
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Me
Chapter 2
I drifted in and out of consciousness, fragments of reality blending with nightmares. Beeping machines. Hushed voices. Pain that ebbed and flowed like a dark tide. And through it all, one thought circled my mind: Michael had signed a DNR. My husband had chosen to let me die.
When I finally clawed my way back to full awareness, the first thing I noticed was the absence of the one person who should have been there. The room was bathed in the sterile white light of morning, making the empty chair beside my bed seem even more stark and accusatory.
"Michael?" My voice came out as a rasp, my throat raw from the breathing tube they must have inserted during surgery.
A gentle hand touched my arm. "Mrs. Parker? You're awake."
I blinked, trying to focus on the face hovering above me. A woman with kind eyes and dark hair pulled back in a practical ponytail. Her name tag read 'Sarah Jenkins, RN.'
"Where's my husband?" I whispered, though some part of me already knew the answer.
Sarah's expression shifted subtly—a flicker of something like anger quickly masked by professional composure. "Let me get you some water first."
She held a cup with a straw to my lips, and I sipped gratefully, the cool liquid soothing my parched throat. My body felt hollow, emptied. "My baby?"
"Your daughter is in the NICU," Sarah said, her voice softening. "She's small but fighting hard. Dr. Evans says she's responding well to treatment."
Dr. Evans. The man who had refused to let me die. Not my husband—a stranger.
"And Michael?" I pressed, needing to hear it confirmed.
Sarah busied herself checking my IV line, avoiding my eyes. "Dr. Parker has been... occupied."
"With Rebecca," I said flatly. It wasn't a question.
Her hands stilled, and she looked at me directly, professional distance giving way to genuine compassion. "Yes. I'm sorry, Mrs. Parker. Dr. Sterling was admitted with pregnancy complications around the same time you were. Your husband has been attending to her case personally."
The words landed like blows. Each one precise and devastating. I closed my eyes, feeling tears burn behind my eyelids but refusing to let them fall. "How long have I been here?"
"You've been in ICU for nearly thirty-six hours," Sarah replied. "You gave us quite a scare."
Thirty-six hours. A day and a half during which my husband hadn't once come to my side. A day and a half spent at the bedside of another woman—a woman carrying another man's child.
"Has he asked about me?" The question slipped out before I could stop it, pathetic in its naked hope.
Sarah's silence was answer enough.
"I see," I whispered, turning my face toward the window. Outside, Seattle continued its normal rhythm, oblivious to the fact that my world was shattering into pieces too small to ever reassemble.
"Mrs. Parker—Jessica," Sarah said quietly. "Is there someone I can call for you? Family?"
My parents. They would come immediately, I knew. But the thought of explaining what was happening, of saying aloud that Michael had abandoned me during the most critical moment of my life—I couldn't bear it yet.
"The doula," I said instead. "We hired a postpartum doula. Her name is Marian. She should be expecting my call once the baby arrived."
Something flashed across Sarah's face—discomfort, maybe even pity.
"What is it?" I asked, dread pooling in my stomach.
"I'm sorry," she said, her voice barely above a whisper. "Dr. Parker reassigned your doula yesterday. She's currently providing care for Dr. Sterling."
The betrayal was so complete, so methodical in its cruelty that I couldn't even find the words to respond. He had taken everything—my medical care, my support system, even the doula we had carefully selected together to help me recover and bond with our child.
A monitor beside me began beeping more rapidly as my heart rate increased. Sarah quickly adjusted something on my IV.
"Try to stay calm," she murmured. "Your body has been through significant trauma."
But the trauma wasn't just physical. As I lay there, staring at the ceiling, I realized that something fundamental had broken inside me—something no doctor could repair, no medicine could heal.
My husband had left me to die, and now he had left me to suffer alone.
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