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My Husband Traded My Mother’s Life for His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Traded My Mother’s Life for His Mistress

The smell of antiseptic usually made my stomach turn, but tonight, it smelled like hope. I sat by the hospital bed, holding my mother’s frail hand, tracing the paper-thin skin over her knuckles. Her eyes, clouded by the milky haze of advanced corneal disease, stared unseeingly at the ceiling. For the first time in months, she wasn’t trembling. "Tomorrow, Elyse," she whispered, her voice a dry rattle. "I’ll see your face again tomorrow." "You will, Mom. I promise." I squeezed her hand, my other hand instinctively clutching the pearl necklace she had given me for my wedding—my anchor. The heavy door swept open. I turned, expecting a nurse, but it was Collin. My husband looked every inch the Chief of Ophthalmology: pristine white coat, silver tie perfectly knotted, his jaw set in that professional grimace I had learned to read too well.
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Chapter 2

The scent of lilies was suffocating. It hung heavy in the brownstone’s foyer, masking the phantom smell of iron and copper that had stained these floorboards just three days ago. I stood by the staircase, my hand hovering over the railing where Mom had slipped, watching the mourners shuffle past in a blur of black wool and murmured condolences.

Collin was in the center of the living room, a tragic figure in a bespoke charcoal suit. He held the hand of the hospital’s Chief of Surgery, his head bowed, his voice a practiced, velvet baritone of grief. He hadn’t been here when she fell. He hadn’t answered his phone when she died. But today, under the gaze of Manhattan’s medical elite, he was the devastated son-in-law.

I watched him check his watch, then his phone. A quick, furtive glance. He slid the device into the inner pocket of his suit jacket before draping the coat over a dining chair to ascend the makeshift podium for his eulogy.

"Grace was more than a mother-in-law," Collin began, his voice catching perfectly on the last word. "She was the light of our home."

Nausea roiled in my gut. I turned away, needing air, and brushed past the dining chair. A vibration buzzed against the wood. The screen of Collin’s phone lit up through the fabric of his pocket.

*Message from M: Daddy says the press is asking about the donor list. Fix this.*

My breath hitched. *M? Daddy?* The donor list.

I glanced at Collin. He was wiping a tear from his cheek, captivating the room. My hand moved on its own, sliding the phone from his pocket. I retreated into the shadows of the hallway.

The passcode. It wouldn’t be my birthday. It wouldn't be our anniversary. I typed in *0512*—his own birthday. The lock clicked open.

My thumb hovered over the messages, but another app caught my eye. A cloud storage folder labeled *Research*. Collin was obsessive about his medical files, but this folder had been modified yesterday, hours after Mom’s funeral arrangements were made.

I tapped it open.

There were no cornea scans. No surgical diagrams. The first image was a selfie: a woman with blonde hair and hungry eyes, her tongue teasing the rim of a champagne glass. Maisy Hart. Dr. Elliott Hart’s daughter.

I swiped. Collin, asleep in a hotel bed, the sheets tangled around his waist. I swiped again. A screenshot of a bank transfer. *Fifty thousand dollars.* My mother’s surgery fund. The destination account wasn’t a hospital bridge loan. It was labeled *Hart Vacation Rentals—St. Barts.*

The timestamps went back two years. Two years of dinners, trips, and skin-on-skin intimacy, all while I sat in waiting rooms holding my mother’s hand. The "critical emergency" that stole Mom’s cornea wasn’t a medical crisis. It was a gift for his mistress.

The eulogy ended. Applause rippled through the room—a grotesque sound at a funeral. I shoved the phone into my pocket, my knuckles white, my heart beating a rhythm of pure, cold rage.

***

An hour later, the last guest—a weeping aunt—finally left. The heavy oak door clicked shut, sealing us in the silence.

Collin loosened his tie, his shoulders slumping. "God, that was exhausting. Did you see Elliott? He seemed pleased with the turnout."

I didn't speak. I pulled his phone from my dress pocket and hurled it at him. It struck his chest with a dull thud and clattered to the floor.

"Elyse?" He blinked, stooping to pick it up. He saw the screen, still glowing with the open folder. The color drained from his face, leaving him gray and waxen.

"Research?" I whispered. The word felt like broken glass in my throat. "You stole her eyes for *her*? You stole my mother's life for a vacation?"

"No, wait—Elyse, listen." Collin scrambled backward, his charm disintegrating into panic. "It’s not what it looks like. Maisy… she’s unstable. She’s Elliott’s daughter. She threatened to ruin me."

He dropped to his knees, crawling toward me across the rug, grasping for the hem of my black dress. Tears streamed down his face, ugly and desperate. "I had to do it. The cornea, the money—she demanded it. I was trapped. I did it to protect my career, to protect *us*. Please, baby, I can fix this. I’ll end it. I swear."

I looked down at him, at the man I had washed socks for, the man I had defended to my mother. He looked pathetic. Small.

"You let my mother fall down those stairs," I said, my voice trembling not with sorrow, but with the terrifying heat of hatred. "You killed her."

"I didn't! It was an accident! I love you, Elyse. Please, don't leave me. I can't lose this."

The phone in his hand rang. The shrill tone cut through his sobbing.

*Caller ID: Dr. Elliott Hart.*

Collin froze. He looked at me, then at the screen. He answered, putting it on speaker, his hand shaking violently.

"Sir?"

"Control your wife, Collin," Elliott’s voice barked, crisp and devoid of humanity. "Maisy tells me the little housewife is snooping. If she speaks, if she goes to the board or the police, you are finished. I will strip you of your license before the ink dries on her statement. Do you understand?"

The line went dead.

Silence stretched between us, taut as a wire. Collin stared at the phone. Slowly, the shaking stopped. He wiped his wet face with the back of his hand and stood up. The pathetic, weeping husband vanished. In his place stood the Chief of Ophthalmology—cold, arrogant, and cornered.

He smoothed his suit jacket, his lip curling into a sneer. "You heard him."

"You're going to jail," I said, stepping back.

He laughed, a sharp, barking sound. "Who are you going to tell? The police? The board? I am the golden boy of Manhattan General. Elliott Hart is a god in this city. And you?"

He stepped closer, invading my space, his eyes hard and dead. "You’re a grieving, hysterical housewife with a history of anxiety. You have no money. You have no connections. You’re a nobody, Elyse. Without me, you don't exist. So go upstairs, wash your face, and let this go. Because if you try to fight us, you’ll lose a lot more than your mother."

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