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When My Groom Took My Grandmother’s Heirloom for His Mistress Novel Cover

When My Groom Took My Grandmother’s Heirloom for His Mistress

The smell hit me before I even turned the key—a heavy, cloying scent of roasted garlic and expensive Merlot that clashed violently with the antiseptic stench clinging to my scrubs. My fingers, stiff from eighteen hours of suturing aortas and massaging stopped hearts, fumbled with the lock. I was hollowed out, a shell of gray fatigue, craving only the silence of my bedroom. But silence didn’t live here anymore. Laughter spilled into the hallway as I pushed the door open. It wasn’t the warm, rumbling laughter of the family I had sacrificed my divinity to save. It was sharp, jagged, and performative. As I stepped into the dining room, the sound died instantly, like a vacuum sealing shut. Carter sat at the head of the table—*my* table. He wore the charcoal suit I’d bought him for his first residency interview, the one we had to skip meals to afford, but he wore it now with a stranger’s arrogance.
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Chapter 1

The smell hit me before I even turned the key—a heavy, cloying scent of roasted garlic and expensive Merlot that clashed violently with the antiseptic stench clinging to my scrubs. My fingers, stiff from eighteen hours of suturing aortas and massaging stopped hearts, fumbled with the lock. I was hollowed out, a shell of gray fatigue, craving only the silence of my bedroom.

But silence didn’t live here anymore.

Laughter spilled into the hallway as I pushed the door open. It wasn’t the warm, rumbling laughter of the family I had sacrificed my divinity to save. It was sharp, jagged, and performative. As I stepped into the dining room, the sound died instantly, like a vacuum sealing shut.

Carter sat at the head of the table—*my* table. He wore the charcoal suit I’d bought him for his first residency interview, the one we had to skip meals to afford, but he wore it now with a stranger’s arrogance. Beside him, Emilia Payne swirled a glass of Pinot Noir. She was seated in my chair, her fingers draped over Carter’s forearm with a possessive ease that made my stomach turn.

"You’re late," Carter said. He didn’t look at my eyes; his gaze flicked disdainfully to the small stain of betadine on my scrub top. "And you look like a corpse."

"Double shift, Carter," I said, my voice rasping. I reached for the back of a guest chair, needing the wood’s solidity to keep me upright. "The trauma center was overflowing. Congratulations on the promotion. I wanted to be here."

"If you wanted to be here, you wouldn’t be burying yourself in the O.R. while real life happens," he scoffed. He smoothed his silk tie—a nervous tic from medical school that had mutated into a gesture of superiority. "Emilia organized this. She knows what it takes to support a Chief of Surgery. She doesn't just... exist in the background."

Emilia’s lips curled. It wasn’t a smile; it was a baring of teeth. The air around her shimmered with a sickly, violet haze only I could see—the static of dark magic interfering with the room’s natural light.

"Don’t be too hard on her, Carter," Emilia purred, her voice like honey laced with arsenic. "Not everyone has the capacity for... elegance."

I looked at Dylan, my brother, and Sawyer, my son, seated across from them. I waited for them to defend me, to crack a joke, to do *something*. But Dylan stared at his plate with a soldier’s thousand-yard stare, and Sawyer was busy texting, a sneer etched onto his teenage face. They were strangers in the bodies of the men I loved.

A sudden, blinding spike of pain drove through my temples—a migraine so severe my vision whitened. I gripped the chair until my knuckles turned to bone-white peaks.

"I need... water," I managed, retreating to the kitchen before they could see the tears of exhaustion welling in my eyes.

The next morning, the hospital scrub sink became my altar.

I pressed the foot pedal with my boot. Water cascaded over my hands, steam rising into the sterile air. I closed my eyes, letting the heat seep into my cold bones, humming a fragment of a melody I hadn’t heard in a decade—a song from the Silver City, from before the fall.

Suddenly, the hum of the ventilation system died.

I opened my eyes. The water was frozen in mid-air, a suspended sculpture of crystal droplets. The steam hung motionless, trapped in a breathless void. The silence was absolute, heavy enough to crush the lungs.

*Roselyn.*

The voice didn’t come from the room; it vibrated in the marrow of my bones. Cold. Absolute. The High Priestess.

*Your penance is concluded. The Ethereal Realm calls.*

My breath hitched, trapped in a chest that suddenly felt too small. Home. The word tasted like ambrosia and ash.

*But ascension requires purity,* the voice intoned, devoid of mercy. *You remain tethered to the mortal coil by threads of emotion. Sever them. You have seventy-two hours. Fail, and your soul will dissipate into the void.*

A searing pain lashed around my left wrist. I gasped, clutching it. As the water suddenly crashed down into the sink, splashing my front, a glowing, intricate sigil burned into my skin. It pulsed with a terrifying, divine rhythm—a countdown clock ticking away my existence.

Seventy-two hours to destroy the love I had spent a decade building.

I dried my hands with trembling towels, the burn on my wrist throbbing in time with my racing heart. I pushed open the door to my office, seeking sanctuary to process the impossible command, but found an ambush instead.

Carter stood by the window, silhouetted against the gray Seattle skyline. He didn’t turn when I entered. He just tossed a manila envelope onto my desk. It slid across the mahogany and stopped inches from my hand.

"Sign them," he said.

I looked at the bold text peeking through the plastic window. *Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.*

"Carter," I whispered, the fight draining out of me. "We can talk about this. The stress, the new job—"

"Stop," he snapped, turning finally. His eyes, usually a warm hazel, were flat and hard, reflecting a reality that didn't exist. "I’m done carrying you, Roselyn. I’m done with the dead weight."

"Dead weight?" I stepped forward, the injustice lighting a spark in my chest. "I worked three jobs while you studied for the boards. I paid your tuition. I held you when you failed your first anatomy exam and wanted to quit. I built this life with you brick by brick."

He laughed, a cold, dry sound that rattled my ribs. "Is that the story you tell yourself? You were an anchor, Roselyn. A gold digger who saw a future doctor and latched on. I succeeded *despite* you. I built this. Me. Alone."

He believed it. I could see the conviction in the set of his jaw, the way the dark magic had rewired his neural pathways, overlaying truth with Emilia’s poison. He didn't see his wife; he saw a parasite.

I looked down at the envelope. The sigil on my wrist pulsed, invisible to him but scorching to me. The first hour was gone.

The universe wasn’t just asking me to let go. It was handing me the knife.

"Fine," I said, my voice steady despite the shattering of my heart. I picked up the pen, the plastic cold against my feverish skin. "If that’s how you remember it, Carter. Then you can have it all."

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