
My Husband’s Mistress Was His Dead Brother’s Wife
Chapter 2
The antiseptic smell of the hospital room burned my nostrils as I stared at the blank white ceiling. Machines beeped steadily beside me, monitoring a body that felt hollowed out. Empty. The doctors had explained everything in gentle, careful terms—internal bleeding, emergency surgery, the loss that couldn't be prevented. Words that washed over me like waves, leaving me numb.
My baby was gone.
I heard the squeak of the door opening but didn't turn my head. I knew it was Ethan before he spoke. His cologne—the one I'd given him last Christmas—reached me first.
"How are you feeling?" His voice was flat, devoid of the anguish that was tearing me apart from the inside.
I finally turned to look at him. His clothes were rumpled, his hair disheveled, but there wasn't a trace of the devastation I felt etched in his features. Just exhaustion. And something else—impatience.
"Where were you?" My voice came out as a rasp. "When they brought me in. When they told me about our baby."
He shifted uncomfortably, not meeting my eyes. "I was making sure Marissa was okay. She hit her head pretty hard in the accident."
"And I was bleeding out in the backseat." The words hung between us, sharp and accusing.
Ethan's jaw tightened. "The paramedics were taking care of you. Marissa was alone."
"So was I." Tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not in front of him. Not anymore. "You left me there, Ethan. You left me screaming for help while our baby was dying inside me."
He ran a hand through his hair, sighing with the put-upon air of someone dealing with an unreasonable child. "You're being hormonal, Claire. The accident wasn't anyone's fault, and I couldn't be in two places at once."
"Hormonal?" The word sliced through my grief like a knife, igniting something hot and fierce in my chest. "Our child is dead, and you're calling me hormonal?"
"You're overreacting." He checked his phone, his attention already drifting. "These things happen. We can try again when you're better."
In that moment, something crystallized within me—a terrible clarity cutting through years of doubt and denial. This man, this stranger wearing my husband's face, had never truly seen me. Had never truly loved me. And he never would.
"I want a divorce."
The words fell from my lips with surprising ease, as if they'd been waiting there all along.
Ethan's head snapped up, his expression shifting from distraction to disbelief. Then, most tellingly, his lips curved into a small, patronizing smile.
"You don't mean that," he said, pocketing his phone. "You're grieving. You're not thinking clearly."
"I've never been more clear about anything in my life." My voice grew stronger with each word. "It's over, Ethan."
His smile faltered, replaced by a flash of anger. "This is ridiculous. You're not in your right mind."
"Get out." I turned away from him, back to the blank ceiling that suddenly seemed more comforting than his face.
"Fine." He stood abruptly, the chair scraping against the floor. "We'll talk when you're being reasonable again."
The door slammed behind him, the sound reverberating through the empty room. He was so certain I would change my mind. So confident in his ability to dismiss my pain, my rage, my decision.
He was wrong.
I closed my eyes, one hand drifting to my now-flat stomach. The emptiness there matched the hollow in my chest, but beneath it, something else was stirring—a resolve hardening like concrete.
I had lost my child. I would not lose myself too.
The door creaked open again an hour later. I tensed, expecting Ethan's return, but instead, Marissa's slender figure appeared, clutching a bouquet of pristine white lilies.
My throat immediately began to itch, my eyes watering—a reaction she knew all too well. She'd seen me struggle through an entire Easter dinner last year when someone brought the same flowers. She knew exactly what she was doing.
"Oh, Claire," she sighed, her voice dripping with practiced sympathy. "I'm so, so sorry for your loss."
You may also like





