
When My Groom Took My Grandmother’s Heirloom for His Mistress
Chapter 4
The smell of singed hair and antiseptic was a suffocating shroud. I woke to the rhythmic beep of a cardiac monitor, a metronome counting down the seconds of a life I no longer owned. My throat felt like I had swallowed broken glass, a souvenir from the clinic fire, but the pain in my chest had nothing to do with smoke inhalation.
Carter stood at the foot of the bed. He wasn’t wearing his husband face; he was wearing his Chief of Surgery mask—impassive, clinical, terrifying.
"Oxygen saturation is ninety-eight percent," he noted, scribbling on a chart without looking at me. "Physically, you’re cleared."
I tried to sit up, the hospital gown sticking to my clammy skin. "Carter, the fire... I had to—"
"You had to make a scene," he cut in, his voice devoid of inflection. He finally looked up, his hazel eyes flat and hard, the violet haze of Emilia’s influence swirling like oil in water. "Dr. Kim told me you walked back into the building. Into a structural collapse zone. That’s not heroism, Roselyn. That’s pathology."
He tapped the metal clipboard against the bed rail. The sound rang like a gavel. "I’ve spoken to Psych. I’m recommending an involuntary seventy-two-hour hold. You’re a danger to yourself."
"A hold?" The words rasped out of me. "I have less than twenty-four hours left, Carter. You can’t lock me up."
"See? That’s exactly what I’m talking about." He stepped closer, invading my space with the scent of starch and expensive cologne. "This countdown. The 'saving' of Sawyer. You’ve constructed a narrative where you’re a celestial martyr because you can’t handle the reality of our divorce. It’s classic narcissistic collapse."
"I saved your son’s life with my own blood," I whispered, the truth tasting like ash. "I healed Dylan’s mind when the VA gave up. Those aren't delusions."
Carter leaned down, his face inches from mine. "Sawyer went into remission because of chemotherapy, Roselyn. Dylan recovered because of time. You were just... there. A spectator taking credit for miracles you didn't perform. And now you’re using suicide to manipulate me into staying. It’s disgusting."
He turned on his heel, the white coat billowing. "I’m signing the papers. Don’t try to leave."
The door clicked shut, sealing the room. The sigil on my wrist flared, a white-hot brand of panic. *Twenty-four hours.* If I was sedated in a psych ward when the clock ran out, I wouldn't ascend. I would simply cease to exist, my soul shredded by the cosmic laws I had broken.
I waited until the nurse’s station shift change. I stripped off the gown, my fingers trembling as I pulled on the soot-stained scrubs they’d left in a bag. I slipped out the fire exit, the irony bitter on my tongue.
The city was a blur of neon and rain. I walked until the concrete turned to wood—the rotting, salt-slicked planks of the pier. Below, the Puget Sound churned, a black, freezing abyss. It didn't look like death. It looked like a doorway.
The wind whipped my hair across my face, stinging my eyes. *High Priestess, I am coming.*
I stepped off the edge.
The shock was instantaneous. The cold was a physical blow, punching the air from my lungs. Darkness swallowed me, heavy and silent. My limbs went numb, the fight draining away. I didn't thrash. I let the water fill me, closing my eyes, waiting for the silver light of the Ethereal Realm to pierce the gloom.
Peace. Finally, peace.
Then, a hand clamped around my wrist.
It wasn't a gentle savior’s grasp. It was a vice grip, bruising bone. I was hauled upward, breaking the surface with a jagged gasp that tore my throat.
"Got her!" Dylan’s voice barked, military sharp.
I was dragged onto the floating dock, coughing up brine and bile. Dylan stood over me, his face a mask of annoyance, checking his phone. "Target secured. She’s alive."
Carter was there a second later, not with a blanket, but with a look of sheer fury. He grabbed my arm, hauling me to my feet before my legs could hold me.
"Are you trying to ruin us?" he hissed, shaking me. "Emilia has a gala next week. Do you know what it looks like if my ex-wife washes up on the shore like a piece of driftwood?"
"Let me go," I sobbed, my teeth chattering so hard I could barely speak. "Just let me die."
"And let the press spin it that we drove you to it?" Carter scoffed. "Not a chance. Get in the car."
They didn't take me back to the hospital. They drove me to the house—the home I had paid for, the sanctuary I had built. They marched me up the stairs, water dripping from my scrubs onto the pristine hardwood.
They shoved me into the guest room.
"Check the drawers," Carter ordered.
Dylan moved with soldierly efficiency. He stripped the room. The letter opener on the desk, the glass vase of hydrangeas, even the belt from the robe in the closet—all confiscated.
I slumped against the wall, shivering violently. "Why are you doing this? If you hate me, let me leave."
"We're controlling the narrative, Roselyn," Carter said, standing in the doorway. He looked at me not as a woman he had loved, but as a liability to be managed. "You stay here until the divorce is final and Emilia’s reputation is secure. Then you can do whatever you want."
"Please," I whispered, the sigil burning so hot I could smell my own flesh singing. "You don't understand what you're doing."
"I understand perfectly," he said coldly. "Goodnight, Roselyn."
The door slammed. The lock clicked—a heavy, final sound. I was trapped in a cage of their making, surrounded by the ghosts of their love, while the clock on my wrist ticked down to oblivion.
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