
After the Malicious Doctor Betrayed Me
Chapter 3
I sat across from Richard Sterling, my family's financial manager for over twenty years. His office, with its mahogany desk and leather chairs, exuded the kind of old-money stability I'd abandoned when I married Jonah.
"Are you absolutely certain about this, Miss Julia?" Richard asked, his fingers hovering over the keyboard. "Once we execute the kill switch, there's no going back."
I touched the flat expanse of my chest beneath my silk blouse, feeling the ridged scars hidden beneath the fabric. "I've never been more certain of anything."
Richard nodded, his expression grim. He'd known me since I was a child, had watched me grow up as the heir to the Wheeler fortune. Now he was witnessing my rebirth as that woman.
"The accounts are all linked to the central funding platform," he explained, turning his monitor so I could see the screen. "We've identified seventeen separate accounts that Mr. Harris has established over the past three years."
Seventeen. The number hit me like a physical blow. Seventeen secret accounts where Jonah had stashed money—my money—while pretending to struggle as a starving artist.
"And the studio lease?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt.
"Your shell company, Meridian Holdings, owns the building. The cancellation notice has been prepared." Richard slid a document across the desk. "Sign here, and he'll be evicted within thirty days."
I signed with a Mont Blanc pen that had belonged to my mother. The ink flowed smooth and black across the paper, sealing Jonah's fate.
"The gallery exhibition sponsorship?"
"Already withdrawn. The curator called this morning, quite upset." Richard's mouth twitched in what might have been a smile. "He seemed more concerned about the financial implications than artistic ones."
Of course he was. Jonah's art had always been more about commerce than creation.
I pulled out my phone and typed a message to Jonah: "Funding Denied." Two words that would shatter his carefully constructed world.
---
"The pattern is consistent across all cases," Marcus Chen said, spreading photographs across the conference table in my father's security office.
I stared at the faces of six women—women who, like me, had been subjected to Daphne's surgical mutilation. Their eyes held the same haunted look I saw in my mirror every morning.
"They all had partners or husbands who were either close friends or colleagues of Dr. Gibson," Marcus continued, his voice clinical but his eyes compassionate. "In each case, the relationship preceded the surgery."
"And in each case, there was no medical necessity?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
Marcus shook his head. "Pathology reports confirm benign conditions in five cases. The sixth is still pending review."
I picked up a photograph of a woman named Rebecca Torres. Her face was familiar—I'd seen her at the hospital, though we'd never spoken.
"She's the most recent victim," Marcus said. "Her husband is a surgical resident at St. Jude's. Dr. Gibson supervised his residency."
The pieces clicked into place with sickening clarity. This wasn't just malpractice. It was a psychosexual power play—Daphne systematically destroying the bodies of women connected to men she wanted or admired.
"Can they testify?" I asked.
Marcus's expression darkened. "They're terrified. Dr. Gibson has threatened to expose their medical records if they speak out."
I thought of my own mother, driven to suicide by Daphne's cruelty. "I'll convince them."
---
The boardroom of St. Jude's Hospital fell silent as I pushed open the heavy doors. Twelve men and women in expensive suits turned to stare at me, their expressions ranging from annoyance to confusion.
"Who are you?" demanded a silver-haired man at the head of the table.
I walked to the center of the room, my Louboutins clicking against the marble floor. The Chanel suit I wore—worth more than most cars—made a statement all its own.
"Julia Wheeler," I said simply.
The name hung in the air for a moment before recognition dawned on their faces.
"Wheeler?" the man repeated. "As in Wheeler Industries?"
"As in the largest private donor to this hospital," I confirmed, placing my phone on the table. "And as in the woman whose mother committed suicide after treatment by Dr. Daphne Gibson."
I pressed play on the recording. Daphne's voice filled the room: "The preventative mastectomy was brilliant. No cancer, but who cares? I couldn't stand her having something I didn't."
The board members exchanged alarmed glances as I continued, "Dr. Gibson has performed six unnecessary double mastectomies in the past three years. I have the pathology reports to prove it."
"Ms. Wheeler," the board chairman began, his voice placating, "these are serious allegations—"
"Serious enough to suspend her immediately," I cut him off. "Or serious enough to lose Wheeler Industries' annual donation of ten million dollars?"
The chairman's face paled. "We'll launch an immediate inquiry."
I smiled, feeling power surge through me for the first time in months. "I thought you might."
You may also like





