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My Husband Defended His Mistress Against Me in Public Novel Cover

My Husband Defended His Mistress Against Me in Public

I turned thirty-four at 6:47 in the morning, somewhere between a fetal heart rate that kept dipping and a patient's chart I'd been staring at for the last twenty minutes without really seeing it. No one mentioned it. Why would they? The ward doesn't stop for birthdays. I checked my phone during a two-minute break by the nurses' station. One notification. A calendar reminder. The kind that auto-generates and fires without anyone having to think about it. Tristan had set it three years ago, back when we still did things like set reminders for each other. Three seconds.
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Chapter 3

The receptionist's name was Brie. Twenty-three, maybe. She caught me at the elevator on Tuesday morning with the slightly apologetic look of someone delivering news they weren't sure was news.

"Dr. Harper? I probably shouldn't—I mean, it's probably nothing—but a woman came by the front desk yesterday asking about your schedule. Like, your weekly schedule. Which days you're on, which days you're off."

I kept my hand on the elevator button. "What did she look like?"

"Young. Really pretty. Cream-colored coat, the long kind." Brie paused. "She said she was a friend. I didn't give her anything. I just thought you should know."

"You did the right thing," I said. "Thank you."

The elevator opened. I got in.

Cream-colored coat. I thought about Angelica Perez's contact photo on Tristan's phone—I'd only seen it for a second, but a second is long enough when your mind works the way mine does. Young. Soft features. The kind of pretty that photographs well in natural light.

I stood in the elevator and felt the shape of something I'd already been sensing click one degree further into focus.

Then, that same afternoon, one of the maternity ward nurses—Soo, who has been here longer than almost anyone and who speaks in the careful, neutral tone of someone with excellent peripheral vision—stopped me in the hallway near the monitoring station.

"Wanted to mention," she said, straightening a chart she didn't need to straighten. "Paulina Perez had a visitor again today. Younger sister. That's twice this week." A pause. "She spent about twenty minutes with admin. Not with the patient."

Not with the patient.

With admin.

I thanked Soo. I walked to my office. I sat down and pressed my fingertips together and looked at nothing for approximately thirty seconds.

Then I understood it completely.

Paulina Perez was not a difficult patient who had happened to land in my ward. She was placed here. Angelica had been mapping my schedule, learning the ward's administrative structure, finding the pressure points. The complaint to Victor Hale. The screaming in the shared ward in front of witnesses. The recordings on Paulina's phone, hunting for any sentence she could detach from its context and reframe as negligence.

This was coordinated. This was a system.

I opened my laptop and pulled up Paulina's chart. Then I opened a new documentation file and began to write.

---

She refused everything.

The expanded genetic panel—declined. I documented it.

The detailed anatomy scan at twenty-eight weeks, critical for a high-risk case with her profile—declined. She said I was 'manufacturing problems.' She said it loudly, with her phone recording on the tray table, aimed at my face. I noted the refusal, the clinical rationale for the recommendation, and the exact language she used to decline. I noted the recording device. I kept my voice even and my sentences short.

The fetal echocardiogram—declined. 'Philosophical objections.' I documented those too, word for word.

Every appointment had the same shape: Paulina performing grievance while her phone collected ammunition, and me building a paper trail so precise and thorough that any future attempt to call me negligent would hit a wall of my own careful documentation.

I was not going to let her rewrite this.

After the third refusal I added a note to her file that read, in the flat, clinical language that means exactly what it says to anyone who knows how to read it: *Patient has been counseled repeatedly regarding the medical necessity of the above screenings for her gestational age and risk profile. Patient declined, citing personal preference. Risks of refusal explained in full. Patient verbally acknowledged understanding. All recommendations are consistent with current ACOG guidelines for high-risk third-trimester care.*

Every word a fact. Every fact a wall.

Marcus passed me in the hallway after the third appointment and looked at the tablet in my hand.

"Perez again?"

"Yes."

He said nothing else. He didn't need to. The look on his face told me he was watching, that he had been watching, and that he would remember what he'd seen. Sometimes that's enough.

---

The twins came at 11 PM on a Thursday.

Placental abruption. Thirty-two weeks. The OR was cold and loud and I had sixty seconds from the moment the ultrasound confirmed it to the moment I needed to be gloved and moving. I didn't think about anything except the bodies on the table and the instruments in my hands and the two heartbeats on the monitor, faint and fast and fighting.

Thirty minutes. Start to finish. Both boys delivered, both breathing, both moved to the NICU with numbers I would check through the night.

I stood in the scrub room afterward with the water running over my hands and felt something I hadn't felt in weeks—clean, uncomplicated, the particular exhausted joy of a thing done exactly right. My hands had not shaken. They never shake. But I noticed their steadiness the way you notice a loyal friend. Grateful.

I wanted to tell someone.

The thought arrived without warning and I recognized it immediately for what it was—not weakness, just the ordinary human need to hand a good moment to someone who cares about you.

I called Tristan.

It rang four times. Five. Six. Seven. Voicemail.

I called again.

He silenced it on the second ring.

I stood in the hospital parking lot with my phone in my hand and the night cold and quiet around me and felt the good thing in my chest drain out slowly, like water finding the lowest point.

I drove home.

The apartment was dark. I sat on the left side of the bed—my side, reliably mine—and waited without knowing I was waiting. At 2 AM I heard his key in the lock.

He moved through the dark apartment with the careful quiet of someone who hopes to go unnoticed. I heard him in the kitchen. The low sound of the tap. Then footsteps down the hall.

When he came into the bedroom I could smell it from six feet away. Wine—something red, something good. And underneath it, faint and warm and completely foreign to our apartment: perfume.

Not mine.

"Work dinner ran long," he said into the dark. He had not turned on the light. He did not know I was awake.

I said nothing.

I pressed my fingertips together under the sheets—the gesture that means reset, that means hold, that means not yet—and felt the structure of things shift again inside my chest. Quietly. Almost without drama. The way a fracture spreads.

I had saved two lives tonight with these hands.

He had silenced my call on the second ring.

I lay in the dark and let myself know, fully and without reservation, exactly what I was building toward. Not a confrontation. Not a scene. A conclusion.

I just needed a little more documentation.

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