
My Husband Faked Cancer to Steal My Father’s Company
Chapter 2
The Mandarin Oriental's Grand Ballroom glittered like the inside of a jewelry box—all crystal chandeliers and gold leaf, the kind of opulence that whispered old money instead of screaming it. I'd chosen the venue deliberately. My father had hosted his sixtieth birthday here, back when Porter Holdings was still called Porter Holdings, back when I'd believed in happy endings.
I stood at the podium in a champagne silk gown that cost more than most people's cars, my father's watch hidden beneath my sleeve like a talisman. Three hundred of Manhattan's elite watched me with expressions ranging from pity to curiosity. Adrian sat at the head table, his face carefully gaunt beneath stage makeup, his hand trembling just enough to sell the performance.
Katie sat three tables back, playing the devoted cousin in a modest black dress. Daniela dabbed at her eyes with a handkerchief, the grieving mother perfected down to the slight quiver of her chin.
"My father believed that wealth was a responsibility," I said, my voice catching exactly right. The microphone picked up every nuance, broadcast my pain to the room. "He taught me that those of us who have everything owe everything to those who are fighting just to survive."
Adrian smiled at me, warm and encouraging. He thought this was another photo opportunity, another chance to play the brave dying husband with his devoted wife.
He had no idea.
"That's why tonight, I'm announcing a fifteen-million-dollar donation to establish the Porter Experimental Oncology Wing at Manhattan Advanced Medical." I paused as applause rippled through the ballroom. "This facility will pioneer intensive combination therapies, treatments so cutting-edge that most insurance companies won't touch them. Treatments that could save lives."
I turned to Adrian, letting my eyes fill with tears that weren't entirely manufactured. Six months of marriage to a man who'd looked me in the eye every morning and lied. Six months of watching him plot my destruction while I played the fool.
"Adrian," I said, my voice breaking beautifully. "I know you've been hesitant about aggressive treatment. But this facility—it's our last hope. Dr. Kellan Peters and Dr. Yael Arnold are the best oncologists in the country. They've agreed to take you on as their first patient."
The room erupted. Cameras flashed. I watched Adrian's face cycle through confusion, then alarm, then settle into resigned gratitude. He couldn't refuse, not here, not with three hundred witnesses and a dozen reporters documenting his wife's desperate generosity.
He stood, his movements carefully weakened, and crossed to the podium. When he kissed my cheek, I smelled his cologne—the same scent he'd been wearing when I'd overheard him laughing about my devotion.
"You're too good to me," he whispered against my ear.
"I know," I whispered back.
---
Two days later, I sat across from Dr. Kellan Peters and Dr. Yael Arnold in a windowless conference room three floors below Manhattan Advanced Medical's lobby. The space smelled like antiseptic and the particular silence that comes from soundproofing designed to keep secrets.
I slid the folder across the table. "Offshore accounts in the Caymans. Forged medical records. Shell companies for equipment kickbacks. Three fake passports and a flight to Rome scheduled for three weeks from now."
Dr. Peters opened the folder, his expression unreadable behind wire-rimmed glasses. Dr. Arnold leaned over his shoulder, her dark eyes scanning the documents with the precision of someone trained to spot irregularities.
"He's been faking terminal pancreatic cancer," I said, keeping my voice level. Professional. "For six months. Using your profession, your colleagues' reputations, to steal millions from my family's company. Money that could have funded actual research. Actual treatments."
Dr. Arnold's jaw tightened. "How many real patients have been denied care because frauds like this drain healthcare resources?"
"Too many," Dr. Peters said quietly. He removed his glasses, cleaned them with methodical precision. "What exactly are you proposing, Mrs. Woods?"
"Ms. Porter," I corrected. "And I'm proposing justice. He wants to experience cancer? Let's give him the full experience. The nausea. The pain. The hair loss. Everything except the actual dying part."
Dr. Arnold's lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "A cocktail of medications that produce severe side effects without causing permanent damage. Entirely possible. Entirely legal, given that he's consented to experimental treatment."
"We'd need complete control over his care," Dr. Peters said. "No outside doctors. No second opinions."
"Already arranged," I said. "The VIP suite is private. Soundproofed. He'll have the best care money can buy—just not the care he's expecting."
Dr. Peters studied me for a long moment. "Your father was a good man. He funded my research wing ten years ago. No strings attached, just believed in the work."
"He believed in a lot of things," I said. "Including that people should face consequences for their actions."
"Then let's make sure they do," Dr. Arnold said.
---
The VIP suite at Manhattan Advanced Medical looked more like a five-star hotel than a hospital room. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked Central Park. The bed had Egyptian cotton sheets. Adrian lounged against the pillows, scrolling through his phone, probably texting Katie about how easy this was going to be.
Dr. Arnold entered with a smile that would have fooled anyone who hadn't seen the steel in her eyes two days ago. "Mr. Woods. Ready to begin your treatment?"
"Absolutely," Adrian said, setting his phone aside. "Whatever it takes, right?"
"Whatever it takes," Dr. Arnold agreed. She prepped the IV with practiced efficiency, the clear liquid catching the afternoon light. "This is our proprietary combination therapy. You might feel some mild discomfort as your body adjusts."
I stood by the window, watching clouds drift over the park. Behind me, I heard the soft click of the IV line connecting, the quiet beep of monitors.
"How long until—" Adrian's question cut off. His breath hitched. "Wait. Something's wrong. This doesn't feel—"
"Perfectly normal," Dr. Arnold said calmly. "The medication works quickly. Just breathe through it."
I turned in time to see Adrian's face go gray. Real gray, not stage-makeup gray. His hand clutched the sheets, knuckles whitening.
"Skyler," he gasped. "Something's wrong. This isn't—I need—"
I crossed to the bed, took his hand in mine. His palm was slick with sweat, his pulse racing beneath my fingers.
"This is the treatment, darling," I said softly. "The intensive therapy you agreed to. The experimental protocol that's going to save your life."
His eyes widened as understanding began to dawn, as the first wave of nausea hit him hard enough to make him double over.
"Remember?" I leaned close, my voice a whisper meant only for him. "You wanted to know what cancer felt like. Now you get to experience every single symptom."
I released his hand and stepped back, watching my husband—my betrayer—begin to truly suffer for the first time in his carefully orchestrated performance.
"Welcome to your treatment, Adrian," I said. "We're just getting started."
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