
My Husband Ignored My Heart Attack for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The Met Gala has always been a battlefield disguised as a party, but tonight, the artillery fire was internal. My heart wasn’t just beating; it was convulsing, a frantic bird battering itself against the cage of my ribs. The air in the museum was thin, sucked dry by a thousand breathless conversations and the crushing weight of the architectural gown I wore—armor that had failed to protect me.
I reached for a flute of sparkling water, but my fingers were numb. The room tilted. The roar of the crowd warped into a distant, underwater hum. I saw Samuel across the room, laughing at something Briella whispered. She was wearing a knockoff of the dress I had worn three years ago, clinging to his arm like a barnacle.
Pain, sharp and blinding, lanced through my chest. My knees gave way. I didn't swoon gracefully; I crumbled, hitting the floor with a heavy, humiliating thud.
Through the haze of closing darkness, I saw Samuel turn. His eyes met mine—wide, recognizing the emergency. He took a step toward me.
Then, a small, theatrical cry cut through the noise.
"Ow! My ankle!"
Briella had stumbled on the bottom step of the grand staircase. A minor misstep. A triviality. Yet, Samuel froze. He looked at me, gasping for air on the floor, and then he looked at her.
He turned his back on me.
"Briella!" His voice was a raw panic I hadn't heard since I took a bullet for him. "Someone get a medic! She’s hurt!"
Strangers swarmed me, their faces blurring into a kaleidoscope of concern, but the last thing I saw before the blackness took me was my husband lifting his mistress into his arms, cradling her ankle as if it were made of spun glass, while my heart stopped.
***
I woke to the rhythmic beep of monitors and the smell of antiseptic. Dr. Elena Vasquez stood at the foot of my bed, her expression grim. She was the only one in this city who looked at me and saw a patient, not a checkbook.
"Takotsubo cardiomyopathy," Elena said softly. "Stress-induced heart failure. Your body is screaming, Meredith. You need to listen."
"I'm listening," I whispered. My throat felt like it was lined with sandpaper.
The door swung open. Samuel marched in, bringing a gust of cool air and a scent that made my stomach turn—*Iris and Sandalwood*. My perfume. He was marinating in it, but I wasn't the one wearing it.
"You're awake," he said, not asking. He didn't come to the bedside. He stayed by the door, checking his watch. "Do you have any idea what time it is?"
"Mr. Harrison," Elena stepped forward, her voice steel. "Your wife suffered a significant cardiac event. She needs—"
"She needs to eat more protein," Samuel cut her off, waving a dismissive hand. "It was low blood sugar. You always had a flair for the dramatic, Meredith, but collapsing at the Met? That was excessive."
"I didn't choose to collapse, Samuel."
"Well, you chose the timing poorly. I was in the middle of introducing Briella to the board. She was terrified when you went down. She twisted her ankle in the chaos."
I looked at him, really looked at him. The man I had saved, built, and loved was gone. In his place was a stranger who valued a twisted ankle over my failing heart.
"Is she... comfortable?" I asked, the words tasting of bile.
"She's shaken," he said, adjusting his cuffs. "I have to get back. She can't navigate the stairs to the apartment on crutches alone."
He left without touching me. The silence he left behind was louder than the screaming in my chest.
***
A week later, I sought solace in the only place that still felt like mine: the garden. I was on my knees by the driveway, pruning the hydrangeas. The repetitive snap of the shears was grounding.
The roar of an engine shattered the peace.
Samuel’s new Porsche 911—a midlife crisis on wheels—tore into the driveway. He was reversing, fast. Too fast.
I stood up, dropping the shears. "Samuel!"
He didn't see me. The car screamed backward, the rear bumper aiming directly for my legs. I threw myself into the dirt, rolling away just as the side mirror clipped my shoulder. The wind of the vehicle’s passing whipped my hair across my face.
*Screech. Crunch.*
The Porsche swerved at the last second, plowing into the pristine hedge of boxwoods. The engine died. Silence hung heavy in the afternoon air, broken only by my ragged breathing. I lay on the pavement, my shoulder throbbing, staring at the sky.
The driver’s door flew open. Samuel scrambled out.
"Briella!" he screamed, ripping the passenger door open. "Briella, talk to me! Did the airbag hit you?"
I pushed myself up to a sitting position, brushing gravel from my scraped palms. I was five feet away from him. He had nearly killed me.
"I'm okay, Samuel," Briella’s voice drifted out, shaky and small. "I think... I think I'm just scared."
"Thank God," Samuel breathed, leaning into the car to stroke her hair. "I'm so sorry. I don't know what happened. I've got you."
He never looked back. He never asked if I was under the wheels.
I stayed on the ground, watching them. The physical pain in my shoulder was dull compared to the clarity that finally, mercifully, snapped into place. I wasn't fighting for my marriage anymore. I was witnessing its autopsy.
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