
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Wife
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Wife Chapter 1
The world tilted beneath me as I missed the last step. One moment I was carrying a basket of laundry down our spiral staircase, the next I was tumbling through air, unable to brace myself. The wooden steps rushed up to meet me, each impact a dull thud against my body that I couldn't feel. That was the curse of my condition—congenital insensitivity to pain—I could break every bone in my body and never know it.
I landed in a heap at the bottom, the laundry scattered around me like fallen leaves. Something warm trickled down my forehead, pooling near my eye. Blood. I touched it with trembling fingers, watching the crimson stain spread across my pale skin. This was bad. I needed help.
"Wesley," I whispered, fumbling for my phone. My husband would know what to do—he always did. That was our arrangement, had been since childhood. I couldn't feel pain; he became my guardian, my protector, eventually studying medicine because of me.
My fingers shook as I dialed his number. One ring. Two rings. Three.
"Maren?" His voice sounded distracted, distant. "I'm a bit busy right now."
"Wesley, I fell down the stairs," I said, my voice surprisingly calm despite the fear coursing through me. "I'm bleeding. I hit my head. I don't know how bad—"
"You fell?" There was a pause, then muffled voices in the background. A woman's laugh. "Are you sure it's serious?"
I blinked, struggling to process his response. "I'm bleeding from my head. I might have broken something. I need you to come home."
"I can't right now," he said, his voice dropping lower. "I'm at Violeta's. Her dog is in labor, and there are complications with the puppies. She needs me here."
"Her dog?" The words didn't make sense at first. "Wesley, I'm your wife and I'm hurt."
"You know how to check yourself for injuries," he replied, his tone suddenly clinical, detached. "Clean the wound, apply pressure if it's still bleeding. I'll be home when I can."
Before I could respond, he ended the call.
I stared at the phone in disbelief. For the first time in our relationship, Wesley had chosen someone else over my safety. Not just someone—Violeta Simmons, his patient with the prize-winning Labrador. The woman whose name had been appearing in our conversations with increasing frequency.
I tried to stand, but dizziness overwhelmed me. The room spun, and I collapsed back onto the floor. I should check for injuries, like Wesley suggested. That's what I'd been taught. But something inside me had fractured in a way no medical training could address.
I don't know how long I lay there, blood drying on my face, the world fading in and out of focus. Hours must have passed. The afternoon light slanted through the windows at a different angle when Margaret's voice cut through my haze.
"Mrs. Riley! Oh my God!" Our housekeeper dropped her shopping bags, rushing to my side. "What happened? How long have you been here?"
"Fell," I managed. "Called Wesley..."
Margaret's face hardened. "And where is he?"
"Violeta's. Dog having puppies."
Something flashed in Margaret's eyes—anger, perhaps understanding. Without another word, she helped me to my feet and guided me to her car.
The hospital was a blur of bright lights and concerned faces. They took me for scans, cleaned my wounds, asked questions I struggled to answer. And then came the news that changed everything.
"Mrs. Chapman, you're approximately two months pregnant," the doctor said, her face grave. "The fall has caused some complications that concern us. We need to monitor you closely."
Pregnant. The word echoed in my mind as tears filled my eyes. A baby—our baby—and Wesley had chosen someone else's dog over us.
It was four hours after my initial call when Wesley finally appeared in the doorway of my hospital room, his hair disheveled, smelling faintly of unfamiliar perfume.
"The veterinary emergency took longer than expected," he explained, not quite meeting my eyes. "Violeta's dog had five puppies, but the last one was breech. I couldn't just leave."
As he spoke, something cold settled in my chest. I studied my husband's face—the man who had promised to protect me, who had built his entire career around caring for me—and saw a stranger. In that moment, I realized that while I couldn't feel physical pain, emotional agony was cutting through me with perfect, devastating clarity.
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Wife of Contents
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