
My Husband Ignored My Heart Attack for His Mistress
Chapter 1
The ice in my water glass had melted three times. Each time, the waiter replaced it with a silent, practiced sympathy that stung worse than the neglect itself. Le Bernardin was a cathedral of hushed conversations and clinking silver, a stage where I had performed the role of the perfect wife for fifteen years. Tonight, however, I was the sole audience member for a play that had been cancelled hours ago.
Five hours, to be exact.
I touched the hollow of my collarbone, my fingers tracing the faint, jagged ridge of the scar hidden beneath my pearls. It was a nervous tic, a physical memory of the bullet I took for Samuel Harrison back when his suits were polyester and his ambition was a desperate, hungry thing. Now, he was a Senior Partner, and I was the woman checking her Patek Philippe watch while the maître d' pretended not to notice the empty chair opposite me.
My phone buzzed against the white tablecloth. The screen lit up with a single, brutal line of text.
*Caught up. Go home.*
No apology. No explanation. Just a command issued to a subordinate.
I signaled the waiter before the screen went dark. "The check, please."
"Madame, Mr. Harrison isn't coming? The chef prepared the tasting menu specifically for—"
"The check, Henri." My voice was steady, polished to a shine that deflected pity. I paid the exorbitant bill without glancing at the total, leaving a tip large enough to buy his silence, and walked out into the cool New York night. The city felt vast and indifferent, a stark contrast to the suffocating tightness in my chest.
When the private elevator opened into our penthouse, I expected darkness. Instead, the air was thick with the smell of sesame oil and cheap soy sauce. The living room, usually a pristine gallery of minimalist Italian furniture, was cluttered with white takeout cartons.
Samuel was there. He wasn't "caught up" at the firm. He was sitting on the beige cashmere rug, tie loosened, laughing—a sound I hadn't heard directed at me in years.
Beside him sat a stranger. She was slight, fragile-looking, with wide, wet eyes that darted toward me like a startled deer. She looked barely out of college, wrapped in a blanket that belonged on the guest bed.
"Meredith." Samuel didn't stand up. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, a gesture of casual regression that made him look like the boy I used to know. "You're back early."
"I'm back exactly when I should be, Samuel." I stepped out of my heels, the marble floor cold against my soles. "You, however, were supposed to be at dinner."
He waved a dismissive hand, gesturing to the girl. "This is Briella Cox. She’s an intern. Her apartment flooded. She had nowhere to go."
Briella pulled the blanket tighter, shrinking into herself. "Mrs. Harrison, I am so sorry. I didn't mean to intrude. Mr. Harrison was just being... so kind."
Her voice was breathy, a carefully constructed whisper. I looked at the takeout containers—greasy stains on my rug—and then at Samuel. "We have corporate housing for this, Samuel. Or hotels."
Samuel’s expression hardened. The laughter vanished, replaced by the sharp, litigator's edge he usually reserved for opposing counsel. "She’s a child, Meredith. She’s destitute and scared. Don't be uncharitable. It doesn't suit you."
"Uncharitable?" The word tasted like ash. "I waited five hours."
"And now you're here, making a scene over a little charity." He turned his back to me, pouring more wine into a glass for Briella. "Go to bed, Meredith. You look tired."
The dismissal was physical. A wall slammed down between us. I looked at Briella, expecting shame. Instead, as Samuel turned away, her gaze locked onto mine. There was no fear there, only a calm, predatory assessment.
I turned and walked down the hall. I didn't go to our bedroom. I went to the guest suite, closing the door softly, refusing to let them hear the click of the lock.
Morning arrived with a headache that throbbed behind my eyes. I went to the kitchen at six, needing the ritual of coffee to ground me. The penthouse was silent, the dawn light filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long, gray shadows across the marble island.
I wasn't alone for long.
Footsteps padded softly behind me. I turned to see Briella standing in the doorway. She was wearing a silk robe—champagne-colored, falling off one shoulder. It wasn't mine, but it was a terrifyingly accurate replica of the one I wore on weekends.
"Good morning, Mrs. Harrison," she murmured, moving toward the coffee pot with a familiarity that made my skin crawl.
"The mugs are in the cabinet above the sink," I said, my voice clipped.
She reached up, the silk sleeve of the robe slipping down her forearm. The morning light caught the glint of gold and diamonds.
My breath hitched. Clamped around her slender wrist was a Cartier bracelet. Not just any bracelet—it was a vintage Panthère, custom-set with emerald eyes. Samuel had given me the exact same piece for our tenth anniversary. He had sworn it was one-of-a-kind, sourced from an estate sale in Paris.
Briella saw me staring. She didn't pull her sleeve down. Instead, she rotated her wrist slowly, letting the emeralds catch the light.
"Isn't it beautiful?" she asked, her voice dripping with syrup. "Samuel found it at a pawn shop. He said it was just a trinket, but I think it looks... expensive."
A pawn shop. The lie was so lazy it was almost an insult.
"It's very distinctive," I managed to say, the room tilting slightly as my heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs.
Briella smiled then. It wasn't the shy smile of the intern from the night before. It was a smirk, sharp and victorious. She took a sip of the coffee I had brewed, her eyes never leaving mine. "I know," she whispered. "It fits perfectly, doesn't it?"
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