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He Paid for His Mistress’s Tattoo, Not Mom’s Surgery Novel Cover

He Paid for His Mistress’s Tattoo, Not Mom’s Surgery

The consultation room smells like antiseptic and something else I can't name—maybe fear, maybe death. Dr. Elena Rodriguez sits across from me, her hands folded on the desk between us, and I know before she opens her mouth that my world is about to end. "Aggressive stomach cancer," she says, and the words land like stones in my chest. "Stage three. We need to operate immediately." Mom squeezes my hand. Three times. I love you. I can't breathe. Dr.
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Chapter 2

I don't remember leaving the apartment. One moment I'm staring at Finn's phone, at the evidence of his betrayal glowing in my hand, and the next I'm shoving clothes into my old duffel bag—the one from college, before Finn, before I learned to make myself convenient.

The shower is still running when I walk out.

The rain starts the moment I hit the street, because of course it does. Cold and mean, the kind that soaks through your jacket in seconds. I end up on a bench in Riverside Park, under a tree that provides exactly zero shelter, watching the Hudson churn gray and angry beneath the storm.

Fifty thousand dollars for my mother's life: impossible.

Five thousand dollars for matching tattoos with his 'soulmate': done without a second thought.

I pull out my phone. The screen is wet, or maybe that's my hands, or maybe I'm crying and I just can't tell anymore. My contacts list blurs. I scroll past Finn's name—blocked now, that felt good for about thirty seconds—past college friends I haven't spoken to in years, past Mom's number that I can't bear to call because what do I tell her? That the man I've spent five years defending, excusing, shrinking myself for, won't lift a finger to save her?

Then I see it. A name I haven't touched in three years.

Cassius Knight.

My finger hovers. We were neighbors once, a lifetime ago. He moved away for boarding school when we were fourteen, came back a stranger in expensive suits who made Forbes' 30 Under 30. We had coffee once after he returned to the city. Just once. He asked about my life with an intensity that made me nervous, and when I mentioned Finn, something shuttered behind his eyes. He said to call if I ever needed anything.

I never called.

I press the contact now because I have nothing left to lose. It rings once. Twice. I'm already preparing the voicemail I'll leave, the humiliating plea I'll have to make—

"Mae."

His voice stops my heart. Deep and certain, like he's been waiting by the phone for three years just in case.

"Cassius." My voice cracks. "I'm sorry, I know we haven't talked, and I shouldn't—I don't have the right to ask, but—"

"Which hospital?"

I blink rain out of my eyes. "What?"

"Your mother." There's movement on his end, the sound of keys, a door closing. "Which hospital, Mae?"

I tell him. The words spill out—the diagnosis, the surgery, the impossible number. I don't mention Finn. I don't have to. Cassius has always been able to read the things I don't say.

"I'm handling it," he says, and there's something in his tone that sounds like a vow. "Go back to her. I'll meet you there."

The line goes dead.

I sit there on the bench, phone clutched in my shaking hand, and I don't know whether to laugh or scream or pray.

---

The billing department looks different when I return to the hospital two hours later. The same tired woman who quoted me fifty thousand dollars this morning now wears a expression I can't quite read—something between shock and reverence.

"Ms. Tucker." She stands when she sees me, actually stands. "The wire transfer has been processed. Your mother's surgery is scheduled for tomorrow morning, and we've arranged her transfer to the VIP suite on the eighth floor."

The words don't make sense. I open my mouth, close it.

"There must be some mistake—"

"No mistake."

The voice comes from behind me, and I turn to find Cassius Knight walking through the hospital corridor like he owns it. Maybe he does. He's wearing a three-piece suit in charcoal gray that probably costs more than my car, and he looks so utterly out of place against the scuffed linoleum and flickering fluorescents that several nurses actually stop to stare.

But his eyes—dark and unreadable—are locked on me.

"Cassius." His name comes out as barely a whisper. "You didn't have to—"

"Yes," he says simply. "I did."

He's carrying two cups from a coffee shop I recognize from magazine spreads, the kind of place where espresso costs twelve dollars. He hands me one, and when our fingers brush, his are warm despite the rain still dripping from my jacket.

"Drink," he says. It's not a request.

I take a sip. It tastes like everything my instant coffee isn't—rich and complex and completely foreign. It tastes like a different life.

"I can't pay you back," I say, because I need him to understand. "Not for years. Maybe not ever."

Something flickers across his face. His jaw tightens, and he taps his signet ring once against the cup—a gesture I remember from childhood, when he was trying not to say something that would get him in trouble.

"I don't want you to pay me back, Mae." His voice drops lower. "I want you to let me help you. There's a difference."

My phone buzzes in my pocket. Once. Twice. Seven times in rapid succession.

I pull it out. Finn's messages flood the screen from a different number—he must have figured out I blocked him.

Finn: Are you seriously ignoring me right now?

Finn: Mae this is childish

Finn: You're overreacting. Dior and I are FRIENDS

Finn: You're being paranoid and honestly it's not attractive

Finn: Fine. Be that way. See if I care.

I stare at the messages. At the manipulation, the gaslighting, the utter absence of accountability. And I think about how many times I've read texts like these and apologized. How many times I've made his cruelty my fault.

Not anymore.

I open our text thread and attach the screenshot I took of his Venmo payment to Dior. The one that says 'For my soulmate's ink' with a winky face. I type three words:

'I know. We're done.'

Then I block the new number too.

Cassius is watching me, and when I meet his eyes, there's something fierce and protective burning there that makes my breath catch.

"Let's go see your mother," he says quietly, and offers me his arm like we're walking into a gala instead of a hospital room.

I take it.

And for the first time in five years, I don't feel like I'm drowning.

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