
My Fiancé Abandoned Me in the Hospital for His Mistress
My Fiancé Abandoned Me in the Hospital for His Mistress Chapter 1
The words "late-stage" sounded absurdly polite in Dr. Renata Solís’s immaculate office. Like a delayed train, rather than an eviction notice from my own body.
"Eve," Dr. Solís said. Her voice was a precise, compassionate instrument. She leaned forward, her stethoscope catching the sterile fluorescent light. "The metastasis is extensive. The liver is fully involved."
I didn't scream. I didn’t cry. My right hand moved to the hem of my camel coat, my thumb and forefinger catching the wool, smoothing it flat. Over and over.
"How long?" I asked. My voice sounded like it belonged to someone else, echoing in a tiled room.
"Six months. Perhaps fewer, given the aggression."
She handed me a stack of glossy pamphlets. I took them, feeling the sharp edge of the paper against my skin. I thanked her—because I was polite, because my father had died of cancer and my mother had walked away, and I had learned early that suffering was no excuse for bad manners.
I took the bus home. A cab would have required small talk. The bus offered the rhythmic, jarring anonymity I needed to construct my walls. The city blurred past the smudged glass, grey and indifferent. By the time I reached my stop, the death sentence was neatly compartmentalized behind my ribs.
My apartment was supposed to be empty. I kept it meticulously tidy—a sanctuary of control. But the moment I turned the key, the air felt thick. Displaced.
A pair of strappy black heels lay discarded near the entryway console. They weren't mine.
A low, rhythmic thud echoed from down the hall. My bedroom.
I walked down the corridor, my footsteps swallowed by the runner rug. I pushed the half-open door.
The afternoon light sliced through the blinds, illuminating the tangle of limbs on my sheets. Shane. My fiancé of six years. His broad shoulders moving above the familiar cascade of Kataleya Peterson’s blonde hair. His younger coworker. The one he called "a kid who needs mentoring."
Shane froze. His head snapped toward the door. The color drained from his face, leaving him looking sickly and small. Kataleya gasped, clutching my white duvet to her chest, her eyes wide with a performative panic.
"Eve—" Shane choked out, scrambling off the mattress. "Eve, wait, it’s not—"
I didn't let him finish the insult. The heat in my chest, the tumor, the six years of quiet devotion—it all crystallized into absolute, blinding clarity.
I stepped forward. My hand cracked across Shane’s jaw with a sickening smack. His head whipped to the side. Before Kataleya could shrink back, my palm struck her cheek. The sharp sting radiated up my forearm, grounding me in my own body.
Neither of them breathed. The silence in the room was absolute, broken only by the ragged sound of Shane exhaling.
I looked at the red handprint blooming on the man I was supposed to marry in three months. I didn't scream. I didn't ask why. I just turned on my heel and walked out the front door, leaving my keys on the console.
The neon sign of the 24-hour diner buzzed like a trapped wasp. I sat in a vinyl booth by the window, a mug of black coffee growing cold between my hands. No sugar, no milk. Just bitter oil and heat.
I pulled my small notebook from my purse.
My phone vibrated on the Formica table. Shane. The seventh call.
I swiped to answer.
"Eve, please," his voice was frantic, breathless, the sound of a man who assumed I couldn't survive without him. "Where are you? Let me explain. It meant nothing."
"The wedding is canceled, Shane." My tone was flat, devoid of the hysteria he was bracing for.
"You're in shock. Just come home. We can fix this."
"I'll have a courier deliver the ring to your office tomorrow." I pressed end. I blocked his number. The tug-of-war was over. The rope was dropped.
I took my pen and began to write. First, a note to his parents. *Mr. and Mrs. Dunn, I deeply regret to inform you that Shane and I have dissolved our engagement. Thank you for your kindness over the years.* Crisp. Dignified.
Next, I opened a new email on my phone. The recipient: Human Resources. CC: Wilder Ellis, my boss. The sharp-tongued executive who noticed everything I tried to hide.
*Please accept this as my immediate resignation,* I typed, my thumb smoothing the edge of the phone case.
I hit send. I was dying, and I was entirely free. I would do this exactly as my mother had taught me, though from the opposite side of the bed: I would remove myself completely, leaving no mess behind.
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