
I Froze His Assets While He Cheated
Chapter 3
Fluorescent lights burned through my eyelids.
I forced them open. A thin hospital sheet covered my legs. Searing agony ripped through my lower abdomen.
"Mrs. Sterling?" A deep voice.
A man in dark blue scrubs stood at the foot of my bed, clipboard in hand. The chaotic hum of the emergency room buzzed behind him.
"Where am I?" My throat tasted like copper.
"Mercy General. I'm Dr. Reyes. Paramedics brought you in after you collapsed at home. The cleaner found you."
"My stomach—"
"You have a ruptured ectopic pregnancy," he said, not softening it. "The embryo implanted in your fallopian tube. It burst."
Pregnancy.
Six months of fertility medication. Tracking ovulation. Hoping. Gone.
I couldn't tell if the wetness on my cheeks was tears or shock.
"We need to operate immediately," Dr. Reyes said. "The internal bleeding is severe. I need consent for the excision, and I need to know who to call for next of kin."
"My husband."
"Where is he?"
"Somewhere over the Atlantic." The words came out hollow. "Or just landing. Give me a minute. Let me try him."
Dr. Reyes nodded, but his eyes flicked to the monitor beside me. The numbers weren't good.
I snatched my phone from the plastic belongings bag and dialed.
*Ring. Ring. Sent to voicemail.*
Redial.
*Call rejected.*
I hit the green button again. Three times. Four. Five.
"Pick up the damn phone, Silas."
Six. Seven.
A female nurse rushed to the opposite side of my bed.
"One more try."
Eight. Nine. Ten.
Every single call went straight to the rejection tone. He had the phone in his hand. He was seeing my name flash on the screen. He was hitting the ignore button.
The nurse placed a warm hand over my trembling knuckles. Her eyes softened with deep, unmistakable pity.
"Mrs. Sterling. We can't wait. If we delay any longer, the internal bleeding will kill you. You have the right to consent for yourself. You're a competent adult."
"He rejected the calls," I said, staring at the dark screen.
"I'm so sorry your family isn't here. But we have to move now."
I looked at the clipboard on my lap. Just my signature was needed. The hospital didn't require Silas. *I* had required Silas. For five years I'd required Silas for everything, asked his permission for everything, made every decision two-thirds his.
He hadn't even answered the phone while I was dying.
The absolute isolation hit me like a physical blow.
I was entirely on my own.
And maybe—maybe that was a mercy.
"Give me the pen."
Dr. Reyes handed over a cheap blue ballpoint.
I dragged the ink across the bottom line. *Clara Sterling.* My signature. My life. My choice.
I shoved the clipboard back at him.
"Prep the OR," Dr. Reyes ordered, already turning.
The bed jerked forward. The ceiling tiles blurred into a stream of white squares.
"Any jewelry?" the nurse asked, walking briskly beside the gurney.
"None."
"I need to take your phone."
I held it up. Instead of crying over the baby I'd just lost, instead of sobbing over the husband who'd abandoned me to bleed out, a dry, hollow laugh scraped up my throat.
The nurse flinched.
"Keep it safe for me," I said, dropping the phone into her palm.
"I will."
The double doors of the surgical wing swung open. The blinding overhead lamps swallowed my vision.
* * *
A rhythmic beep pulled me out of the dark.
My mouth was stuffed with cotton. A thick bandage stretched across my lower stomach. The room was quiet. Late afternoon sun filtered through plastic blinds.
The door opened. The same nurse walked in with a paper cup of ice chips.
"You made it."
"Barely."
She set the ice on the tray and pulled my phone from her scrub pocket. "You had a lot of notifications. I plugged it into the charger."
"Thank you."
She slipped out.
I grabbed the phone. I unlocked the screen, expecting a barrage of panicked texts.
Nothing. Not one missed call. Not one message.
Instead, a notification from the dummy social media account I'd used to track the smartwatch syncs glared at me.
*Ivy Thorne just posted a new photo.*
I tapped it.
Ivy on a plush white fur rug, holding two crystal champagne flutes. A man's arm wrapped around her bare waist.
Silas.
The face wasn't in the frame, but I knew his wrist. I knew the tailored cuff of his navy suit.
And I knew the gleaming platinum cufflinks holding the fabric together.
The ones I'd spent three months tracking down for our fifth anniversary.
The ones I'd locked in my dresser drawer yesterday.
He'd broken into my vanity. He'd stolen the anniversary gift I'd bought him just to wear it on his cheating getaway.
I swiped to the next photo.
A glass dome against pristine snow. Location tag: *Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort — Glass Igloo.*
The exact trip I'd spent five years planning. The vacation I'd been saving my inheritance for.
The stitches in my abdomen burned. A brutal, stinging reminder of the child I'd just lost alone on a steel table while my husband drank champagne in the snow.
My tears dried up.
The sorrow vanished, replaced by something cold and crystalline.
Silas thought he could drain my accounts, steal my gifts, and leave me to die in a hospital while he played house in Finland. He thought I would cry and take it.
I locked the phone and stared at the blank wall.
Five years ago I'd married him with fifty dollars and a promise. He hadn't known then that the maiden name I'd given up — Vance — opened doors he couldn't even see. That "modest inheritance" I'd put into our joint account was the visible tip of a trust fund his startup couldn't dream of touching.
He had built his entire empire on what I let him see.
Now I was going to show him the rest.
I picked up the phone again and opened my contacts. Scrolled past three years of friends I hadn't spoken to since I'd given up everything for Silas. Stopped on one name.
*Julian Croft.*
The forensic attorney my father had retained for our family interests. I hadn't called him since the funeral.
I hit dial.
He picked up on the first ring.
"Clara. It's been a long time."
"Julian. I need a war."
You may also like





