "Don't you dare quit on me."

Footsteps echoed in the hallway—slow, casual, infuriating.

"Honestly, the decor in here is so dated," Richard’s voice drifted in, accompanied by a light, tinkling laugh from Adrianna. "We’ll have to renovate once we settle the estate issues. Is your sister decent, Vanessa? Adrianna needs to lie down. Her stomach is—"

Richard stepped into the room. The laughter died in his throat with a wet choke.

He didn't see my sister, the stranger he thought I was saving. He saw the pale yellow wallpaper he grew up with. He saw the teddy bear on the dresser. And then, he saw the face of the woman under my hands.

"Liberty?"

The name fell from his lips like a stone.

Mrs. Gable sobbed from the corner, clutching her apron. "We called you twenty minutes ago, Mr. Richard! She was asking for you! She couldn't breathe!"

Richard froze. His eyes darted from Liberty’s gray, slack face to the useless pacemaker still cycling through its boot sequence. *85%...*

The realization hit him like a physical blow. The delay. The coffee. The inspection of the bumper. The time he spent caressing his mistress’s knee while his sister suffocated alone.

"Clear!" I shouted, not for them, but for the machine that finally beeped green. I pressed the paddles to her chest.

*Thump.* Her body arched off the rug, a grotesque marionette jerked by invisible strings. I watched the monitor. Flatline.

"Again! Charging!"

"Stop it!" Richard roared.

He crossed the room in two strides. I didn't see the hand coming. I only felt the explosion of light behind my eyes as his palm connected with my cheekbone. The force threw me sideways, my shoulder colliding hard with the metal casing of the defibrillator.

"You killed her!" Richard screamed, his face twisted into a mask of ugliness I had never seen, even in our worst fights. Spittle flew from his lips. "You incompetent bitch! You let her die!"

My ears rang. I tasted copper. I looked up, dazed, hand trembling as it went to my stinging cheek. "Richard... you turned off the machine. You stopped the car."

"Liar!" He lunged again, grabbing me by the lapels of my coat and shaking me until my teeth rattled. "You drove like a grandmother! You wasted time! You wanted this!"

"She stopped for coffee!" Adrianna’s voice cut through the air, shrill and poisonous. She stood in the doorway, her fake illness forgotten, pointing a manicured finger at me. "I begged her to hurry, Richard! I told her it was an emergency, but she insisted on stopping at that drive-thru! She said she needed the caffeine!"

The staff gathered in the hallway gasped.

"I didn't..." I gasped, air struggling to enter my lungs against Richard’s grip. "The coffee... you threw it..."

"Murderer!" Richard shoved me backward. I tripped over the tangle of wires, hitting the floor hard.

He raised his hand again, a fist this time. I flinched, curling into a ball, waiting for the impact.

It never came.

"Touch my daughter again, Richard Stone, and I will bury you under so much litigation your grandchildren will be born bankrupt."

The voice was ice cold. My mother.

She stood in the doorway, a leather portfolio clutched in her hand—she had been here to drop off the merger addendums. Now, she looked like a valkyrie in a Chanel suit. She stepped over the threshold, placing herself physically between Richard and me. Her eyes, usually so warm and deferential to the Stone family, were hard flints of obsidian.

"Get out of my way, Evelyn," Richard snarled, though he lowered his fist. "She killed my sister."

"I saw you strike her," my mother said, her voice trembling not with fear, but with a rage that matched my own. She reached down, hauling me to my feet with a grip of iron. "And I heard that woman lie."

Sirens wailed in the distance, growing louder, finally piercing the suffocating atmosphere of the room. The police.

Within minutes, the room was swarming with uniforms. Richard transformed instantly. The feral animal vanished, replaced by the grieving, dignified patriarch. He wept into a handkerchief, pointing a shaking finger at me as he spoke to the officer.

"My wife... she was negligent," he sobbed, leaning into Adrianna for support. "She was hysterical. Jealous of my friendship with Ms. Wright. She delayed the ambulance on purpose. A petty, domestic grudge... and now my sweet Liberty is gone."

"It's true," Adrianna sniffled, dabbing at dry eyes. "She was driving so slowly. She was screaming at us the whole time."

I stood against the wall, my mother’s arm around my waist keeping me upright. I looked at Liberty’s body, now being covered by a sheet.

The grief was a hollow pit in my stomach, but beneath it, something sharper was pricking at my senses.

The smell.

I had been too focused on CPR to notice it before, but now, in the stillness, it was overwhelming. A vase of white Stargazer lilies sat on the nightstand, their petals fully open. Liberty was anaphylactic to lilies. Richard knew that. Everyone knew that.

But it wasn't just the pollen. Underneath the floral cloy, there was a chemical sweetness—acrid, like bitter almonds and industrial cleaner.

I stared at the flowers, then at Adrianna. She was watching the police officer write down her lies, but for a second, her gaze flicked to the vase. A tiny, satisfied tightening of her jaw.

She didn't just delay us. She didn't just lie.

My hand went to my pocket, gripping the cold metal of my stethoscope. They thought I was broken. They thought I was the villain.

I took a breath, the scent of the poisoned flowers filling my nose. I wasn't just a wife anymore. I was the only witness to a murder.

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