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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 3

I sat across from Marcus in his office, the morning light filtering through the blinds and casting striped shadows across his polished desk. His eyes—kind but shrewd—studied me as I slid the folder of documents toward him.

"You're certain about this?" he asked, his voice steady and calm as always.

"I've never been more certain of anything," I replied, surprised by the steadiness in my own voice. Three days had passed since the gala, since Jamie's theatrical swoon and Chris's reflexive abandonment of his speech to rush to her side. Three days of silent meals and separate bedrooms.

Marcus nodded, opening the folder to review the withdrawal forms I'd already filled out. "The West Wing expansion is his pet project," he said, not a question but a statement of fact. "Without your family's backing, it stalls immediately."

"I know." A small smile played at my lips. "That's rather the point."

He met my gaze, his expression professional but with an undercurrent of approval. "I'll process these personally. The first transfers should complete by tomorrow."

I picked up the Mont Blanc pen he offered, feeling its weight in my hand. Each signature felt like reclaiming a piece of myself—Parker funds that had been funneled into Montgomery dreams without so much as a consultation. One elegant stroke after another, I signed my maiden name. Evelyn Parker. Not Montgomery. Parker.

"There will be questions," Marcus warned gently. "From the board, from Chris."

"Let there be," I replied, capping the pen with a satisfying click.

---

The text message came three days later from Olivia Chen, a nurse I'd always exchanged pleasantries with during hospital functions. We weren't close, but there had always been a quiet respect between us.

*I think you should see this. I'm sorry.*

Attached was a screenshot of what appeared to be an accidental group text Jamie had sent to several hospital staff members before quickly deleting it. But not quickly enough.

The image showed Chris, unmistakably Chris, shirtless in what was clearly not our bed. The timestamp: 2:17 AM last night. While I'd been sleeping alone in our penthouse, believing he was working a late shift.

I stared at my phone, waiting for the tidal wave of pain to hit. Instead, I felt an odd sense of validation. Proof. Finally, irrefutable proof that I wasn't paranoid, wasn't imagining things, wasn't—as Chris had suggested—in need of therapy for my "insecurities."

*Thank you, Olivia,* I typed back, my fingers steady.

Her response came quickly: *Are you okay?*

I considered the question, truly considered it. Was I okay? No. But I would be.

*I will be,* I replied honestly.

---

The doorman called up just after midnight. "Mrs. Montgomery, there's a courier with a delivery for you. He insists it's urgent."

"Send him up, please, Thomas."

Minutes later, I signed for a manila envelope with no return address. The courier—a young man with tired eyes—nodded respectfully before disappearing back toward the elevator.

Inside the envelope: eight high-quality photographs. Chris and Jamie at an intimate restaurant in Cambridge, his hand covering hers on the table. Chris and Jamie entering a hotel that wasn't Boston General. Chris kissing Jamie against her car in a darkened parking garage, his wedding ring clearly visible on the hand cupping her face.

I spread the photos across our dining table, studying each one methodically, as if they were evidence in a case I was building. Which, in a way, they were.

My laptop hummed to life as I created a new, encrypted folder. I scanned each photograph, saved it, and labeled it with the date visible on the timestamp. Then I gathered the physical copies, returned them to the envelope, and locked them in my personal safe—the one Chris didn't have the combination to.

Someone was watching them. Someone wanted me to know.

As I closed my laptop, my phone lit up with a text from Chris: *Surgery running late. Don't wait up.*

I smiled to myself, a cold, determined smile that would have surprised anyone who thought they knew Evelyn Parker-Montgomery.

*No,* I texted back. *I won't wait.*

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