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My Husband's Secret Anniversary with His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband's Secret Anniversary with His Mistress

For seven years, Dr. Elena Sinclair lived as the dismissed and neglected wife of Adrian Voss, enduring his family's disdain and his blatant affair with his mistress, Vivian Chen. When Adrian secretly celebrates their wedding anniversary with Vivian and coaches their young daughter, Lily, to reject Elena entirely, he believes he has cleanly erased his wife from his life. He couldn't be more wrong. Elena is not just a humble doctor; she is Edmund Sinclair II, a brilliant neurosurgeon and the sole heir to the Sinclair Medical Group, a global empire that secretly underpins the Voss family's entire fortune. Reclaiming her true identity and power, Elena orchestrates a precise, devastating dismantling of Adrian's world, systematically stripping away his business alliances, social standing, and wealth. But her clinical vengeance takes a tragic turn when Lily is diagnosed with a deadly brain tumor. There is only one surgeon in the world capable of saving the little girl: Dr. E. Sinclair II. Now, a broken Adrian must surrender everything he owns to beg for the mercy of the woman he threw away, leaving Elena to navigate the ultimate choice between her flawless revenge and the life of the daughter she never stopped loving.
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Chapter 4

The world narrowed to a tunnel of fluorescent lights and linoleum. The pain was a living thing, twisting and clawing inside me with each bump of the town car. I'd called our driver, James. His eyes had widened in the rearview mirror when he saw me doubled over on the mansion's front steps.

"The Sinclair Memorial, ma'am?" he'd asked, already pulling away from the curb.

"No," I'd gasped, the words sharp. "Not there. Anywhere else."

He'd driven to City General. A public hospital. The kind of place the Voss family would never use. My VIP access to their private facilities had been quietly revoked months ago, I realized now. Another removed privilege.

The emergency room was a cacophony of suffering. A child cried. An old man coughed wetly. The air smelled of antiseptic and stale coffee. There were no private rooms here, no hushed corridors. Just rows of vinyl chairs and harried nurses.

James helped me to a chair. "Should I call Mr. Voss, Dr. Voss?"

I shook my head, a tight, painful motion. "No. Thank you, James. You can go."

He hesitated, a good man caught in a bad contract, then nodded and left. I was alone.

I curled forward, my arms wrapped around my middle. The black dress was damp with sweat. The pain came in waves, each crest higher, more crushing than the last. Between the waves, a dull, relentless throb settled in. I knew this pain. I'd studied it. I'd treated patients for it. Recognizing it in myself made it more horrifying, not less.

My phone was in my hand. I'd clutched it the whole ride. The screen was lit. A notification had popped up hours ago, from a society gossip app I never used but hadn't deleted. 'Live: Vivian Ashford's Retrospective Opens to Elite Crowd.'

My thumb trembled as I tapped it.

The stream was high-definition. It showed a gleaming white gallery space, all sharp angles and dramatic lighting. People in cocktail attire milled with champagne flutes. And there, in the center of the frame, stood Adrian.

He looked impeccable. A dark suit that cost more than most cars, his hair perfectly styled. He held a champagne flute aloft. Vivian stood beside him, a vision in a backless gown of liquid silver, her arm threaded through his. She was smiling at the camera, but her body was angled toward him, a possessive curve.

A reporter's microphone was thrust toward Adrian.

"Mr. Voss, a few words on the artist and this stunning collection?"

Adrian smiled, that easy, public smile that never reached his eyes—except now, as he glanced at Vivian, it did. It warmed, it crinkled at the corners. It was real.

"Vivian's work has always spoken of longing," he said, his voice clear and resonant through my phone's tinny speaker. "Of patience rewarded." He turned fully to her, lifting his glass higher. "So tonight, I toast to the love of my life… who finally came back to me."

The crowd around them erupted in soft, knowing applause. Vivian's smile turned radiant. She leaned in, and he met her for a kiss—not a deep one, but a firm, public claiming. A seal on the statement.

The camera panned away, sweeping across the gallery walls. It landed on a large, central painting, illuminated by a single spotlight.

The title card beside it read: 'Seven Years of Waiting.'

The painting was hyper-realistic, almost photographic. It showed Adrian, younger, his face softer, holding a toddler Lily in his arms. They were on a beach at sunset. The light was golden, perfect. Adrian was looking down at Lily with such naked adoration it made my breath catch. And in the background, a blurred, feminine figure was walking away, her features indistinct, just a silhouette against the dying light.

Seven years. He'd been waiting for Vivian for seven years. Our entire marriage. The painting declared it. His toast confirmed it. The child in the painting, our child, was just a prop in his narrative of loss and reunion.

A fresh, seizing pain ripped through my lower abdomen. It was different this time. Sharper. Deeper. A hot, sudden rush of wetness soaked through my underwear and the fabric of my dress.

No. No, no, no.

I dropped my phone. It clattered on the linoleum. I pressed my hands hard against myself, as if I could hold it all in. A low moan escaped my lips.

A nurse noticed. She was by my side in an instant. "Ma'am? Can you tell me what's happening?"

"I'm… I'm a doctor," I managed, the words strangled. "Eight weeks. Pregnant. I'm… I'm bleeding."

Her professional mask snapped into place. "Okay. I need you to come with me. Now." She called for a gurney. Hands helped me onto it. The ceiling lights streaked past as they wheeled me through swinging doors, away from the crowded waiting room.

The next hours blurred into a series of clinical moments. The curtained bay. The blood pressure cuff tightening. The ultrasound technician's silent, focused face as she moved the cold transducer over my gel-slicked abdomen. I stared at the grainy screen on the rolling monitor. I knew what to look for. The gestational sac. The fetal pole. The flicker of a heartbeat.

The screen showed a sac. It was misshapen. Collapsing. There was no flicker. Just a static, grey emptiness.

The tech didn't say anything. She just took measurements, her lips pressed together. She wiped the gel away and left without meeting my eyes.

The OB on call was brisk, kind in a detached way. "The ultrasound confirms a missed miscarriage. The bleeding you're experiencing is your body beginning to pass the tissue. We can manage the pain. I'm very sorry."

Sorry. The word floated in the sterile air. It meant nothing. It was a protocol.

They gave me medication for the cramps and moved me to a semi-private room to "let things progress." My curtain was drawn. On the other side, I could hear the quiet sounds of another patient, the beep of a monitor.

The physical pain subsided into a deep, hollow ache. The bleeding continued, a final, brutal punctuation. I lay there, staring at the acoustic tiles on the ceiling. The silence in my body was louder than any pain. The fluttering possibility I'd felt just days ago was gone. Extinguished.

A different doctor came in later, holding a clipboard. She was young, with tired eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses. She glanced at my chart, then at me.

"Dr. Voss?" she asked, her tone routine.

I nodded, my throat too raw to speak.

She looked back at the chart, flipping a page. Her eyebrows lifted slightly. "Your maiden name is Sinclair. That's an uncommon name. You're not related to Dr. Edmund Sinclair, are you?"

The name, my father's full name, hit me like a physical shock. In all my years with Adrian, in that world of old money and whispered connections, I'd never heard anyone outside the estate lawyers say it. He was always just "your father's estate," or "the Sinclair legacy." A shadow.

I turned my head on the thin pillow to look at her. "He was my father."

Her tired eyes sharpened with genuine interest. "Really? I did a rotation at Mass General as a resident. He was a visiting lecturer. Brilliant man. His work on vascular grafts… it changed my approach to surgery." She gave a small, respectful shake of her head. "I heard he passed. I'm sorry. The medical community lost a giant."

She offered a faint, professional smile, then tapped her clipboard. "Your vitals are stable. The worst of the cramping should be over. We'll keep you for observation for a few more hours, then you can be discharged. Do you have someone who can take you home?"

I stared at her. The question was so normal, so mundane. Do you have someone?

The image of Adrian, his glass raised to Vivian in a gallery full of light, superimposed itself over this doctor's concerned face. The empty, grey ultrasound screen flashed in my mind.

"No," I whispered, the sound scraping out of me. "There's no one."

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