My Boyfriend’s Mistress Called Me “Pig” in the ER Novel Cover

My Boyfriend’s Mistress Called Me “Pig” in the ER

9.2 / 10.0
The notification sound from my phone cut through the quiet of my Seattle apartment just after eleven on Tuesday night. I'd been curled on the couch for hours, laptop balanced on my knees, finally wrapping up the quarterly reports for work. My stomach gurgled softly—a familiar reminder of the ulcers that had become my constant companion since the crash diet Reid had inspired years ago. I ignored it, reaching for my phone instead. The video played automatically. Skye Bennett's manicured fingers filled the frame, holding something small and pink between her thumb and forefinger. Hamlet. The hand-stitched piglet ornament I'd spent weeks making for Reid last Christmas, carefully embroidering his initials on the little hooves. I remembered the way my fingers had cramped, how I'd stayed up past midnight for a week to finish it in time. 'Does this thing even have a name?' Skye's voice, smooth and bored, carried through my phone speakers as she dangled Hamlet over a wastebasket.

My Boyfriend’s Mistress Called Me “Pig” in the ER Chapter 1

The notification sound from my phone cut through the quiet of my Seattle apartment just after eleven on Tuesday night. I'd been curled on the couch for hours, laptop balanced on my knees, finally wrapping up the quarterly reports for work. My stomach gurgled softly—a familiar reminder of the ulcers that had become my constant companion since the crash diet Reid had inspired years ago. I ignored it, reaching for my phone instead.

The video played automatically. Skye Bennett's manicured fingers filled the frame, holding something small and pink between her thumb and forefinger. Hamlet. The hand-stitched piglet ornament I'd spent weeks making for Reid last Christmas, carefully embroidering his initials on the little hooves. I remembered the way my fingers had cramped, how I'd stayed up past midnight for a week to finish it in time.

'Does this thing even have a name?' Skye's voice, smooth and bored, carried through my phone speakers as she dangled Hamlet over a wastebasket. 'It looks like someone's arts and crafts project.'

The camera panned to show Reid's apartment—the familiar blue couch, the coffee table where I'd left my book that morning. Reid himself was off-camera, but I could hear his laughter, low and indulgent, the sound I'd once treasured as proof he was happy.

'Oh, toss it already,' I heard him say, his voice casual, amused. 'She won't mind.'

The piglet dropped from Skye's fingers, disappearing into the trash with a soft thud.

The caption beneath the video read: 'Someone's arts and crafts project 🐷.' Comments filled the screen with laughing emojis and supportive messages for Skye.

I set my phone face-down on the coffee table and sat very still, my hands flat on the surface, feeling the cool wood beneath my palms. The silence in the apartment felt different suddenly—not the comfortable quiet I'd grown used to, but something heavier, more deliberate. I didn't call Reid. I didn't comment. I didn't cry. I simply sat there, noticing the way the lamplight cast shadows across the floor, the way my reflection looked back at me from the dark screen of my laptop.

Something had shifted. Not with a crash or a shout, but with the quiet finality of a door clicking shut.

The next morning, I arrived at work earlier than usual. My desk was bathed in the gray-blue light of another Seattle morning, the kind that made everything look like it was underwater. Nora Lawson was already there, her dark hair pulled back in a messy bun, her eyes sharp with concern as she looked up from her computer.

'Indie,' she said, her voice tight. 'Did you see it?'

I nodded, setting my bag down carefully. 'Yes.'

'I'm going to call Reid. This is bullshit.' Nora's fingers were already reaching for her phone, her protective fury radiating like heat. Nora had been my friend since college, the one person who had never hesitated to call Reid out when he disappointed me.

'No,' I said quietly, my hand covering hers, stopping her. 'Don't.'

Nora looked at me, really looked, her brow furrowing. 'Indie, she threw away your gift. On video. For everyone to see.'

'I know.' My voice was steady, calmer than I'd expected.

'And he let her.' Nora's voice cracked slightly. 'He let her, and he laughed.'

'I know that too.'

Nora studied my face, searching for something. Whatever she saw there made her pause. 'This isn't like you,' she said finally. 'You're not—' She stopped, rethinking her words. 'There's something different.'

I didn't answer immediately. The truth was, I felt different. Not broken or angry, but clear-headed in a way that was new and unsettling. 'I'm not going to fight this battle,' I said finally. 'Not anymore.'

Over the next few days, I moved through my life with an awareness that felt almost clinical. I noticed things I'd been blind to for years—the shelf of expensive wine in our kitchen cabinet, all varieties Skye preferred. The birthday two years ago that I'd spent alone because Reid had 'forgotten' and was 'really sorry' the next day. The way he never asked about my stomach, never remembered that I couldn't eat spicy food or drink coffee after noon.

I noticed how he answered Skye's calls mid-sentence when we were talking, never apologizing for the interruption, how he saved her texts but deleted mine after reading them. Each observation was like turning over a rock to find something I'd known was there all along.

Friday evening, Reid came home in a good mood, carrying takeout from the Thai place down the street. 'Great day,' he announced, setting the bags on the counter. 'Landed the Morrison account. Team's taking me out tomorrow to celebrate.'

He didn't mention the video. Didn't notice that I was quieter than usual, didn't ask why I'd barely spoken all weekend. He ate his pad thai, checked his phone, and eventually fell asleep on the couch, remote control still in his hand.

I sat at the kitchen table, watching him in the dim light of the television. His face was relaxed in sleep, vulnerable in a way it never was when he was awake. I waited, listening to his breathing, for some acknowledgment, some apology, some sign that he understood what Skye had done with Hamlet. That he understood what it had done to me.

It didn't come. It wouldn't come. Ever.

I turned off the kitchen light and went to bed alone, leaving him on the couch where he'd fallen asleep.

Two weeks later, on the morning of my birthday, Reid mentioned over coffee that he had a work dinner that evening. 'Just colleagues,' he said vaguely, not meeting my eyes as he checked his phone. 'Big celebration next weekend, I promise.'

He kissed my forehead and left for work, the door closing with a soft click behind him.

At the office, my coworkers had decorated my desk with a small balloon and a cupcake with a single candle. Nora took me to lunch at the little Italian place around the corner, where she made me laugh with stories about her disastrous blind date the night before.

It was a kind day. A small day. And I was grateful for it—which was itself a kind of grief, that a birthday spent without the person who was supposed to love me most was still better than the alternative.

But as I blew out the candle on my cupcake, I made no wishes. I had already started to understand that the life I wanted couldn't be wished into existence. It would have to be built, piece by careful piece, from whatever remained after everything else fell away.

Continue Reading

My Boyfriend’s Mistress Called Me “Pig” in the ER of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

You may also like

New Release Novels

I was an Angel, You made me a Villain Novel Cover
9.5
He repayed with evil, I show him to hell
PRICED BY MY BILLIONAIRE NEMESIS Novel Cover
9.1
Eight years ago, Lena Hale was a second-year university student who trusted the wrong moment with her entire life. Adrian Vale was in his final year-brilliant, disciplined, already learning how to rule rather than feel. To Lena, he was safety. To Adrian, she was the one weakness he allowed himself. Until one night destroyed everything. Adrian saw her in a position he could not forgive. Something that looked deliberate. Something that felt like betrayal carved into his bones. He didn't ask for the truth. She never got the chance to give it. They separated broken, bleeding, and unfinished-and the damage followed them for eight years. When they meet again, there is no tenderness left. Lena is older now. Quieter. Cornered by debt that doesn't negotiate and men who collect pain instead of money. Survival forces her into one final humiliation-standing in for her best friend on a single escort assignment. One night. One paycheck. One way to keep breathing. She never expects Adrian to be the man watching. Adrian Vale is no longer capable of doubt. He is a billionaire built on precision, control, and a resentment he never questioned. Power has stripped him of mercy. When he sees Lena again-dressed for another man, standing exactly where he believes she chose to stand-his judgment finalizes. She betrayed him once. Now she's proving it. He doesn't ask questions. He doesn't want explanations. He wants confirmation-and control. Money becomes a weapon. Silence becomes obedience. And Lena learns just how expensive survival can be. But Adrian's empire is cracking. His mother is dying, and her deal is brutal in its simplicity: marriage in echange for another round of chemo. What begins as punishment becomes proximity. What begins as resentment mutates into obsession. And beneath Adrian's certainty lurks a truth so corrosive it could dismantle everything he built. This is not a love story. It is not forgiveness. It is power colliding with memory. Control strangling truth. And two people bound together by a lie that refuses to stay buried. Because some love stories don't burn slowly. They detonate. And when the truth comes out... nothing survives intact.
Reborn To The Wife of a Billionaire with Disabilities Novel Cover
9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress. Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door. Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest. "Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises." The original owner had left her an absolute mess. Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings. If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days. Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic. Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies? She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim. Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest. "I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm. She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.
Slapped by Her Fated Mate Novel Cover
8.9
My daughter Mallory’s condition worsened suddenly, and she desperately needed her parents with her. Yet, at that moment, Alpha Leo decided to leave to attend the birthday party of Beta Marina’s daughter, Brynleigh. I didn’t stop him, letting him go. In a past life, I had kept him home with our daughter. Meanwhile, Beta Marina and her daughter were left waiting for him on the street and became the target of kidnappers. After her child was taken, Marina was so distraught that she took her own life. Alpha Leo blamed me, vowing I should experience the pain of separation. He began locking Mallory and me in separate rooms during her episodes, forcing me to watch her in distress from a distance. Occasionally, he demanded that we kneel at his beloved Marina’s grave as an act of atonement. Eventually, Mallory succumbed to her illness, and I slipped into depression.
The Baby Name I Chose for His Mistress's Son Novel Cover
8.4
I requested to leave Doctors Without Borders a year ahead of schedule, just to come back home for the occasion and marry Hayden Tran. But when I arrived, I discovered Hayden had already become a father. I overheard him instructing the maid, "Keep Nora Stewart abroad a little longer. It's best if she doesn't come back. If she finds out I have a son now, there will definitely be a mess." In that moment, reality hit me. He had misled me. Three years ago, he had advised, "Go work as a doctor overseas for three years to gain some experience and maturity. Once you've calmed down a bit, you can return and be my wife." Indeed, I have matured. I'm no longer the girl who would cry and throw a tantrum at every minor thing. And because of this change, my tastes have evolved as well.
The Broken Mother's Ruthless Revenge Novel Cover
8.8
My little boy died on the operating table during a minor, routine surgery. That exact same night, my billionaire husband bought out the Hudson River for a massive, million-dollar fireworks show. It wasn't to mourn our child. It was to celebrate his first love's son being discharged from the hospital. When I confronted him with our son's death certificate, he sneered and accused me of hiding the boy to get his attention. He held his mistress in our home, watched her fake a panic attack, and threatened to bankrupt my family if I didn't get on my knees and apologize to her. But the most horrifying truth came from a terrified hospital nurse. My son's anesthesia was deliberately kept low during the procedure to keep his tissue viable to save the mistress's child. He was awake and in agonizing pain while his own father planned a grand celebration for another man's son. I couldn't understand how a father could be so completely heartless. How could he sacrifice his own flesh and blood just to please a woman who constantly manipulated him? Looking at the ashes on my son's favorite toy, my paralyzing grief evaporated, replaced by a cold, unyielding rage. I arranged my little boy's funeral alone in the freezing rain, left my wedding ring on the counter, and walked straight into the private hotel suite of my husband's most ruthless business rival. "Let's take him down," I said.
Chapters
Read now
Share