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After My Surgeon Husband Chose His Mistress Over Me Novel Cover

After My Surgeon Husband Chose His Mistress Over Me

The maître d' approached with that look—pity barely masked by professional courtesy. "Another glass of champagne, Mrs. Montgomery?" I shook my head, forcing a smile that felt like cracked porcelain. "No, thank you. I'm sure my husband will be here any minute." We both knew it was a lie. The anniversary dinner reservation had been for 7:30 PM. The delicate watch on my wrist—a wedding gift from Chris—now read 9:17. Around me, Boston's elite dined in intimate pairs, their laughter and conversation forming a backdrop that only amplified my solitude. The candle between the two place settings had burned down significantly, wax pooling on the pristine tablecloth. The small gift box wrapped in silver paper sat untouched beside my plate, corners perfectly aligned the way Chris preferred things. Beside it lay the cream-colored envelope containing my handwritten letter—words I'd rewritten a dozen times, trying to breathe life back into our marriage. I reached for my phone, tucked discreetly in my clutch beneath the table. No missed calls. No apologetic texts. Just silence—the kind I'd grown accustomed to over three years of marriage. My finger hovered over Chris's name, but pride kept me from calling. Again. Instead, I opened Instagram, a habit born of masochism more than hope. The first post stopped my breath.
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Chapter 1

The maître d' approached with that look—pity barely masked by professional courtesy. "Another glass of champagne, Mrs. Montgomery?"

I shook my head, forcing a smile that felt like cracked porcelain. "No, thank you. I'm sure my husband will be here any minute."

We both knew it was a lie. The anniversary dinner reservation had been for 7:30 PM. The delicate watch on my wrist—a wedding gift from Chris—now read 9:17.

Around me, Boston's elite dined in intimate pairs, their laughter and conversation forming a backdrop that only amplified my solitude. The candle between the two place settings had burned down significantly, wax pooling on the pristine tablecloth. The small gift box wrapped in silver paper sat untouched beside my plate, corners perfectly aligned the way Chris preferred things. Beside it lay the cream-colored envelope containing my handwritten letter—words I'd rewritten a dozen times, trying to breathe life back into our marriage.

I reached for my phone, tucked discreetly in my clutch beneath the table. No missed calls. No apologetic texts. Just silence—the kind I'd grown accustomed to over three years of marriage.

My finger hovered over Chris's name, but pride kept me from calling. Again. Instead, I opened Instagram, a habit born of masochism more than hope.

The first post stopped my breath.

There he was. My husband, his strong arm wrapped protectively around Jamie Collins's slender waist as he guided her through the sliding doors of Boston General's emergency entrance. Her head rested against his shoulder, face contorted in apparent pain. The caption read: *Chief Montgomery to the rescue! Even America's Sweetheart @JamieCollinsRN needs a hero sometimes. #NightShiftDrama #BostonGeneral*

The timestamp: 7:15 PM. Fifteen minutes before he was supposed to meet me.

I zoomed in on the image, studying the details like a pathologist examining tissue. Chris's expression—concern etched across his handsome features, but something else too. A tenderness I hadn't seen directed at me in... I couldn't remember how long. Jamie's designer blouse, perfectly pressed despite her "sudden illness." The way her manicured hand clutched at his lapel.

The comments scrolled beneath:

*OMG they're so cute together!*

*Wasn't tonight his anniversary? Awkward...*

*Poor Evelyn Parker always waiting somewhere LOL*

I set my phone down with trembling fingers, heat rising to my cheeks. Everyone knew. The entire hospital staff, their social circles, probably half of Boston's upper crust—all watching this slow-motion car crash that was my marriage.

The waiter approached again, this time without words as he cleared away the untouched champagne flute and the bread basket that had gone stale. His eyes flicked to the gift and letter before looking away quickly.

"I'll take the check," I said softly.

"Dr. Montgomery already arranged to have the dinner charged to your account, Mrs. Montgomery. Standing instructions." His voice was kind, which somehow made it worse.

Of course. Chris had set up automatic billing for our anniversary dinners. Efficient, like everything else about him. Except showing up.

---

The morning light streamed through the penthouse windows when I returned from my sister's apartment. I hadn't been able to face our empty bed last night, not after sitting alone in that restaurant, not after those photos.

The silence of our home greeted me—pristine surfaces, designer furniture, the curated art pieces that decorated walls but somehow never made this place feel warm. I set my keys in the crystal dish by the door, the soft clink echoing through the space.

That's when I saw it.

Draped carelessly over the back of our Italian leather couch—a camel-colored scarf with the distinctive Burberry pattern. Not mine.

I approached it slowly, as if it might rear up like a snake. My fingers brushed the cashmere, still carrying the faint warmth of its owner. I lifted it to my face, inhaling involuntarily.

Floral notes with a hint of something spicy. Unmistakably feminine, unmistakably not my signature scent.

The perfume lingered in the air too, I realized—not just on the scarf. It hung in our living room like an invisible intruder. I followed the scent, my legs moving mechanically toward our bedroom.

The bed was made—our housekeeper's work, not Chris's. But one of the decorative pillows was slightly askew, the duvet not quite perfectly aligned.

Something inside me—something that had been bending and bending for three long years—finally snapped.

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