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

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

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.
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Chapter 4

The office was empty by eleven.

I was the last one left, the way I always was when a deadline was closing in. The overhead lights had switched to their dim after-hours setting, leaving my desk in a small pool of yellow light. My eyes burned. My back ached. My stomach had been sending quiet warnings since eight o'clock, the kind I'd learned to acknowledge and ignore in equal measure.

I saved the file, closed my laptop, and sat for a moment in the silence.

Outside, Seattle was doing what it does past midnight in November — a cold, steady rain that turned the street below into a mirror of headlights and neon. I pulled on my coat, slung my bag over my shoulder, and opened the rideshare app. Three minutes away. I watched the little car icon move toward me on the map and thought about nothing in particular.

The driver was quiet when I got in. That was fine. I didn't want to talk. I leaned my head back and watched the city slide past the window, the familiar streets blurring into streaks of light.

Then the car turned left.

I sat up. The route on my phone showed a right turn. I watched the blue line recalculate, then recalculate again as he turned left a second time, taking us deeper into a stretch of blocks I didn't recognize.

'This isn't the right way,' I said.

He didn't answer. His eyes found mine in the rearview mirror and held them for a beat too long.

I heard the locks click.

The sound was small. Mechanical. Ordinary, the way a lot of terrible things are ordinary right before they aren't.

My hands went cold. I pressed myself against the door and looked at the handle — locked, the little pin flush with the panel — and then at the window, at the dark street outside, at the driver's hands on the wheel. He was saying something now, his voice low and conversational, the words sliding past me because my brain had stopped processing language and started processing exits.

I opened the rideshare app. My fingers were shaking so badly I mistyped twice.

I found the emergency alert. I pressed it.

I pressed it again.

The car slowed. I didn't wait to understand why. The moment I heard the lock disengage — some automatic response to the alert, some protocol I'd never had reason to know about until right now — I yanked the handle and pushed the door open while the car was still rolling to a stop.

I ran.

Two blocks. Maybe three. I didn't count. I ran until my lungs gave out and my heels were screaming and I had to stop, hands on my knees, gasping under a streetlight on a corner I didn't recognize.

The rain came down. My coat was soaked through. I straightened up slowly and looked around at the empty street, the closed storefronts, the orange glow of the light above me.

I was shaking. My whole body, a fine, continuous tremor I couldn't stop.

I called Reid.

It rang twice.

'Hello?'

Not Reid. Skye's voice, smooth and slightly bored, the way she always sounded when she was performing indifference.

I stood very still under the streetlight. Rain dripped from my hair onto my collar.

'Skye.' My voice came out steadier than I felt. 'I need to talk to Reid. It's important.'

'He's busy.' A pause, just long enough to be deliberate. 'Stop being so clingy, Indie.'

The line went dead.

I lowered the phone from my ear and looked at the screen. The call timer had stopped at fourteen seconds. I stood there with the rain coming down and the city quiet around me and the screen going dark in my hand.

I sat down on the curb.

Not because my legs gave out. I just — sat down. Pulled my knees up to my chest, wrapped my arms around them, and sat on the wet concrete under the streetlight like I had nowhere else to be.

My hands were still shaking. I watched them, distantly, the way you watch something happening to someone else.

After a while, they stopped.

I thought about Reid. I waited for the familiar pull — the ache, the anger, the desperate need to explain or be understood or be chosen. I'd felt those things for thirteen years. They were as familiar as my own heartbeat.

There was nothing.

Not anger. Not heartbreak. Not even the dull, tired grief I'd been carrying for months.

Just — space. A vast, clean emptiness where something used to be. Like pressing your tongue to the place where a tooth was and finding only smooth, healed gum.

I sat with it for a long time. The rain slowed to a mist. A cab passed. Somewhere down the block, a bar let out a burst of noise and then went quiet again.

I called a different car. I went home.

---

Reid came in just after two.

I heard his key in the lock, the familiar sound of his bag hitting the floor, his shoes kicked off by the door. I sat at the kitchen table with my hands folded on the surface and my packed bag on the chair beside me and watched him move through the apartment like he owned the air in it.

He went to the fridge. Opened it. Stood there in the cold light, scanning the shelves.

'What's there to eat?' he said. Not to me, exactly. Just to the room.

His jacket was navy. I could smell Skye's perfume from across the kitchen — something floral and expensive, the kind that clings.

'Reid.'

He turned. Registered me at the table. His eyes moved to the bag beside my chair and then back to my face, and something shifted in his expression — not concern, not guilt, just a slight recalibration, the look of a man who has walked into a room and found the furniture rearranged.

'Hey,' he said. 'Why are you still up?'

'I was in a rideshare tonight,' I said. 'The driver locked the doors. He took a wrong route. I had to trigger the emergency alert to get out of the car.'

Reid's hand was still on the fridge door. He looked at me.

'I called you,' I said. 'Skye answered. She told me to stop being clingy and hung up.'

A beat of silence.

'Indie —'

'We're done,' I said.

My voice was so steady it didn't sound like mine. It sounded like someone who had already made the decision days ago and was only now saying it out loud.

Reid laughed. A short, reflexive sound, the kind that isn't really laughter. 'Come on.'

I didn't say anything.

He closed the fridge. The laugh faded. He looked at me — really looked, maybe for the first time in months — and something in his face changed. The easy confidence shifted. Underneath it was something smaller and less certain.

'You're serious,' he said.

'Yes.'

'Indie.' His voice dropped. 'It was one phone call. You can't just —'

'I was alone on a curb in the rain at midnight,' I said. 'I called you because I was scared. That's all. That's the whole story.'

He ran his hand through his hair. 'I didn't know. I didn't have my phone —'

'I know you didn't.' I stood up. I picked up my bag. 'That's the point, Reid. You never do.'

He stepped toward me. 'Don't do this. You're tired, you're upset —'

'I'm not upset.' And I wasn't. That was the thing. I was the calmest I'd been in years. 'I'm just done.'

Something crossed his face then — a flash of the old arrogance, the reflex of a man who has never been left. 'Where are you even going to go?' His voice had an edge now. 'Who else is going to put up with —'

I walked to the door.

I didn't slam it. I pulled it shut behind me with a soft, final click, the same sound a lock makes when it catches, and I stood in the hallway for one breath, two, listening to the silence on the other side.

Then I walked to the elevator and pressed the button and watched the numbers count down, and I did not look back at the door.

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