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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 2

I stood in our pristine living room, the Burberry scarf clutched in my trembling hand as I heard the front door open. Chris strode in with the confidence of a man who owned the world—tailored suit, not a hair out of place, his surgeon's hands holding nothing but his phone and car keys. No gift. No apology.

"You're home," he said, his tone suggesting mild surprise rather than guilt. He set his keys in the crystal dish beside mine, the soft clink echoing between us.

"I found this." I held up the scarf, watching his face for any flicker of recognition or remorse. "And there's perfume in the air. Perfume that isn't mine."

His expression remained impassive, but something hardened in his eyes. "What exactly are you implying, Evelyn?"

"I'm not implying anything. I'm asking why Jamie Collins's scarf is in our living room, and why our bedroom smells like her perfume." My voice was steadier than I expected, fueled by three years of swallowed hurt.

Chris sighed—the patronizing sound he reserved for patients who questioned his medical judgment. "That's Jamie's? She must have left it when the surgical team met here last week for the quarterly planning session. You were at your mother's charity event, remember?"

I hadn't known about any meeting in our home.

"And the photos of you bringing her to the ER last night? During our anniversary dinner?" The words scraped my throat on their way out.

His face softened into something resembling concern, but it didn't reach his eyes. "She collapsed after her shift. What was I supposed to do, Evelyn? Let her suffer because we had dinner plans?"

"You could have called."

"I was busy saving someone who needed me." He stepped closer, placing his hands on my shoulders. They felt heavy, not comforting. "Honestly, this jealousy isn't like you. Jamie is my resident, nothing more. Perhaps you should talk to someone about these... insecurities."

The suggestion that I needed therapy for noticing the obvious made something cold settle in my stomach. I stepped back, his hands falling away.

"I waited for two hours," I said quietly.

"And I'm sorry about that." He wasn't. "But this paranoia needs to stop. It's beneath you, and frankly, it's beneath us."

Us. As if we were still a team. As if there had ever been an "us" beyond the merger of our family names and bank accounts.

I watched him walk away, disappearing into his study without another glance at the scarf still dangling from my fingers.

---

The Boston General Foundation Gala glittered with wealth and ambition. Crystal chandeliers cast diamond-like reflections across the ballroom as Boston's elite mingled, champagne flutes in hand. At our table near the stage, I sat alone while Chris worked the room, his charismatic laugh carrying across the space.

"Mrs. Montgomery, you look absolutely stunning tonight," Dr. Weiss's wife said, settling into the chair beside me. Her eyes held the same pity I'd seen in the maître d's.

I smiled politely, smoothing the silk of my emerald gown. "Thank you. And please, call me Evelyn."

Chris finally returned to our table just as the hospital director took the stage to introduce him. He squeezed my shoulder briefly—a public display of affection for watching eyes—before straightening his bow tie.

"And now, I'm pleased to introduce our Chief of Surgery, the visionary behind Boston General's upcoming West Wing expansion, Dr. Christopher Montgomery."

Applause rippled through the room as Chris ascended the steps to the podium, his smile dazzling under the spotlights. I clapped mechanically, the diamond wedding band on my finger catching the light.

"Thank you all for your continued support of Boston General," Chris began, his voice commanding the room. "Tonight's contributions will—"

A commotion from the side of the stage interrupted him. Jamie Collins, resplendent in a form-fitting silver dress, swayed dramatically, one hand pressed to her forehead.

"I'm sorry," she called out, voice breathy and weak. "I feel faint..."

Without hesitation—without even a glance in my direction—Chris abandoned his speech mid-sentence, rushing to her side. The microphone picked up his concerned murmur: "I've got you, Jamie."

Every eye in the ballroom shifted from them to me, watching for my reaction as my husband guided his resident to a chair, kneeling beside her with tender attention.

I remained perfectly still, my face a practiced mask of composure while something inside me calcified into resolve.

This would be the last time Christopher Montgomery made me a spectacle of pity.

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