
Betrayal in White Coats
Chapter 2
I arrived at the medical center earlier than usual, the memory of yesterday's chelation 'treatment' still lingering in my body like a betrayal. My veins ached where the needle had pierced my skin—a physical reminder of Marcus's willingness to harm me to appease Chloe. The revelation had kept me awake most of the night, my mind replaying seven years of memories, searching for signs I'd missed.
The conference room was already half-full when I slipped in, nodding professionally to colleagues whose sympathetic glances told me rumors were already circulating. I took my usual seat at the table, deliberately focusing on organizing my notes rather than looking for Marcus.
"Morning, everyone," his voice carried that familiar authoritative tone as he strode in, Chloe following close behind. Something about their body language made my stomach tighten—a new intimacy, a shared secret.
Marcus cleared his throat after covering the standard agenda items, his eyes deliberately avoiding mine. "Before we wrap up, I have a quick personal announcement."
The room went quiet. I felt the weight of several gazes shift to me, then back to him.
"Dr. Rivers and I got married yesterday," he said, his voice clinically detached. "It's purely contractual—for her green card situation. Nothing that affects our professional arrangements here."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Married. The commitment he'd withheld from me for seven years, he'd given to Chloe in what—weeks? Months?
"Congratulations," someone said, breaking the awkward silence.
I sat perfectly still, my face a mask of professional composure while my insides shattered. The meeting continued around me, voices fading into background noise as I struggled to process what I'd just heard. A purely contractual arrangement. For her green card. The justifications felt hollow, rehearsed.
When the meeting adjourned, I gathered my things with mechanical precision, avoiding eye contact with anyone. I needed space. Time to think.
"Victoria," Marcus called as I reached the door. I kept walking.
---
I was reviewing patient files in my office when Jessica burst in without knocking, her face a mixture of fury and concern.
"Have you seen it?" she demanded, thrusting her phone toward me.
"Seen what?" I asked, though some part of me already knew.
"Instagram. Chloe's post. It's everywhere—the staff group chats are blowing up."
I took the phone, my hand steady despite the tremor I felt inside. There it was—a photo of an official marriage certificate, Marcus's signature clearly visible beside Chloe's. The caption read: "Dreams do come true #FinallyMrsWebb" with a string of heart emojis.
"Purely contractual, my ass," Jessica muttered, watching my face carefully.
A cold clarity washed over me. The tea. The punishment. The marriage. Each betrayal building on the last, constructing a reality I could no longer deny.
"Vic," Jessica's voice softened. "I'm so sorry. Everyone knows this is wrong. The way he's treating you—"
"I need to talk to him," I said, rising from my chair, my decision made. Seven years deserved at least a confrontation.
---
Marcus was in his office, the glass walls offering no privacy as I stormed in, closing the door behind me with controlled force.
"Purely contractual?" I said, my voice low but intense. "Is that why she's broadcasting it to the world as her dream come true?"
He sighed, leaning back in his chair. "Victoria, you're overreacting. It doesn't mean anything."
"Seven years, Marcus. Seven years I waited while we built this place together. And you marry her for a green card?"
"We talked about this," he said, his tone shifting to that patronizing cadence I now recognized as gaslighting. "We agreed our relationship was about more than paperwork. We're partners in what matters—this center, our work."
"We never agreed to this," I said, gesturing toward his hand where a wedding band now gleamed. "You never even asked."
"Look," he said, his impatience breaking through, "Chloe needs this. She's emotional, unstable. This stabilizes her, which is better for everyone—for us, for the center."
"For us?" I repeated, the audacity of his words hitting me like a slap. "There is no 'us' anymore, Marcus. You made that clear when you poisoned me to appease her jealousy."
His face hardened. "That's not what happened."
"It's exactly what happened," I said, turning to leave. "And we both know it."
As I walked out, I felt the eyes of our colleagues watching through the glass walls. Let them see. Let them all see exactly who Marcus Webb really was.
What I didn't see was Chloe, watching from the nurses' station, a triumphant smile playing on her lips as she twirled her new wedding ring.
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