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My Fiancé Used My Fortune to Woo His Mistress Novel Cover

My Fiancé Used My Fortune to Woo His Mistress

Tuesday started like every other Tuesday. I was between rounds, still in my scrubs, coffee cooling in my hand, when Evie caught me in the hallway outside the OR. She was one of my better interns — sharp instincts, fast hands, the kind of earnest focus you can't teach. She'd been with me eight weeks and hadn't once embarrassed herself in the field. She was holding a small envelope. Cream-colored. Hand-addressed. 'Dr. Harris.' She was almost bouncing on her heels. 'I wanted to give you this in person.' I took it.
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Chapter 3

Friday morning. Seven a.m. The sky was the color of wet concrete and the parking lot was half-empty, the way it always is before the day shift fully arrives.

I was cutting across the physicians' lot with my thermos and my badge swinging when I saw him.

Augustine was leaning against the hood of a car that wasn't his — his Porsche was presumably still in my garage, which was its own irony — arms crossed, jacket wrong for the weather. He had not shaved. His eyes were red at the rims in the specific way that comes from no sleep and too much thinking and not nearly enough courage.

He pushed off the hood when he saw me.

I kept walking.

'Penelope.' His voice cracked on the third syllable. 'Please. Five minutes.'

I stopped. Not for him. Because I was not going to be chased across a parking lot like a scene in a bad movie.

I turned around. I waited.

What came out of him then was not an apology. It was a performance of one — the measured collapse of a man who has spent three sleepless days rehearsing his own fragility. The affair was a single moment. One moment of weakness. I had to understand what it was like, standing beside me, watching me outrun every room we walked into together. My career. My name on everything. His startup — his startup, the way he said it, soft emphasis on the possessive — always living inside the architecture of my success. He had felt invisible. He had felt erased. Evie had simply been the first person in a long time who looked at him and saw *him*.

His voice broke on that last part. An actual tear tracked down his left cheek.

I stood still. Thermos in my right hand. Thumb pressed once, briefly, to the inside of my wrist.

I let him finish.

Then I said, 'One week. The penthouse, the Porsche, the fifty million in three tranches. Full restitution. No negotiation.'

He stared at me. 'That's — Penelope, that's everything. That's the company. You'd be destroying something I built —'

'You have one week,' I said.

I turned and walked through the side entrance.

The door closed behind me with a solid, hydraulic hush.

---

The surgery ran eleven hours and forty minutes. Cardiothoracic. Aortic valve replacement complicated by adhesions from a prior procedure — the kind of case that requires you to be entirely inside it, no periphery, no noise. That is the thing about the OR that no one outside it fully understands. It doesn't ask you to forget. It simply makes forgetting irrelevant. There is only the field, the instruments, the rhythm of a life you are temporarily holding in your hands.

I was entirely inside it.

When I stepped out, Richard Calloway was in the scrub corridor. He was doing chart review on a tablet but he was not, I noticed, doing it with any particular urgency. He glanced up when I pulled my mask down.

'Clean closure?' he asked.

'Clean.' I tossed my gloves. 'Patient should be in recovery within the hour.'

He held my gaze for a moment. Not long. The kind of look a person gives when they are filing something away rather than saying it aloud.

'Good work,' he said, and went back to his chart.

I went to wash my hands.

---

Two days later. Sunday. I was coming off rounds when Evie found me.

I heard her before I saw her — the fast footsteps, the slight unsteadiness in the rhythm. She came around the corner near the oncology wing looking like someone who had been crying in a bathroom stall and then tried very hard to look like she hadn't.

'Dr. Harris.' Her voice was doing that controlled thing that voices do when control is the only thing left. 'Can I talk to you?'

I looked at her. Then I looked at the corridor — nurses at the station, a transport orderly with a gurney, two residents debating something near the window.

'In here,' I said, and opened the door to the nearest consultation room.

She came in. I closed the door.

She started talking before I could.

'He loves me.' She said it the way people say things they are no longer entirely sure of. 'I know what you think, but you don't know him. He's been there for me. The bracelet, the trip to Aspen, he wired money to my sister's wedding — that's not nothing, that's not a man who doesn't care, that's —'

'Evie.'

She stopped.

I set my chart on the table. I reached into the inside pocket of my white coat and removed a folded AmEx statement. I had printed it three days ago. I had known this conversation was coming.

I unfolded it and laid it flat on the table between us.

'The Cartier bracelet,' I said. 'March fourteenth. Charged to a Harris-family AmEx. Account holder: Penelope A. Harris.' I pointed to the line. 'The Aspen weekend. The chalet was leased through my LLC. It's in my name on the rental agreement.' I turned to the next page. 'The wire to your sister. It came from a joint account that Augustine contributed zero dollars to after March of last year. I have the monthly statements if you'd like to see them.'

Evie was not looking at the statement. She was looking at me.

'He bought you gifts,' I said. 'With my money. He took you on vacation, to my property. He made generous gestures, with my accounts.' I kept my voice exactly level. 'None of it was his to give.'

The silence in the room was very complete.

Something moved through Evie's face. Not one emotion. Many of them, arriving in sequence, each displacing the last — disbelief, then the precarious stage just before belief, then something that looked like the specific vertigo of a person whose floor has just become the wall.

Her mouth opened. Nothing came out.

I folded the statement. I slid it back into my pocket.

'I'm not telling you this to hurt you,' I said. 'I'm telling you because you deserve to know what was real.' I paused. 'Take the rest of the day.'

I picked up my chart and left the room.

In the corridor, the hospital moved around me — overhead pages, a cart rattling past, someone laughing at the nurses' station. All of it the same as it had ever been.

I pressed my thumb to my wrist once. Then I started walking.

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