
My Husband Traded My Mother’s Life for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The neon sign outside the Starlight Motel buzzed with a dying, insect-like hum, flickering pink light across the cheap polyester duvet. I sat on the edge of the bed, my mother’s pearl necklace coiled tight around my fist, the pearls biting into my palm. The brownstone, with its suffocating silence and Collin’s lingering scent, was behind me. Here, the air smelled of stale cigarettes and industrial cleaner. It smelled like rock bottom.
But rock bottom was a solid place to build a weapon.
I spent the night scouring legal forums on my cracked phone screen. One name kept surfacing in the threads discussing medical malpractice: Holden Murray. They called him "The Butcher." He didn't settle; he severed.
His office was in Midtown, but not in a glass tower. It was a pre-war building with slow elevators and no receptionist. Holden Murray sat behind a desk cluttered with files, looking less like a high-powered attorney and more like a man who lived on caffeine and spite. He didn't stand when I entered.
"Mrs. Spencer," he said, not looking up from a document. "My hourly rate is five hundred. If you’re here because your husband cheated, go to a mediator. I don't do standard divorces. They bore me."
"He didn't just cheat," I said, my voice steady despite the trembling in my knees. I placed a manila envelope on top of his paperwork. "He killed my mother to pay for it."
Holden stopped writing. He looked up, his eyes dark and sharp, assessing me with a predator’s focus. He reached for the envelope. I watched him slide out the printed screenshots: the bank transfers to *Hart Vacation Rentals*, the timestamped texts from 'M' about the donor list, and the rejection notice for the nursing agency due to insufficient funds.
"The donor cornea," I said, leaning forward, placing my hands on his desk. "He diverted it to Maisy Hart. Elliott Hart’s daughter. My mother fell down the stairs blind because Collin Spencer wanted a weekend in St. Barts."
Holden went still. The air in the room shifted, charged with a sudden, electric intensity. He picked up the photo of the transfer, his jaw tightening. "Elliott Hart is the King of New York medicine. You know that, right? If you come at him, he won't just sue you. He’ll bury you."
"I don't have anything left to bury, Mr. Murray. I want them destroyed."
A slow, terrifying smile touched Holden's lips. It wasn't friendly; it was the look of a wolf spotting a wounded deer. "Sit down, Elyse. Tell me everything."
***
Two days later, I stood in the shadow of a pillar in the atrium of Manhattan General. My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. Below, the morning sun streamed through the glass ceiling, illuminating the Grand Rounds. Collin stood at the center of a semi-circle of interns, his white coat gleaming, his posture radiating that practiced, false humility I used to mistake for grace.
"The key to corneal transplants," Collin was saying, his voice carrying up to the balcony, "is ethical allocation. We treat the patient, not the status."
I felt bile rise in my throat.
"Now," Holden whispered beside me. He wasn't looking at Collin; he was checking his watch.
A man in a nondescript windbreaker pushed through the circle of interns. Collin frowned, mid-gesture. "Excuse me, this is a restricted area—"
"Dr. Collin Spencer?" the man asked loudly. The chatter in the atrium died instantly.
"Yes, but—"
The man slapped a thick packet of documents against Collin’s chest. "You’ve been served. Divorce petition and a wrongful death suit. Plaintiff: Elyse Gardner."
The papers scattered across the polished floor. Collin froze, his face draining of color. The interns stared. The silence was absolute, heavy and suffocating. Then, the whispers started, a rising tide of scandal.
"Maisy Hart is named as a co-defendant," the server added, his voice ringing out. "Have a nice day, Doctor."
Collin looked up, his eyes scanning the atrium wildly until they locked onto the balcony. Onto me. Even from this distance, I saw the mask slip. He wasn't the Chief of Ophthalmology anymore. He was a man drowning.
***
The victory was short-lived. By evening, the empire struck back.
I sat on the motel floor, the TV muttering in the corner. The headline on the local news ticker made my blood run cold: *WIDOW OR GOLD DIGGER? SPENCER ALLEGATIONS LINKED TO MENTAL INSTABILITY.*
My phone buzzed relentlessly. Unknown numbers. Death threats. A reporter from the *Post* was banging on the motel door, shouting questions about my mother’s "alleged" fall. Elliott Hart hadn't waited for the courts. He had unleashed the media.
"They say I neglected her," I whispered to the empty room, reading a tabloid article on my phone. "They say I’m trying to extort the hospital because I’m broke."
The walls felt like they were closing in. I curled into a ball, the grief I had pushed down with rage suddenly surging back, choking me. I couldn't do this. I was one woman against a monument of money and power.
A knock at the door made me flinch. Not the aggressive pounding of the press, but a rhythmic, heavy rap.
"Elyse. It's Holden."
I opened the door a crack. Holden stood there, not in his suit, but in a raincoat, holding a brown paper bag stained with grease. He looked past me at the dark room, then pushed the door open gently.
"You didn't answer my calls," he said, setting the bag on the rickety table. "I brought Szechuan. Extra spicy. It burns the panic out."
"They’re destroying me, Holden. Look at this." I shoved my phone at him. "Everyone thinks I’m crazy."
"Let them," Holden said, opening a carton of rice. His voice was calm, a stark contrast to the storm outside. "They’re loud because they’re scared. Elliott Hart doesn't smear people he thinks are harmless. He smears threats."
I sank onto the bed, covering my face. "I’m not a threat. I’m just a wife who failed her mother."
Holden stopped unpacking the food. He walked over and pulled the chair opposite me, sitting close enough that our knees almost touched. He waited until I lowered my hands.
"My mother died in a hallway," he said quietly. The admission hung in the air, stripping the room of its cheapness. "Not a fall. A missed diagnosis. The doctor was playing golf while her appendix burst. I was twelve. I screamed for three hours, and no one came."
I looked at him, really looked at him, and saw the boy behind the shark’s eyes. The anger that mirrored my own.
"I know what it’s like to scream in a room where no one is listening, Elyse," he said, his voice rough. "But you’re not in that room anymore. You hired me to be the one who screams back. So eat the damn rice. We have a war to win."
For the first time since Mom died, the cold knot in my chest loosened, just a fraction. I took the chopsticks he offered. The wood felt solid in my hand. A weapon.
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