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After Terminal Cancer, My Wife Unveiled Our Family Lies Novel Cover

After Terminal Cancer, My Wife Unveiled Our Family Lies

The consultation room at Northwestern Memorial Hospital was too bright, too sterile. I sat perfectly still in the uncomfortable chair, my fingers gripping the edges of the medical report as if it might fly away if I loosened my hold. The words blurred before my eyes, but I couldn't stop staring at them. *Advanced gallbladder cancer. Stage IV. Metastasized to the liver.* Dr. Evans' voice seemed to come from somewhere far away, though he sat directly across from me, his kind eyes filled with the practiced compassion of someone who had delivered this news too many times before. "Mrs. Hayes, I understand this is overwhelming," he said, leaning forward slightly. "The prognosis is...
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Chapter 1

The consultation room at Northwestern Memorial Hospital was too bright, too sterile. I sat perfectly still in the uncomfortable chair, my fingers gripping the edges of the medical report as if it might fly away if I loosened my hold. The words blurred before my eyes, but I couldn't stop staring at them.

*Advanced gallbladder cancer. Stage IV. Metastasized to the liver.*

Dr. Evans' voice seemed to come from somewhere far away, though he sat directly across from me, his kind eyes filled with the practiced compassion of someone who had delivered this news too many times before.

"Mrs. Hayes, I understand this is overwhelming," he said, leaning forward slightly. "The prognosis is... challenging. We're looking at months rather than years."

Months. Not years. Not even a year.

A strangled laugh escaped my throat before I could stop it. Seventeen years I had given to a family that didn't love me. Seventeen years of cooking meals no one appreciated, of raising children who looked through me, of sleeping beside a husband who wished I was someone else. And now, just months.

"There are treatment options," Dr. Evans continued, his pen tapping gently against his notepad. "Palliative care, of course. And we can discuss pain management—"

"Will it extend my life?" I asked, my voice sounding strange to my own ears. "The treatments?"

A slight hesitation. "They might buy you some time, but with the cancer this advanced..."

He didn't need to finish. I understood. The irony wasn't lost on me—after a lifetime of being invisible, my body had finally decided to make itself known in the most devastating way possible.

"I'll need some time," I whispered, folding the report with trembling hands. "To tell my family."

Dr. Evans nodded, his expression softening. "Of course. But don't wait too long, Mrs. Hayes. You'll need support through this."

Support. The word echoed hollowly in my chest as I left his office, my footsteps unnaturally loud against the polished hospital floor. I'd spent my entire adult life supporting others—my husband's business dreams with my father's inheritance, my sister's endless crises, my children's every need. Who would support me now?

Outside, the afternoon sun felt obscenely bright. I stood on the sidewalk, watching people rush past—all of them with somewhere to go, something to do, lives stretching endlessly before them. I pulled out my phone and stared at it for a long moment before typing a message to Michael.

*At the hospital. Need to talk. Can you meet me at home?*

I waited, watching the screen as if I could will his response into existence. When it came, it was brief and dismissive:

*Tied up with urgent family matters. Can it wait?*

Family matters. In Michael's world, that always meant Victoria. My sister. The woman he had always loved, even while wearing my wedding ring.

I swallowed hard and typed back: *It's important.*

*Later,* came his reply.

The pharmacy was quiet when I arrived. I handed over the prescription for pain medication, avoiding the pharmacist's sympathetic gaze. While I waited, I studied my reflection in the security mirror mounted in the corner—the pallor I'd attributed to stress, the weight loss I'd blamed on a new diet. All symptoms I'd ignored, dismissed, or explained away, just as my family had always dismissed and explained away my presence in their lives.

With the small white bag clutched in my hand, I made my way home to our Lincoln Park townhouse. The house I had furnished, decorated, and maintained for nearly two decades. The house that had never felt like mine.

I heard their voices before I saw them—Michael's low, eager tone and Victoria's musical laugh. They were in the living room, heads bent together over papers spread across the coffee table. My sister's perfume hung in the air, expensive and intrusive.

"This investment opportunity is perfect," Michael was saying, his voice animated in a way it never was when he spoke to me. "The returns could be substantial."

Victoria tossed her perfectly styled hair over her shoulder. "I knew you'd see the potential. That's why I came to you first."

I stood in the doorway, medical report in one hand, pharmacy bag in the other, watching my husband and sister exist in their private world—a world I had never been allowed to enter.

"I have cancer," I said, the words falling from my lips before I could stop them.

They both looked up, startled, as if suddenly remembering I existed.

"Catherine," Michael frowned, annoyed at the interruption. "We're in the middle of something important."

"Did you hear what I said?" My voice sounded strange, hollow. "I have cancer. Terminal cancer."

Michael's expression flickered—not with concern, but with impatience. "You're overreacting again. We can discuss this when I'm free."

Victoria's eyes narrowed slightly, assessing me, calculating how my news might affect her plans. Then she smiled, reaching for Michael's arm. "Let's finish going through these numbers first. Family comes first, right?"

Family. As I stood there, invisible in my own home, I finally understood a truth I had been avoiding for seventeen years: I had never been family to them at all.

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