
My Husband Dove Past Me to Save His Mistress
Chapter 3
The next morning, the campus was painted in bright autumn sunlight. I sat in the university coffee shop with my laptop open. Barnaby was fast asleep under my table. Across from me sat Sophia Chen. She was a fellow Ph.D. candidate. We had bonded over late-night lab hours and strong espresso.
Suddenly, Sophia gasped. She nearly dropped her mug. Her dark eyes went wide as she stared at her phone.
“Edith,” she whispered. “Have you seen Instagram?”
I took a sip of my black coffee. “No. Why?”
She slid her phone across the table. I looked down. It was Milana’s official account. She had posted a black-and-white photo. In the picture, she was sitting by a hospital bed, holding Axel’s hand. The caption was a masterpiece of fake sorrow.
*“It breaks my heart to see true love abandoned. Some people only stay for the money and run when the recovery gets hard. Praying for Axel. We will get through this trauma together. #Loyalty #FamilyFirst”*
Beneath the photo, the comments were a war zone. Thousands of people were tagging me. They called me a bitter gold-digger. A coward. A fake wife who left her paralyzed husband the second she got her bag. Milana’s PR team was working overtime.
Sophia looked furious. Her knuckles were white as she gripped the edge of the table. “This is a targeted smear campaign. They are trying to ruin your reputation before you even start your career here.”
I stared at the screen. A year ago, this would have crushed me. I would have cried in the bathroom. I would have begged Axel to tell the truth. Now? I just felt a cold, sharp clarity.
“Let them try,” I said softly.
I pulled my laptop closer. I didn't call a PR team. I didn't draft a tearful apology. I simply opened my files.
During my three years in the Brooks penthouse, I learned to keep records. I opened my social media accounts. I uploaded three images.
The first was a clear scan of my divorce decree. It highlighted the date. It showed I walked away from the Brooks corporate shares and the penthouse. I only took the cash settlement my lawyers legally secured.
The second and third images were screenshots. They were text messages Milana had sent me months ago, long before the yacht accident.
*“Thanks for keeping him warm for me, Edith. I’ll take it from here.”*
*“We both know he only married you because I didn't want a cripple. Enjoy my leftovers.”*
I didn't write a long, emotional caption. I didn't play the victim. I just typed one sentence.
*“The truth doesn’t need a filter. Keep the change, Milana.”*
I hit post.
I closed my laptop and took another sip of coffee. It tasted perfect.
Within ten minutes, the internet flipped. Sophia watched her screen, her jaw dropping. “Oh my god,” she laughed. “Edith, it's going viral. People are tearing her apart. They're calling her a home-wrecker.”
Before I could answer, my phone vibrated violently against the wooden table. An unsaved New York number. I knew who it was.
I answered and put it to my ear. “Hello.”
“Take it down!” Axel’s voice roared through the speaker. It was loud enough that Sophia winced. “Take that garbage down right now, Edith!”
I leaned back in my chair. Barnaby shifted under the table, sensing the noise. I nudged him gently with my boot to soothe him.
“Take what down, Axel?” I asked. My voice was completely flat.
“You know damn well what!” he shouted. His breathing was heavy and ragged. “Milana is having a panic attack. Her sponsors are calling. You are publicly humiliating her over a few private jokes!”
“Jokes?” I echoed. “She called you a cripple, Axel. Is that funny to you?”
He hesitated. The silence on the line was thick. He hated that word. But his obsession with Milana won out. “She didn't mean it like that. She was just trying to get under your skin. You need to apologize and delete the post. You're ruining the Brooks' reputation. We need to keep the peace.”
My chest didn't tighten. My eyes didn't burn. I realized, right then, that looking at a dead thing didn't hurt anymore.
“There is no peace, Axel,” I said quietly. “She started a fire to burn me. I just gave it oxygen.”
“Edith, I am warning you—”
“No,” I cut him off. My voice dropped, turning sharp as glass. “I am warning you. I am not your wife. I am not the Hoffman family's punching bag. If she ever mentions my name in public again, I will release the yacht security footage. I will let the world see exactly how you save people.”
“Edith—” his voice cracked. The anger suddenly vanished, replaced by a desperate, choking panic.
I hung up.
I went to my settings and blocked the new number. I set my phone face down on the table.
Sophia was staring at me in awe. “You are terrifying,” she whispered.
I smiled. A real, genuine smile. “I'm just protecting my peace.”
The bell above the coffee shop door chimed. I looked up. Callum White walked in. He wore a tailored navy coat, his dark eyes scanning the room. When he saw me, his expression softened instantly. He walked straight toward our table, bringing the scent of crisp autumn air with him.
My phone stayed silent on the table. For the first time, I didn't care about the past. I was only looking forward.
You may also like





