
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Wife
Chapter 1
The dining room filled with the warm scent of roasted chicken and my father's favorite lavender from the garden. He sat across from me at our mahogany table, his weathered hands gesturing animatedly as he recounted his week at the community center, where he volunteered teaching seniors how to use smartphones.
"You should see Mrs. Patterson trying to take a selfie, Bailey," he chuckled, his eyes crinkling with the same warmth that had comforted me through every childhood scraped knee and teenage heartbreak. "She holds the phone so far away, I told her she's photographing the ceiling fan."
Tucker barely looked up from his plate, scrolling through his phone with one hand while mechanically cutting his chicken with the other. The sight made my chest tighten—when had my husband become so disconnected from the man who'd welcomed him into our family with open arms?
"Dad, you're a saint for having that much patience," I said, forcing lightness into my voice while shooting Tucker a pointed look he didn't catch.
Stormi's laugh tinkled from the kitchen doorway like wind chimes in a storm—pretty but entirely out of place. "Oh, Mr. Hunt, you're so sweet! I should feature you in my senior wellness series on Instagram. My followers would absolutely love—"
"Stormi," I interrupted, my jaw clenching. "We're having family dinner."
She glided into the room anyway, her blonde hair catching the chandelier light as she positioned herself near Tucker's chair. Too near. "I know, I just stopped by to grab those patient files Tucker mentioned. But when I heard Mr. Hunt's adorable stories, I couldn't help myself."
My father's face suddenly went slack.
The fork slipped from his fingers, clattering against his plate with a sound that seemed to echo through my bones. His left hand flew to his chest, and when he tried to speak, the words came out garbled, incomprehensible.
"Dad?" I shot to my feet, my chair scraping against the hardwood. "Dad, what's wrong?"
His face drooped on the left side, and panic crashed over me like ice water. I'd seen this before during my nursing school rotations—the telltale signs were unmistakable.
"Tucker!" I screamed, rushing to my father's side as he slumped forward. "Call 911! Now! He's having a stroke!"
But before Tucker could even look up from his phone, Stormi was there, her own device already in her hands, camera pointed directly at my father's contorted face.
"Oh my God, this is perfect timing," she breathed, her voice taking on that artificial sweetness she used for her videos. "Hi everyone, Stormi here with an incredibly important public service announcement about stroke awareness..."
"What the hell are you doing?" I lunged toward her, but she stepped back, keeping the camera rolling.
"Bailey, please, I'm trying to help," she said, never lowering her phone. "Do you know how many lives this could save? My followers need to see the real symptoms of stroke. Look—" she zoomed in on my father's face, "—notice the facial drooping on the left side, the slurred speech..."
"PUT THE PHONE DOWN!" I roared, grabbing for the device, but she twisted away.
"Tucker, tell her," Stormi pleaded, still filming. "This is educational content. I'm providing a valuable public service here."
My husband finally looked up, his face confused and slow to process the crisis unfolding before him. "Bailey, maybe she has a point—"
"Are you insane?" I whirled on him, my father's labored breathing filling the terrible silence between us. "This is my father! He needs help NOW!"
But Stormi had positioned herself between me and Dad, narrating to her camera like some demented news reporter. "As you can see, stroke symptoms can come on suddenly. It's so important to recognize these signs early for the best possible outcome..."
Fifteen minutes. Fifteen precious, irreplaceable minutes ticked by while I fought past Stormi's manufactured concern and Tucker's bewildered enabling. By the time the paramedics finally arrived—summoned by my own trembling call when I realized neither of them would act—my father's window for treatment had slammed shut.
Dr. Margaret Chen's words at the hospital would haunt me forever: "If he'd received immediate medical attention, Mr. Hunt would have survived with minimal lasting effects. The delay in treatment was the determining factor."
Fifteen minutes. That's all it took for Stormi's social media obsession to steal my father's life, and for my husband to reveal exactly where his loyalties lay.
It wasn't with me.
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