Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The apology arrived three days after Samuel nearly crushed me against the boxwood hedge with his Porsche. It wasn’t a conversation, or a therapist’s appointment, or even a handwritten note. It was an object, shrouded in purple velvet, placed on the dining table like a centerpiece for a funeral.

Samuel stood beside it, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. He wore the expression of a man who believed a credit card receipt could patch a hemorrhage.

"Open it," he urged, his voice tight with forced buoyancy. "I saw it in a window on Madison and... well, it reminded me of you."

I pulled the velvet cover away. Beneath it sat a cage of intricate, gilded wire—a baroque palace in miniature. Inside, hopping frantically from a porcelain feeder to a gold-leafed swing, was a canary. Its feathers were a brilliant, piercing yellow, the exact shade of the sundress I had worn on our honeymoon in Capri.

"It's a Gloucester," Samuel said, tapping the glass. "Rare. Delicate. I named him Pip."

I stared at the creature. It fluttered against the bars, its tiny chest heaving with the same frantic rhythm as my own damaged heart. It had food, water, and a golden roof, but it was terrified. It was a decorative living thing, kept for its song and its beauty, utterly dependent on a keeper who might forget to fill the water dish if a younger, more interesting pet came along.

"It's a cage, Samuel," I said, my voice flat.

"It's an antique, Meredith. Eighteenth-century French design." He moved to put his arm around me, but I stepped out of reach.

From the doorway, a soft, hacking cough broke the silence. Briella leaned against the frame, clutching a silk handkerchief to her nose. She wore a cashmere sweater that was two sizes too big—Samuel’s, undoubtedly.

"Is that... a bird?" she wheezed, her eyes widening with performed distress. "Oh, Samuel. You know how sensitive my allergies are. The dander... I can already feel my throat closing up."

Samuel froze. He looked at the bird, then at Briella, and finally at me. The conflict played out on his face: the desire to be the benevolent husband versus the compulsion to be the savior of the fragile girl.

"Meredith," he started, rubbing the back of his neck. "Maybe we can keep it in the servant’s quarters? Or the study? Just until Briella feels better."

He wanted me to solve it. He wanted me to hide the inconvenience so he could feel good about the gift without dealing with the consequences.

I looked at Pip. The bird gripped the gold bar with tiny, desperate claws.

"No," I said.

I picked up the heavy cage. The metal was cold against my palms. I walked past Samuel, past the sputtering Briella, and straight to the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked Central Park.

"Meredith, what are you doing?" Samuel’s voice rose, edged with panic.

I unlatched the heavy brass lock. "Clearing the air."

I threw the window open. The city roar—sirens, wind, the hum of millions—rushed in, chaotic and violent. I opened the small wire door of the cage.

For a second, Pip didn't move. He tilted his head, looking at the vast gray expanse of the sky. Then, with a burst of yellow wings, he was gone. Up and out, swallowed by the skyline.

"Are you insane?" Samuel shouted, rushing to the window as if he could catch the bird with his bare hands. "That cost four thousand dollars!"

I set the empty cage back on the table. It looked better this way. Hollow.

"Nothing should be kept in a cage it's outgrown, Samuel," I said, meeting his gaze. He flinched, and for a moment, I saw the fear behind his eyes—the realization that I wasn't talking about the bird.

***

The final fracture didn't happen in private. It happened under the crystal chandeliers of the Whitmore estate, surrounded by fifty of New York’s most influential power brokers.

The dinner was in honor of the firm’s expansion. I sat at Samuel’s right hand, wearing a smile that felt like it was stapled to my face. Briella was seated at the far end of the table, technically part of the "junior associate" cluster, though she had spent the entire evening loudly refusing wine.

As the waiters cleared the main course, the room quieted for toasts. But it wasn't the Managing Partner who stood up.

It was Briella.

She rose slowly, resting a hand on her flat stomach. The gesture was universal. The silence that followed was instant and suffocating.

"I know this is unorthodox," she began, her voice trembling with a vulnerability that had been rehearsed in front of a mirror. "But in a room full of family and mentors, I couldn't keep this blessing to myself any longer."

She looked down the length of the table. She didn't look at the partners. She looked directly at Samuel.

"I'm pregnant."

The air left the room. A dozen conversations died instantly. Beside me, I felt Samuel stiffen. His fork clattered onto his china plate, the sound echoing like a gunshot.

Every eye at the table swiveled to him. The math was easy. The late nights. The "mentorship." The intern living in his penthouse.

"Samuel?" I whispered. It was a prompt, a final test. *Look at me. Deny it. Be outraged.*

But Samuel didn't look at me. He didn't look at Briella. He stared fixedly at the stem of his wine glass, his face draining of color, his jaw working silently. He was a man drowning in his own hubris, and he didn't have the courage to reach for the life raft.

Across the table, Margaret Whitmore caught my eye. Her expression wasn't pity; it was horror.

I didn't faint this time. My heart beat a slow, heavy rhythm—a war drum. I picked up my napkin, folded it precisely into a square, and placed it on the table.

The marriage hadn't just died. It had been murdered, publicly and brutally, before the dessert course was even served.

You may also like

Divorce After 999 Days Novel Cover
9.2
I checked my watch for the twentieth time in two hours. 7:45 PM. The candle at my table had burned down halfway, the flame flickering like my dwindling hope. Around me, couples leaned toward each other across white tablecloths, sharing whispered conversations and laughter that felt like a mockery of my solitude. "Would you like me to refill your water, Mrs. Sterling?" The waiter approached with practiced sympathy, his eyes betraying pity I couldn't bear. "Yes, please." I forced a smile. "And my husband will be here any minute." The same lie I'd been telling for the past hour and a half. As he walked away, I reached for my phone again, scrolling through our text messages. *On my way.
He Hated A Love I Forgot Novel Cover
7.4
My memory was gone, a blank slate wiped clean each day. I lived a life guided by Post-it notes-simple instructions that told me who I was, what to eat, and to be polite to visitors. Then he came back. Jax, the man I supposedly abandoned for money seven years ago, was now a billionaire. He stood at my door with his new fiancée, his eyes burning with a hatred I couldn't place. He forced me onto a humiliating reality show, turning my broken mind into a public spectacle. He tore down my notes, my only connection to myself, and let the world watch as I nearly drowned in a tank of ice water. When my brother tried to save me, he was arrested for assault. To free my brother, I had to confess. I stood before the world and apologized for a betrayal I couldn't even remember, becoming the monster everyone believed me to be. But as I spoke the lies he fed me, a single detail about a stolen necklace made his perfect world shatter. He finally saw the truth in my empty eyes. It was just seven years too late.
Her Love for him was Gone Forever Novel Cover
7.6
The marriage between Joslyn and Kade was a union of two prominent families in the city, but it also hid her deep, unrequited love. Five years ago, she believed that Kade had lost his sexual function due to a car accident while saving her, so she willingly accepted a platonic marriage. She even continuously invested the profits of the her family into the his family to ease her guilt. It wasn't until a chance encounter that she discovered Kade's affair with his childhood sweetheart, Scarlett, that she realized the so-called "secret illness" was all a lie. Kade had not only fully recovered but had been spiking her drinks with sleeping pills for a long time. Moreover, due to a misunderstanding from when she returned from being taken away by her uncle-mistakenly deemed as being from a "place of ill repute"-he considered her "dirty" and deliberately kept his distance. More cruelly, the car accident back then was not to save her but because Kade was on his way to pick up Scarlett at the airport. The series of betrayals and schemes finally awakened Joslyn. Under constant threat from Kade and Scarlett, she faced numerous dangers-from being pushed in front of a knife, undergoing skin grafts, to nearly falling off a cliff due to tampered brakes. Ultimately, she decided to sever ties with the past and, with her uncle's assistance, went abroad. Overseas, Joslyn found her true self, pursued a PhD in finance, and took over her family business. Unexpectedly, she encountered Kade again while dealing with gangsters. Kade, now truly remorseful, did everything to protect her from the gang, even sacrificing the his family's interests, yet it couldn't undo the past wounds. Meanwhile, Kade's half-brother, Nicolas, allied with Scarlett to disrupt the family inheritance. In the end, both Nicolas and Kade perished in an explosion. Years later, Joslyn became a CEO. She let go of past love and hatred, established a foundation to support African communities in accordance with Kade's last wish, and shifted her life's focus to greater love and responsibility, embarking on a new chapter truly her own.
His To Claim  Novel Cover
8.7
~Zara~ I kissed him, then stole from him. A one-night stand with a billionaire wasn’t supposed to end in a job offer—or a manhunt. Cassian Wolfe isn’t just rich—he’s dangerous. He doesn’t ask questions. He takes. And when I disappear after stealing his family heirloom, he doesn’t call the cops. He hunts me. But instead of revenge, he offers a job. One that keeps me right under his control... and him right under my skin. I thought I could play him. Use his obsession. Use the secrets buried inside Wolfe Enterprises to destroy everything he stands for. What I didn’t expect... was to fall for the man I came to ruin. And now? I’m not sure who’s really playing who.
I Married The Tycoon In A Coma To Destroy My Ex Novel Cover
9.5
The ivory silk cascaded around my feet like liquid moonlight as Madame Beaumont made her final adjustments to my wedding gown. LaBella Couture's private fitting room on Fifth Avenue was bathed in golden afternoon light, making the thousands of hand-sewn crystals shimmer with every breath I took. "Hold still, Miss Whitmore," Madame Beaumont murmured, pins delicately held between her lips as she adjusted the hem. "Perfection cannot be rushed." I caught my reflection in the three-way mirror and barely recognized myself. Charlotte Whitmore, bride-to-be, future Mrs. Ryan Sterling. The thought alone made my heart flutter. In three days, I would walk down the aisle toward the man I'd loved since childhood. "Your mother's veil complements the silhouette beautifully," my wedding planner, Vivienne, remarked from her perch on a velvet settee. "Ryan will be speechless." I smiled, fingering the delicate lace edge of my grandmother's veil.
Leaving The Billionaire Who Loved His Ex Novel Cover
8.1
My father was dying on a hospital bed, and I was frantically calling my husband, Ethan. He didn't answer. Later, he claimed his battery had died while he was on a crucial business trip. But a photo sent by my best friend revealed the sickening truth. Ethan wasn't working. He was in a London café, looking at Olivia—the ex-girlfriend he swore he hadn't seen in five years—with pure desperation and love. His phone was sitting right there on the table between them, face up and fully charged. I swallowed the betrayal and played the perfect, grieving wife when he returned. But then I found the locked drawer in his study. Inside wasn't just a shrine of photos of her; it was a journal. The ink was barely dry on the latest entry. "I pray the child has Olivia's eyes. If it looks like her, I can pretend I didn't settle for the safe, boring option. Ava is a good placeholder, but she isn't Her." He didn't want a family with me. He wanted to use my body to recreate a ghost of the woman he actually loved. He planned to turn our unborn child into a prop for his twisted obsession. I wiped my tears. The next morning, I handed him a stack of documents to sign, hiding the divorce papers in the middle. Then, while he was busy texting her under the table, I walked into a clinic to remove the only thing binding us together. He thinks he is the mastermind. He has no idea he has already lost the game.