
Scarred by His Betrayal
Chapter 3
Dr. Sarah Mitchell's office felt like a sanctuary compared to the suffocating atmosphere of my apartment. Her face remained professionally neutral as she examined the detailed scans of my leg, but I caught the brief flicker of concern in her eyes.
"These incision patterns are... unusual," she said carefully, tracing the image with her finger. "The nerve damage here shouldn't have happened with standard procedure. And this suturing—" She stopped, pressing her lips together.
"It was deliberate, wasn't it?" My voice remained steady despite the storm raging inside me.
Sarah sighed, removing her glasses. "I can't prove intent, Alicia. But I can tell you this isn't consistent with best practices, especially for someone with Edwin's training. These complications were avoidable."
She compiled her findings into a detailed report, complete with comparative images showing standard surgical outcomes versus mine. The evidence was damning—not just of Lyra's incompetence, but of Edwin's failure to correct her mistakes during the procedure.
Armed with Sarah's report, I waited for Edwin in our living room. When he finally arrived home, Lyra trailing behind him like a shadow, I felt strangely calm.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice cutting through their laughter. "Alone."
Lyra's smile faltered, but she recovered quickly. "I'll just wait in the kitchen."
"Actually," I said, "this concerns you too, Lyra. You should stay."
I spread Sarah's report across the coffee table, watching their expressions as they realized what they were looking at.
"You had me examined behind my back?" Edwin's voice rose in indignation.
"I had my injuries assessed by an unbiased professional." I tapped the images. "Dr. Mitchell confirms what I suspected. This wasn't a complication, Edwin. This was negligence at best, deliberate harm at worst."
Lyra's face drained of color, but Edwin stepped in front of her protectively.
"This is ridiculous," he snapped. "Sarah Mitchell has always been jealous of my position at the hospital. She'd say anything to undermine me."
"She's your friend, Edwin. Or she was."
"And you're trying to destroy an innocent woman's career over what? Some scarring? Some pain that will eventually subside?"
I stared at him, truly seeing him for the first time. The man I'd loved for five years was defending the woman who had deliberately maimed me. The betrayal was so complete it felt almost freeing.
"I'm leaving you," I said simply.
Edwin laughed—actually laughed. "Don't be dramatic, Alicia. You're upset, I understand that. But you're not thinking clearly."
"I've never thought more clearly." I stood, ignoring the pain shooting through my leg. "I've already packed my things. I'm going back to my apartment tonight."
"This is just a tantrum," Edwin said dismissively. "You'll calm down and realize how irrational you're being."
"Irrational?" I gestured to my leg. "Your assistant deliberately botched my surgery, and you're protecting her instead of me. What part of leaving you is irrational?"
"You can't just throw away five years over one mistake!"
"It wasn't a mistake. It was a choice. Your choice, Edwin."
As I limped to the bedroom to collect my suitcase, I heard Lyra's soft voice behind me: "She'll come around, Dr. Wheeler. She just needs time."
The next morning, my phone exploded with messages from colleagues and acquaintances at the hospital. Attached was a video that made my stomach turn. There was Lyra, kneeling in the middle of the hospital lobby during morning rounds, tears streaming down her face as she loudly begged for forgiveness.
"I only wanted to help her," she sobbed to the growing crowd. "It was an accident, but she wants to destroy my career, my life!"
Staff members gathered around her, offering tissues and supportive pats on the shoulder. Patients stopped to watch the spectacle, murmuring sympathetically about the poor young woman being persecuted.
It was a masterful performance—and it was working. By noon, I'd received dozens of messages urging me to forgive the "honest mistake" of a promising young medical professional.
Lyra had turned public opinion against me with a single theatrical display. But she'd underestimated one thing: I no longer cared what anyone thought. Not Edwin, not the hospital staff, not even the public.
For the first time in five years, I was finally seeing clearly.
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