
My Fiancé Abandoned Me in the Hospital for His Mistress
Chapter 3
Before I could push back my chair and execute the graceful retreat I'd been mentally rehearsing, Wilder was already standing. The movement was so fluid, so predatory, that I didn't realize what was happening until he was halfway across the restaurant. His tie hung loose around his neck, and for the first time in five years, I saw him completely unbuttoned—not just his collar, but the carefully constructed walls he wore like armor.
"Shane Dunn," Wilder's voice cut through the ambient chatter like a blade. Every conversation in the vicinity died. Shane's head snapped up, his face cycling through confusion, then recognition, then a pale attempt at charm. "Wilder Ellis. I didn't know you—"
"I know you, Shane." Wilder's tone was surgical, each word precisely chosen for maximum damage. "I know you think you're clever. I know you think you can have your fiancée of six years and your office entertainment too. What you don't know is that you're pathetic."
The restaurant had gone completely silent. Even the waitstaff had stopped moving. Shane's mouth opened and closed like a fish gasping for air. Beside him, Kataleya stared at her plate, her cheeks burning with a humiliation that matched the shade I'd left on her skin yesterday.
"You think Eve will come crawling back because you can't imagine a world where you're not the center of it," Wilder continued, his voice never rising above conversational level. "You think she needs you. The truth is, she needs nothing from you. Not your excuses, not your lies, and certainly not your company."
Shane finally found his voice. "You don't understand—"
"I understand perfectly." Wilder leaned down, placing both hands on their table, a posture of absolute dominance. "I understand that Eve gave you six years of her life. I understand that while she was planning your future, you were planning your escapes. I understand that you failed to see the extraordinary woman sitting in front of you every single day."
Kataleya's eyes flicked up to Wilder's face, then quickly back down. The calculation in her gaze was unmistakable—she was already measuring the distance between this moment and her next opportunity.
"You finished?" Shane's voice had hardened, but the effect was like a child trying on his father's suit. "Because this is none of your business."
"You're right." Wilder straightened, adjusting his sleeves with the precision of a surgeon preparing to make an incision. "It's not my business. It's my pleasure."
He turned and walked back to our table without waiting for a response. The silence stretched for three heartbeats before conversations reluctantly resumed, but the damage was done. Shane's face had gone from pale to gray, and Kataleya was already reaching for her purse.
The cab ride back to my hotel was a different kind of silence. The sharp, combative energy that had filled the restaurant had dissolved into something heavier, charged with unspoken questions. Outside the window, the city lights blurred into streaks of color, mirroring the way my life had begun to unravel.
"You didn't need to do that," I finally said, my voice barely audible above the engine's rumble. "I was handling it."
"Were you?" Wilder's profile was half-illuminated by passing streetlights, his jaw set in that familiar line of determination. "Because from where I was sitting, you looked like you were drowning."
"I don't need rescuing, Wilder."
He turned to face me fully, and in the harsh yellow light of a passing taxi, I saw something in his eyes I'd never allowed myself to notice before. "It wasn't rescue, Eve. It was justice. And it was necessary."
The word 'necessary' hung between us like a bridge neither of us was sure we should cross. For five years, we had existed in the safe, sterile space of professional boundaries. Now, those lines were blurring into something neither of us could name.
Three days later, I stood in the sterile fluorescent glow of the hospital lobby, clutching a prescription pad for something strong enough to dull the sharp edges of my reality. The pain had become more aggressive, a constant pressure beneath my ribs that made it hard to breathe. Dr. Solís had reluctantly agreed to escalate my medication.
As I walked toward the pharmacy, the cumulative weight of everything—the diagnosis, Shane's betrayal, Wilder's unexpected defense—hit me all at once. My vision tunneled, the floor tilting beneath my feet. I stumbled toward the nearest restroom, barely making it to the sink before my body revolted. The violence of the vomiting was primal, my entire body convulsing as if trying to purge not just the poison in my system, but the poison of these past days.
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