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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 5

The diagnosis came through the phone line with the sterile precision of a scalpel. I was standing in the sunroom, watching Samuel and Briella in the garden below, when Dr. Vasquez delivered the verdict.

"Your ejection fraction has dropped to thirty percent, Meredith," Elena said, her voice devoid of the usual bedside softness. "The stress hormones are flooding your system. It’s not just broken heart syndrome anymore. It’s structural damage. If you stay in that environment, your heart will stop within six months."

I pressed the phone against my ear until the plastic was warm. Below, Samuel was laughing. He held a glass of sparkling cider—a toast to the "miracle" Briella carried. She was seated on the stone bench, one hand resting protectively over a stomach that was still flat, soaking in the morning sun like a lizard.

"Did you hear me, Meredith?" Elena asked sharply. "This isn't a warning. It's a timeline."

"I hear you," I said. My voice sounded strange, detached, as if it were coming from someone else standing across the room.

"I can prescribe beta-blockers, but they won't fix the root cause. You are being poisoned by your own life. You need to leave."

I hung up without saying goodbye. Through the glass, I watched Samuel lean down and kiss Briella’s forehead. It was a tender, reverent gesture—the kind he used to give me before the bullet, before the infertility, before I became the furniture he bumped into on his way to happiness.

Six months.

I touched my chest. My heart didn't flutter; it thudded, a heavy, laborious rhythm. It was tired. It was done beating for a man who was already celebrating its replacement.

***

Night fell like a shroud over the penthouse. I had retreated to the master suite, the only territory I had left, when the handle turned. It was locked.

"Meredith?" Samuel’s voice was muffled by the mahogany. "Open the door. We need to talk."

I sat in the wingback chair by the fireplace, staring at the unlit logs. "I have nothing to say to you, Samuel."

"Stop being dramatic. The dinner... that was a shock for everyone. But we can handle this like adults." He paused, and I could hear him leaning his forehead against the wood. "She’s young, Meredith. She’s scared. And the baby... it’s my child. We can work something out. An arrangement. You’re still my wife."

An arrangement. He wanted me to be the dowager queen, keeping the social calendar and the household running while he played house with his fertile mistress in the guest wing. He wanted my competence and her adoration. He wanted to consume us both.

I stood up and walked to the door. I didn't open it. I placed my hand flat against the wood, feeling his presence on the other side like a radiant heat.

"The Samuel Harrison I married died in Seattle," I said, my voice low and steady. "I don't know who you are, but you are trespassing in my home."

"Meredith, be reasonable—"

I turned the deadbolt. The *click* was louder than a gunshot.

He knocked for ten minutes. Then he pleaded. Finally, he walked away. I listened to his footsteps recede down the hall, toward the guest wing. Toward her.

I didn't cry. Tears require hope, and I had none left. I simply went to the closet, pulled out a single duffel bag, and began to pack. Not clothes—I didn't want the costumes of Mrs. Harrison. I packed my passport, the deed to the Montana property my grandmother left me, and the medical file Elena had emailed.

***

The diner was on 10th Avenue, a place that smelled of grease and stale coffee, far removed from the scented air of our social circle. Joelle was already there, tucked into a red vinyl booth, her face illuminated by the harsh fluorescent lights.

She didn't stand when I approached. She just slid a manila envelope across the sticky table.

"I tracked the credit cards," Joelle said without preamble. "He didn't find the bracelet at a pawn shop. He bought it at the Cartier boutique in SoHo three weeks ago. Along with a lease on an apartment in the Village under her name, paid six months in advance."

I sat down, keeping my coat on. "He’s not leaving me, Joelle. He wants both."

Joelle’s jaw tightened. She looked at me, really looked at me, noting the pallor of my skin and the tremor in my hands. "You look like you're dying, Meredith."

"I am."

I pushed the medical file toward her. Joelle opened it, her eyes scanning the clinical text. Her face went pale. She looked up, her expression shifting from professional concern to a fierce, protective fury.

"Six months?"

"If I stay," I corrected. "If I continue to be the polite, suffering wife."

Joelle closed the folder. She took a sip of her black coffee, her eyes hard. "So we don't stay. We don't fight for the marriage. We burn the ship."

"I want to disappear, Joelle. I don't want a divorce. I don't want a settlement where I have to sit across a table and listen to his lawyers explain why my fifteen years of sacrifice are worth less than her six months of seduction. I want to be gone."

Joelle reached into her purse and pulled out a notebook. She flipped it open to a fresh page, uncapping her pen with a decisive snap.

"The Anniversary Gala is in three weeks," she said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "Everyone will be there. It’s the perfect stage."

"A stage for what?"

"For a tragedy," Joelle said, a dark smile touching her lips. "If he wants a new life so badly, let’s give him one. But let’s make sure he pays for it with your ghost."

I looked at her, then at the reflection in the dark window of the diner. The woman staring back was gaunt and haunted, but for the first time in months, her eyes were clear.

"Tell me what to do," I said.

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