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My Husband Ignored My Heart Attack for His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Ignored My Heart Attack for His Mistress

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.
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Chapter 2

The erosion of my sovereignty began in the hallway, specifically with a pile of linen towels left uncollected outside the guest suite. They smelled of damp cotton and neglect.

"Marta," I called out, my voice echoing off the marble floors that used to be spotless.

Marta appeared from the kitchen, wiping her hands on her apron. She didn't hurry. That was new. For five years, the click of my heels had been a command; now, it was background noise.

"The guest wing hasn't been turned down," I said, gesturing to the linens. "And the windows need washing."

Marta didn't look at the towels. She looked past me, toward the closed double doors where Briella was supposedly recovering from her "ordeal."

"Ms. Cox said she has a migraine," Marta said, her tone flat. "She told me not to run the vacuum or disturb the air. She needs rest, Mrs. Harrison."

The air in the hallway seemed to thin. "Ms. Cox is a guest. I am your employer. You will clean the suite, or you will pack your things."

Marta’s chin lifted, a subtle defiance that made my blood run cold. She didn't move toward the linen. She turned back to the kitchen. "I'll clean when she wakes up."

"You're fired," I said, the words sharp and final.

But finality is a luxury I no longer possessed.

Four hours later, Samuel stood in the foyer, loosening his tie. Briella was perched on the edge of the sofa, weeping silently—a single, photogenic tear tracking through the powder on her cheek. Marta stood behind her, looking like a wrongfully accused saint.

"Meredith, be reasonable," Samuel sighed, dropping his briefcase with a heavy thud. "Briella is fragile. Marta brings her tea the way she likes it. Why are you making this difficult?"

"She refused a direct order, Samuel." My hands were clasped tight to hide the tremor.

"She was respecting a guest's health," he countered, walking past me to pour himself a drink. He didn't pour one for me. "Marta stays. Briella needs the support right now."

He took a sip of scotch, the amber liquid catching the light, and looked at me with the exhaustion of a man dealing with a unruly child. "Stop looking for enemies where there are none."

I stood frozen as Marta smirked, a microscopic twitch of the lip, and went to fetch Briella a fresh blanket. In my own home, I had become a ghost before I was even dead.

Over the next few weeks, the haunting became literal. I would reach for my signature scent—a custom blend of iris and sandalwood I’d worn since my thirties—only to find the crystal bottle lighter than it should be. The atomizer hissed air.

At the firm’s quarterly mixer, the theft became public.

I had chosen a midnight-blue sheath dress, architectural and severe, designed to armor me against the whispers. I walked into the ballroom, head high, only to freeze.

Briella was standing by the bar. She was wearing a dress of identical cut, though the fabric was a cheaper synthetic that clung too tightly. She had styled her hair in my chignon. As I approached, the scent of iris and sandalwood hit me—a cloying, excessive cloud of it.

Samuel stood beside her, his hand resting possessively on the small of her back.

"Doesn't she look elegant?" Samuel asked as I joined them, his eyes sliding over me without recognition. He was looking at a funhouse mirror reflection of his wife—younger, pliable, and without the scars of his history. "She has impeccable taste. Reminds me of... well, she just has an eye."

"It's lovely," I said, the lie tasting like copper. Briella beamed, her fingers fluttering to her neck—imitating the way I checked my pearls.

"I just wanted to fit in," she whispered.

The final boundary fell on a Tuesday. I went to Samuel’s office to drop off the deed transfers for the Hamptons estate—ironically, part of my exit strategy. The receptionist didn't buzz me in; she just looked down at her desk, uncomfortable.

I pushed open the heavy oak doors.

The leather chesterfield sofa had been moved to the opposite wall. The blinds were drawn, dimming the room. And behind the massive mahogany desk—Samuel’s throne—sat Briella.

She was spinning slowly in his chair, a pen between her teeth. When Samuel walked in from his private bathroom, she didn't scramble to get up. She stayed seated, the power dynamic visually inverted.

"Samuel," I said, stepping fully into the room.

He started, buttoning his jacket. Briella stood up then, but she didn't move away. She stepped into his space, reaching up to adjust his tie. Her hands smoothed the silk knot with a familiarity that made my stomach turn.

"You're crooked," she murmured, ignoring me completely.

"Get away from him," I said, my voice low.

Samuel slapped my hand away as I reached for the papers on the desk. "Stop it, Meredith. She’s helping me. She reorganized the filing system this morning. I’ve never been more productive."

"She is sitting in your chair, Samuel. She is wearing my face. Don't you see what is happening?"

"I see an intern who is actually making my life easier," he snapped, looking at Briella with a mix of gratitude and something darker, hungrier. "Unlike you, she isn't constantly demanding I apologize for existing."

Briella looked at me over his shoulder. Her eyes were dry, clear, and triumphant. She wasn't just organizing his files. She was curating my erasure, and Samuel was handing her the eraser.

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