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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 5

The letter from the Medical Board sat on the mahogany desk, its weight far exceeding the single sheet of paper it was printed on. *Suspended pending investigation into gross negligence.* The words blurred under the harsh light of the study lamp.

I didn't cry. I had run out of tears somewhere between the morgue and the moment Richard moved Adrianna’s Louis Vuitton luggage into the guest house.

"She needs emotional support, Vanessa," he had said, his voice smooth as polished glass, stepping over the threshold of the home I kept, the life I built. "And frankly, so do I. You're... unstable right now."

I watched through the blinds as rain lashed against the guest house windows. Shadows moved inside—two silhouettes merging into one. My husband and his mistress, mourning his sister by playing house in my backyard. I touched the stethoscope in my pocket, a reflex. They had taken my license, but they couldn't cut the doctor out of me.

A sharp rap at the back door made me jump. I pulled the silk robe tighter around my chest and moved through the darkened kitchen.

Dr. Emily Foster stood on the porch, shaking rain from her umbrella. Her face was pale, her eyes darting toward the guest house before locking onto mine.

"Let me in," she whispered. "If the board knows I'm here, I’m next."

We huddled over the kitchen island, the granite cold against my forearms. Emily didn't waste time with condolences. She slid a manila folder across the counter.

"The preliminary autopsy report," she said, her voice tight. "Richard is pushing to seal it, claiming family privacy. But I saw the tox screen before the file was locked."

I opened the folder. My eyes scanned the medical jargon, translating the data into a physiological horror story. *Severe laryngeal edema. Elevated tryptase levels. Massive histamine release.*

"It wasn't just cardiac arrest," I murmured, the room spinning slightly. "It was anaphylaxis."

"She suffocated, Van," Emily said, gripping my hand. "Her throat closed up before her heart stopped. It was an allergic reaction so severe it mimicked a massive coronary event."

The smell hit me again—the phantom scent of that bedroom. The cloying sweetness of Stargazer lilies masked by the acrid bite of bitter almonds.

"The flowers," I said, my voice hardening. "Liberty was allergic to lilies. But pollen alone wouldn't do this so fast. It was accelerated."

"Chemicals?" Emily asked.

"Poison," I corrected.

Emily left as quickly as she came, leaving me with the truth burning a hole in my stomach. Liberty hadn't just died; she had been executed. And the weapon was a bouquet Richard had likely paid for, arranged by the woman currently sleeping in his guest house.

But I needed proof. I needed the timeline.

My gaze drifted to the garage. Richard’s SUV. He was obsessed with liability. The car was equipped with a 360-degree internal cabin recording system for insurance purposes. It recorded everything—audio, video, speed, braking patterns.

It recorded the coffee. It recorded the delay. It recorded the truth.

The house was silent as a tomb. I slipped into the garage, the air heavy with the smell of gasoline and wet concrete. The motion sensor light flickered on, bathing the sleek black SUV in a sterile, white glow. It looked like a beast sleeping with one eye open.

My hands shook as I opened the passenger door. The interior still smelled of Richard’s cologne and the sour, burnt odor of the coffee Adrianna had thrown. I reached up to the console above the rearview mirror, my fingernails prying at the small plastic panel housing the SD card.

*Click.*

The memory card popped out into my palm. Cold. Small. Damning.

The sound of the side door opening froze the blood in my veins.

I ducked, sliding down into the footwell of the passenger seat, curling my body into a tight ball. Through the gap between the seats, I saw the beam of a flashlight cut through the dark.

"Relax, he's in the main house passed out on scotch," a woman's voice echoed. Adrianna.

But she wasn't speaking to Richard.

"You're sure it's safe?" A man’s voice. Deep, rough, unfamiliar.

"Richard is an idiot, Marcus," Adrianna laughed—a sound that was light, airy, and utterly devoid of the grief she had performed for the police. "He thinks his wife killed his sister. He’s so busy blaming her, he hasn't even looked at the credit card statements."

I held my breath, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird. Through the tint of the window, I saw them. Adrianna was pressed up against a man in a leather jacket, her arms looped around his neck. This wasn't Richard. This was a stranger.

"And the sister?" the man, Marcus, asked, his hands sliding down to her waist.

"Taken care of," Adrianna purred. "The spray on the flowers worked faster than I thought. Poor Liberty. She never stood a chance against us."

She kissed him, hungry and fierce, right there in the garage where my husband’s car sat cooling.

"Thirty million in inheritance," Marcus murmured against her lips. "And once the divorce goes through..."

"We take it all," she finished.

I squeezed the SD card in my fist until the edges bit into my skin. They thought I was the victim. They thought I was the broken, suspended doctor who had lost everything.

In the dark of the footwell, a cold smile touched my lips. I wasn't a victim anymore. I was the surgeon holding the scalpel, and I had just found the tumor.

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