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Betrayal's Endgame Novel Cover

Betrayal's Endgame

I clutched the small velvet box against my chest, my heart hammering with an excitement so pure it made my hands tremble. Inside, nestled in soft tissue paper, were the tiniest pair of baby shoes I'd ever seen—white leather with pearl buttons, perfect and precious. Beneath them lay the pregnancy test, its pink lines bold and unmistakable. Three years. Three years of marriage to Adonis, and finally, finally we were going to have the family I'd dreamed of since our wedding day. The baby was barely the size of a poppy seed, but already I could picture everything—Adonis's face when I told him, the nursery we'd design together, tiny fingers wrapped around mine. The hospital corridors buzzed with their usual activity, but I floated through them as if walking on air. Adonis had texted that he was finishing rounds in the east wing. I'd surprise him in his office, maybe we'd celebrate with dinner at that little Italian place where he proposed. My free hand drifted to my still-flat stomach, a gesture that felt both protective and wondering.
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Chapter 3

The Crystal Ballroom of the Metropolitan Hotel glittered with Manhattan's elite, their jewels catching the light from massive chandeliers as they moved through carefully choreographed conversations about charity and tax write-offs. I smoothed my black evening gown and checked my reflection in the gilt mirror by the entrance, ensuring every detail was perfect. Tonight's cancer research gala would be another performance, another opportunity to gather intelligence while playing the grieving wife recovering from tragedy.

Adonis's hand settled on my lower back as we entered, his touch light but possessive. "You look beautiful," he murmured, his breath warm against my ear. Once, those words would have made me glow with happiness. Now they felt like another lie wrapped in familiar packaging.

"Thank you," I replied, allowing him to guide me toward our assigned table where several prominent doctors and their spouses were already seated. Malayah hadn't arrived yet, but her absence felt more present than anyone else's company.

The evening proceeded with predictable precision—speeches about breakthrough treatments, silent auction announcements, the gentle clink of champagne glasses punctuating discussions of mortality and hope. I participated with the grace expected of Mrs. Adonis Cole, smiling at the right moments, nodding sympathetically when others spoke of loss.

During the third course, a young man approached our table with hesitant steps. He was perhaps thirty, with prematurely gray temples and intelligent eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses. His hospital ID badge identified him as Dr. Marcus Thorne, though he'd tucked it partially beneath his jacket lapel.

"Dr. Cole," he said, addressing Adonis with professional courtesy before his gaze shifted to me. "Mrs. Cole. I was hoping I might have a word."

Adonis looked up from cutting his salmon, a slight frown creasing his brow. "Of course, Marcus. Though if this is about the Henderson case, perhaps we should—"

"Actually," Dr. Thorne interrupted gently, "I was hoping to speak with Mrs. Cole. About her mother's foundation work."

Something in his tone made my pulse quicken, though I kept my expression politely interested. "Of course. Though I'm afraid I haven't been as involved lately."

"Understandable, given your recent loss," he said, and there was genuine sympathy in his voice. "Perhaps we could discuss it on the terrace? The evening air might be refreshing."

Adonis started to rise. "I'll join you—"

"Please, don't let me interrupt your dinner," Dr. Thorne said quickly. "It won't take long."

I stood, placing a gentle hand on Adonis's shoulder. "I'll be right back, darling."

The terrace was blissfully quiet after the ballroom's chatter, with only the distant hum of traffic below and the soft rustle of my dress in the evening breeze. Dr. Thorne led me to a corner where potted topiaries provided privacy from curious eyes.

"Mrs. Cole," he began, his voice dropping to barely above a whisper, "I need to tell you something about your mother's surgery. Something I should have reported months ago."

My heart stopped. "What do you mean?"

He glanced back at the ballroom doors, ensuring we weren't being watched. "I was assisting Dr. Ross that day. What happened... it wasn't a surgical complication. She made deliberate choices during the procedure that directly caused your mother's death."

The world seemed to tilt beneath my feet. Hearing Malayah confess had been devastating, but having independent confirmation made it brutally, undeniably real.

"I don't understand," I whispered, though I understood perfectly.

"The arterial nick during the initial incision—that was intentional. She had access to your mother's medical history, knew about the clotting disorder. When the bleeding started, she delayed the standard protocols. I questioned her decisions, but she claimed it was a teaching moment, that I needed to trust her experience." His hands clenched into fists. "By the time I realized what was happening, it was too late."

My legs threatened to give out. I gripped the terrace railing, the cold stone anchoring me to the moment. "Why didn't you report it?"

Shame colored his features. "I was a resident. She was a senior attending with an impeccable reputation. Who would have believed me? And afterward, she made it clear that speaking out would end my career before it began."

"But you're telling me now."

He met my eyes directly. "Because I've been watching her since then. Her treatment protocols with certain patients, the way she handles cases involving people she has... personal connections to. What happened to you recently—the miscarriage—I know she was providing your prenatal vitamins."

The words hit like physical blows. "You think she—"

"I can't prove it. But I can testify about your mother. I kept copies of everything—surgical notes, timeline documentation, my own observations. If you ever decide to pursue this legally, you won't be alone."

He pressed a small card into my hand. Not his hospital business card, but something personal with only a phone number.

"Why would you risk this?" I asked.

"Because your mother didn't deserve to die that way. And because someone needs to stop her before she kills again."

As we returned to the ballroom, I slipped the card into my clutch with trembling fingers. The evening's remaining events passed in a blur of polite conversation and forced smiles, but inside, something fundamental had shifted.

I finally had proof. I had an ally.

The game was no longer just survival—it was justice.

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