
My Husband Missed My Cancer to Collect My Sister
Chapter 1
The oncologist's office was quiet, too quiet. I sat alone in the examination room, staring at the pristine white walls and the framed medical degrees that meant nothing to me now. Dr. Hale's voice had been gentle but clinical when she delivered the news. Stage-two uterine cancer. The words hung in the air like smoke I couldn't wave away.
My hands remained steady as I clutched my purse. I'd chosen this clinic deliberately—across Brooklyn, far from Cassian's hospital, far from anyone who might connect the dots. I needed space to think, to breathe, to decide what came next.
"Ms. Crawford, I know this is overwhelming," Dr. Hale had said, her eyes kind behind stylish glasses. "But we have treatment options. The prognosis is better than it could be."
I'd nodded and thanked her, my voice functioning on autopilot while my mind was already racing ahead. Cassian. I needed Cassian.
In the privacy of my car, I pulled out my phone with trembling fingers and called him. The call went straight to voicemail. I tried again. And again. On the third attempt, I heard the automated message: "The subscriber you've reached has turned off their phone."
A cold weight settled in my stomach. I dialed the hospital next, my heart pounding against my ribs.
"I'm looking for Dr. Wright," I said when his secretary answered. "It's urgent."
"Oh, I'm sorry," she replied, her tone professionally sympathetic. "Dr. Wright left early today. He mentioned a personal matter—something about picking someone up from the airport? He didn't say when he'd be back."
The words hit me like ice water. The airport. Today of all days, when I needed him most, he was at the airport.
I didn't go home. Instead, I found myself driving toward JFK, following an instinct I couldn't name, couldn't rationalize. The traffic was heavy, the afternoon sun glinting off windshields and making my head pound. But I kept driving.
I spotted his car in the arrivals lane—that sleek black BMW he'd bought last year. My breath caught as I watched him step out, tall and confident in his tailored suit, his dark hair catching the light. He looked exactly as he always did: composed, in control, the brilliant Dr. Cassian Wright.
Then I saw her.
Arlet emerged from the terminal, her honey-blonde hair falling in perfect waves around her shoulders. Even exhausted from travel, she looked immaculate—a tear streaking down her cheek in a way that seemed almost choreographed, designed to elicit sympathy. I watched, frozen, as Cassian approached her.
He took her suitcase with a gentleness he'd never shown me. His hand settled low on her back, guiding her toward the car with an intimacy that made my chest tighten. And when he spoke to her, his voice—God, his voice—was soft in a way I'd never heard, never known he could be.
I didn't get out of the car. I couldn't. I watched them drive away, and something inside me cracked open, spilling cold realization everywhere.
The apartment was silent when I returned. I moved through it like a ghost, past the furniture we'd chosen together, past the photographs of our wedding, past three years of what I'd thought was building a life.
I found myself in our bedroom, standing before Cassian's vanity. It was immaculate as always—his cologne bottles lined up by height, his watch collection arranged with precision. But now, I looked at it differently.
A photograph, tucked behind the mirror. Arlet at some gala I'd never been invited to, her smile radiant, her arm linked with someone I didn't recognize. I pulled it out, studying it with new eyes. The date on the back was two years before I'd even met Cassian.
A perfume bottle, unopened, with a gift tag still attached. "For A—" it read. The scent was the same one Cassian had given me on our first anniversary, the one he'd said reminded him of me.
My hands shook as I opened his laptop. The browser history painted a picture I couldn't unsee—searches for Arlet's name, images saved from social media, old messages. Every haircut he'd suggested, every dress he'd bought, every "You'd look beautiful in this" assembled into a single, sickening truth.
He hadn't been seeing me. He'd been building me. Molding me into her image.
I sat on the bathroom floor for what felt like hours, the laptop closed beside me. I didn't cry. I cataloged instead: three years of haircuts, dresses, perfume, habits—all hers. All Arlet's.
The cancer diagnosis sat in my coat pocket, heavy with implications. The man who should have been by my side had turned off his phone and driven to the airport to collect my sister.
I washed my face, staring at my reflection in the mirror. The woman looking back at me seemed like a stranger—or maybe, finally, she looked like herself.
That night, I called Chelsea. My voice was steady as I told her everything—the diagnosis, the airport, the vanity shelf, the perfume. Her response was immediate and volcanic, exactly what I needed to hear.
"I'm coming over," she said, already grabbing her keys. "That absolute bastard. I'll be there in twenty minutes."
"No," I said, surprising myself with my calm. "Not tonight. I need one night to think clearly before anyone else's fury fills the room."
Chelsea argued, but eventually agreed, her voice tight with worry. "Whatever you decide, babe," she said before we hung up. "You are not doing this alone. You are not doing this alone."
As I lay in bed that night, staring at the ceiling, I thought about the baby. The one I hadn't told Cassian about yet. The one I'd only discovered last week, in a moment of pure joy that now felt like a cruel joke.
I placed my hand over my stomach, feeling nothing yet, but knowing. This child would be mine. Only mine. And no one—not Cassian, not Arlet, not my parents—would ever make me feel like I was less than enough for them.
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