
After My Husband's Public Betrayal, I Was Dying
Chapter 1
I stared at my laptop screen in disbelief, my fingers frozen over the keyboard. What had started as another mundane Monday morning—another all-hands Zoom meeting for Ryan's marketing agency—had suddenly transformed into my personal nightmare broadcast live to thousands.
"Amanda," Ryan's voice came through crystal clear, his face softened in a way I hadn't seen directed at me in years. "I can't keep pretending anymore. I love you. I've loved you for months."
My husband didn't know his webcam was still on. He didn't realize the breakout room had failed to activate. He had no idea that his declaration of love for his colleague was being streamed to the entire company—and beyond, since someone had shared the LinkedIn Live link with external partners.
I watched the chat explode with shocked reactions. Someone typed my name with a string of exclamation points. Another wrote "OMG SARAH IS WATCHING THIS."
Ryan continued, oblivious. "I want to leave Sarah. I've wanted to for a long time."
My lungs seemed to collapse. The wedding band on my finger suddenly felt like it was burning into my skin. Five years of marriage, reduced to this public execution.
I slammed my laptop shut, but it was too late. My phone began vibrating incessantly—notifications, messages, calls from people who had witnessed my humiliation in real-time. I turned it off and sank to the floor, wrapping my arms around my knees as the room spun around me.
* * *
"Ms. Mitchell?" Dr. Hanson's voice was gentle but firm as she closed the manila folder containing my test results. "I'm afraid the news isn't good."
I sat perched on the edge of the exam table at Mount Sinai Hospital, the paper gown crinkling beneath me. The room was too bright, too sterile, too final.
"The imaging confirms what we suspected. Stage four pancreatic cancer. It's already metastasized to your liver."
I clutched my sketchbook—the one I'd carried for years, filled with dreams I'd put aside to support Ryan's career. I'd brought it to doodle in the waiting room, a small comfort in an anxious moment. Now it felt like the only solid thing in a world turning to quicksand.
"How long?" My voice didn't sound like my own.
Dr. Hanson's eyes held compassion that made me want to scream. "Without treatment, three to four months. With aggressive intervention, perhaps six to eight, but I need to be honest—the five-year survival rate at this stage is less than one percent."
A tear slipped down my cheek, landing on the open page of my sketchbook. The small dark circle spread, blurring the pencil lines of a landscape I'd started that morning—before I knew my life had an expiration date.
"There are experimental treatments," Dr. Hanson continued, her voice fading in and out of my awareness. "A clinical trial at MD Anderson... significant costs not covered by insurance... approximately five hundred thousand dollars..."
I nodded mechanically, accepting the pamphlets she pressed into my hands, signing the forms she placed before me. All I could think was: I need to tell Ryan. Surely this would matter more than whatever was happening with Amanda. Surely my husband wouldn't abandon me now.
* * *
Our Upper East Side apartment felt cavernous and cold as I sat cross-legged on the living room floor, surrounded by the artifacts of our marriage. Wedding photos in silver frames. The crystal vase from his parents that we never used. The vintage record player he'd given me on our third anniversary, before he stopped coming home for dinner.
My phone sat heavy in my palm. I'd turned it back on to find sixty-three missed calls, ninety-seven text messages, and hundreds of social media notifications. The video had gone viral. My humiliation was complete.
With trembling fingers, I dialed Chloe's number. My childhood friend from Boston answered on the first ring.
"Oh my God, Sarah, I've been trying to reach you for hours! Are you okay? I saw the video—everyone's seen the video."
"Chloe," I whispered, my voice breaking. "It's not just Ryan."
"What do you mean?"
"I'm dying."
The silence on the other end stretched until I heard her sob. "No, Sarah, no."
"Pancreatic cancer. Stage four." The words felt unreal, like I was reciting lines from someone else's tragedy.
"I'm booking a flight right now," Chloe said, her keyboard clicking frantically in the background.
"Don't," I said. "You can't leave the kids. Just... just talk to me for a while?"
We switched to video, and Chloe's tear-streaked face appeared on my screen. She tried to comfort me with promises that everything would be okay, that Ryan would come to his senses, that there must be some treatment, some hope. But we both knew she was powerless against the twin catastrophes that had befallen me.
As we talked, I stared at the wedding photo on the mantel. Ryan and I, faces pressed together, smiling as if we had forever. Now I had months, and he had Amanda.
My phone beeped with an incoming call. Ryan's name flashed on the screen.
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