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Cancer - Forsaken by Husband Novel Cover

Cancer - Forsaken by Husband

The fluorescent lights of the exam room at Cedars-Sinai buzzed overhead, the sound drilling into my skull as I stared at the paper trembling in my hands. The words blurred and refocused, but their meaning remained unchanged: late-stage gastric cancer. Metastasized. Inoperable. Dr. Anya Sharma's voice seemed to come from somewhere far away, floating across the sterile room like it belonged to another conversation, one that couldn't possibly be about me. "Isabella? Mrs. Mitchell? Are you hearing me?" I nodded mechanically, though I wasn't sure what she'd just said.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights of the exam room at Cedars-Sinai buzzed overhead, the sound drilling into my skull as I stared at the paper trembling in my hands. The words blurred and refocused, but their meaning remained unchanged: late-stage gastric cancer. Metastasized. Inoperable.

Dr. Anya Sharma's voice seemed to come from somewhere far away, floating across the sterile room like it belonged to another conversation, one that couldn't possibly be about me.

"Isabella? Mrs. Mitchell? Are you hearing me?"

I nodded mechanically, though I wasn't sure what she'd just said. Something about treatment options. Chemotherapy. Palliative care. Life expectancy. Words that belonged to old people, to other people. Not to me. Not at thirty-four.

"How long?" I finally managed, my voice barely a whisper.

Dr. Sharma's dark eyes softened with compassion. "With aggressive treatment, perhaps six to eight months. I'm so sorry."

My phone buzzed again—the fifth time in the last twenty minutes. I glanced down reflexively. Ryan's assistant Melanie: *Red carpet starts at 7. Press asking if you'll attend with Ryan. Please confirm ASAP.*

Another buzz. *Stylist needs to know if you're wearing the Valentino or Dior tonight.*

I almost laughed. The Valentino or Dior. As if it mattered now. As if anything about Hollywood's glittering facade mattered when I'd just been handed my death sentence.

Nothing from Ryan himself. Of course.

"Do you have someone with you today?" Dr. Sharma asked gently. "Someone who can drive you home?"

I should have said my husband. I should have been able to say my husband. Instead, I shook my head. "I'll be fine."

The drive back to our Beverly Hills mansion passed in a blur. I pulled through the wrought iron gates, past the manicured gardens that had once filled me with such pride. Now they just seemed like another thing I maintained for appearances—for Ryan's appearances.

The house was empty when I arrived, my footsteps echoing on the marble floors. I found Maria, our housekeeper, in the kitchen.

"Where's Ryan?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.

"Mr. Mitchell called, señora. He's at a pre-production party for the new film. Said not to wait up." She hesitated, her kind eyes studying my face. "Are you okay, Mrs. Mitchell? You look pale."

I wasn't okay. I would never be okay again. But I nodded and forced a smile. "Just tired, Maria. Thank you."

It was New Year's Eve. Once, that had meant something to us. Once, before the fame and the awards and the endless stream of people who wanted pieces of him, we'd celebrated just the two of us. I remembered our first New Year's together in that tiny studio apartment, eating takeout on the floor, Ryan promising me the world while fireworks exploded outside our window.

A sudden, fierce determination seized me. One last normal night. One last attempt to reclaim what we'd lost.

"Maria, I'll be cooking dinner tonight," I announced. "For Ryan and me."

She looked startled. "But Mr. Mitchell—"

"Will be home," I said firmly. "It's New Year's Eve."

I spent the afternoon cooking, my mother's worn recipe book open on the counter. Ironic, that gastric cancer would take me when food had always been my language of love. I set the table with our heirloom china, crystal glasses that caught the light from the candles I'd arranged. A perfect, intimate setting for two.

When the front door finally opened at nine, my heart leapt—then plummeted as I heard multiple voices, laughter, the click of high heels on marble.

Ryan strode in first, devastatingly handsome in a tailored suit, his golden hair perfectly styled. Behind him came Sophia Hartwell, his ex-girlfriend and co-star, along with three men I recognized from the studio. None of them seemed surprised to see me. This had been planned.

"Darling," Ryan said, his tone pleasant but his eyes cold. "You've been busy."

I stood frozen, the first course—a delicate soup—trembling in my hands. "I thought... it's New Year's Eve. I made dinner for us."

"How quaint," Sophia said, her perfect red lips curving into a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Oh darling, you look so tired. Are you feeling alright?"

Ryan barely glanced at me as he loosened his tie. "We've already eaten. The party had an incredible spread." He gestured dismissively at my offering. "You should have checked with Melanie about my schedule."

Something in me broke. The diagnosis. The months of his indifference. This final humiliation.

"I'm your wife," I whispered. "Not your assistant."

His eyes flashed with sudden fury. In one violent motion, he swept his arm across the table, sending china, crystal, and food crashing to the floor. The sound was deafening in the sudden silence.

"And I'm Ryan fucking Mitchell," he snarled. "I don't need to check in with anyone."

Sophia's smile widened as she placed a possessive hand on his arm. The others looked away uncomfortably.

I stood amid the wreckage of my last attempt at normalcy, cancer and heartbreak eating me from the inside out. In that moment, I knew I couldn't die here, watching him become someone I no longer recognized.

"I'm leaving," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "I'll face this alone."

Ryan's laugh was cruel. "Face what? Another of your dramatic exits?"

I didn't answer. He didn't deserve to know. Not anymore. Not after this.

Upstairs, I packed a single suitcase with shaking hands, the diagnosis paper tucked safely inside my purse. Behind me, a life built on sacrifice and love lay shattered like the china on our dining room floor.

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