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Auctioned by Unfaithful Husband Novel Cover

Auctioned by Unfaithful Husband

The shrill ring of Marcellus's phone cut through the elegant atmosphere of Le Bernardin like a blade. I watched his face transform as he answered, the color draining from his features in a way that made my stomach clench with sudden dread. "What?" His voice cracked, raw with an emotion I'd never heard from him before. "How bad is it?" The conversation lasted mere seconds, but each word seemed to age him years. When he hung up, his hands were trembling. "Marcellus, what's wrong?" I reached across the table, my fingers barely grazing his before he pulled away. "I have to go." He was already standing, throwing his napkin down with such force that our wine glasses rattled. "There's been an accident." "An accident? Who—" "Ana." The name fell from his lips like a prayer, soft and reverent in a way he'd never spoken mine. "She's at Mount Sinai.
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Chapter 1

The shrill ring of Marcellus's phone cut through the elegant atmosphere of Le Bernardin like a blade. I watched his face transform as he answered, the color draining from his features in a way that made my stomach clench with sudden dread.

"What?" His voice cracked, raw with an emotion I'd never heard from him before. "How bad is it?"

The conversation lasted mere seconds, but each word seemed to age him years. When he hung up, his hands were trembling.

"Marcellus, what's wrong?" I reached across the table, my fingers barely grazing his before he pulled away.

"I have to go." He was already standing, throwing his napkin down with such force that our wine glasses rattled. "There's been an accident."

"An accident? Who—"

"Ana." The name fell from his lips like a prayer, soft and reverent in a way he'd never spoken mine. "She's at Mount Sinai. Critical condition."

Ana. The name I'd heard whispered in his sleep, the ghost that haunted the edges of our marriage. My throat constricted as I watched him frantically signal for the check.

"I'm coming with you," I said, but he was already moving toward the exit.

"No, Serenity. Stay. Finish dinner." He didn't even look back.

I sat there for a moment, surrounded by the soft murmur of other diners' conversations, the clink of silverware against china, the normal sounds of a world that suddenly felt foreign. Then I threw down my own napkin and followed him.

The hospital corridors blurred past as I hurried to catch up with Marcellus's long strides. He moved with desperate purpose, his usual composed demeanor completely shattered. When we reached the emergency department, he immediately cornered the nearest doctor.

"Ana Hawkins—where is she? I need to see her now."

The young resident looked overwhelmed. "Sir, she's in surgery. The injuries are severe—massive blood loss, possible internal bleeding—"

"I don't care what it costs." Marcellus's voice turned sharp, commanding. "Get your best surgeons. I want every available unit of her blood type. Now."

"Mr. Oliver, we're doing everything we can, but—"

"Not enough." He turned to me then, his eyes wild with panic I'd never seen before. "Serenity, you're O-negative, aren't you? Universal donor?"

The question hit me like a physical blow. "Marcellus, I—"

"She needs blood. You can help her."

I stared at him, seeing a man I didn't recognize. This wasn't the controlled businessman I'd married, the man who calculated every decision. This was someone raw, desperate, completely undone.

"I'm not feeling well," I said quietly. "I've been dizzy lately, and—"

"Please." The word broke from him like a sob. "Please, Serenity. She's dying."

The nurse led me to a small room where they inserted the needle with practiced efficiency. I watched my blood flow through the clear tubing, each drop carrying away a piece of my strength. Through the thin walls, I could hear Marcellus on the phone, his voice tight with authority as he arranged for private specialists, additional equipment, whatever Ana needed.

When it was over, I felt hollow, drained of more than just blood. The nurse offered me juice and crackers, but I couldn't swallow past the knot in my throat. I made my way back to the waiting area, where Marcellus paced like a caged animal.

Then I saw them through the glass doors of the ICU. Ana, pale and fragile against the white sheets, machines beeping around her like mechanical prayers. And Marcellus, sitting beside her bed, holding her hand with a tenderness that stopped my breath.

He was crying. Silent tears tracked down his cheeks as he whispered something I couldn't hear, his thumb stroking across her knuckles with infinite care. In all our years together, through every joy and sorrow, I had never seen him cry. Not when his father died. Not on our wedding day. Not ever.

But here he was, breaking apart for another woman.

"I need to get some paperwork from your study," I told him later, when he finally emerged from her room. "For the insurance claims."

He nodded absently, his attention already drifting back toward the ICU. "The key's in my desk drawer. Top right."

Our house felt different when I returned—too quiet, too empty. I climbed the stairs to his study, a room I rarely entered, and found the key exactly where he'd said. The insurance documents were easy to locate, but as I rifled through the files, my fingers caught on something else.

A hidden drawer, slightly ajar.

My hands shook as I pulled it open fully. Inside lay a shrine to a love I'd never known existed. Photographs of Ana—dozens of them—carefully preserved in protective sleeves. Her smile radiant in every image, her eyes bright with the kind of joy I'd spent years trying to kindle in Marcellus.

Love letters in his handwriting, passionate and desperate: "My darling Ana, every moment without you is agony..." Dried flowers pressed between pages like sacred relics. A delicate gold bracelet I'd never seen her wear, but had admired in jewelry stores, wondering why Marcellus never bought me anything so beautiful.

With trembling fingers, I opened another drawer—the regular one where he kept everyday items. There, carelessly tossed among old business cards and loose change, was our wedding photo. The glass was cracked, and someone had folded one corner, creasing right through my face.

I sank into his leather chair, the evidence of his true feelings scattered before me like broken glass. Seven years of marriage, and I had been nothing but a placeholder, a pale substitute for the woman who held his heart.

The sound of my own breathing seemed too loud in the silence. Outside, the city hummed with life, but inside this room—inside this marriage—I was utterly, completely alone.

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