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My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby Novel Cover

My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby

Seven years married to the city's most acclaimed neurosurgeon. Sloane Carrow had learned to wait—through midnight calls, missed anniversaries, dinners gone cold on the counter. She was twelve weeks pregnant the morning she started bleeding. She called her husband Roman. He didn't pick up. She drove herself to his hospital. The receptionist told her Dr. Vale was in OR 3, performing an elective rhinoplasty—on Dr. Eden Hale, the resident he had known since medical school. Sloane lost the baby on Table Five while her husband fixed another woman's nose three doors down. She didn't tell him. She signed the discharge papers under her maiden name. She emptied the joint account. She filed for divorce while he was still scrubbing out. What Roman doesn't know: the hospital he runs sits on land owned by a woman whose name has been on his marriage certificate for seven years. By the time he learns who his wife really is, his hospital, his career, and the only child he will ever almost have—are already gone.
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Chapter 2

I saw the missed calls at 4:07 p.m.

Three of them. All from Sloane. The earliest was timestamped 6:22 a.m., which meant she'd called while I was scrubbing in, before the first case of the day. The last was 6:31. Eleven minutes apart.

There was also a text, sent at 6:19: *I might be bleeding. I think it's the baby.*

I read it twice. Then I set my phone face-down on the locker room bench and sat with it for a moment.

Sloane worried. It was one of the things I had learned about her in seven years — she translated worst-case scenarios for a living and sometimes forgot to stop when she came home. A year ago she'd convinced herself a headache was an aneurysm. Six months ago, a bruise on her shin had sent her down a two-hour internet spiral about bone cancer. She was brilliant and careful and she catastrophized, quietly, the way some people breathed.

Bleeding could mean anything. Stress. Irregular cycle. She'd been tired lately.

I picked up the phone and called her back.

It went straight to voicemail.

I tried once more. Same result.

I called Marisol.

She answered on the second ring, and there was a half-second pause before she spoke — the kind of pause I'd learned to associate with Marisol choosing her words.

"Mr. Vale." Her voice was careful. Neutral in a way that wasn't quite neutral. "Madam left this morning. Early. She drove herself."

"Drove herself where?"

"She didn't say."

I leaned back against the locker. Outside in the hallway, someone laughed — a resident, probably, the easy laugh of someone who'd just finished a good case. "She's probably at her parents'. You know how she gets when she's in one of her moods."

Another pause. "Yes, Mr. Vale."

"The reservation at Coriander tonight — that's still on?"

"Yes. Eight o'clock. Madam confirmed it three weeks ago."

"Good." I stood up, rolled my neck until something cracked. "She'll be there. You know how she is — she makes a production of things and then shows up anyway."

"Of course," Marisol said.

I hung up and went to find Eden about the afternoon's post-op notes.

---

I arrived at Coriander at seven fifty-five.

It was the kind of restaurant Sloane loved — warm light, close tables, the smell of cardamom and browned butter hanging in the air. She had discovered it two years ago and had been waiting for the right occasion ever since. Our anniversary, she'd decided. She'd made the reservation in October, reminded me about it in November, December, twice in January, and once last week with a Post-it note stuck to the coffee maker that said *Thursday. 8 p.m. Don't be Dr. Vale about it.*

I had laughed at that. I had meant to tell her I laughed.

The host led me to the table — corner booth, candlelit, the anniversary cake already arranged with the kitchen per my request two weeks ago. A small thing. Chocolate, because Sloane had mentioned it once in passing and I had remembered.

I ordered water and checked my phone.

Nothing.

At eight-thirty I ordered a drink. At nine I told the server she was running late. He nodded with the practiced sympathy of someone who had seen this before, and I found that irritating in a way I couldn't quite name.

By nine-thirty the irritation had shifted into something quieter and less comfortable. I kept picking up my phone. Her number rang once and cut to voicemail — not the flat silence of a dead phone, but the single ring of a phone that had been deliberately declined.

She was declining my calls.

I set the phone down harder than I intended. The couple at the next table glanced over.

At ten I told myself she was making a point. Sloane made points sometimes — clean, precise, devastating points, delivered without a single raised word. It was one of the things that had drawn me to her and one of the things that, lately, I hadn't had the bandwidth to navigate. The work was demanding. She knew that. She had always known that.

At ten-fifteen, I flagged down the server.

"The cake," I said. "Can you box it?"

He looked at the untouched table. "Of course, sir. Shall I — "

"Just box it."

I drove home with the white pastry box on the passenger seat. The city was quiet at that hour, the streets slick from an earlier rain I hadn't noticed. I kept the radio off. I was composing, in my head, the version of tonight I would give Sloane tomorrow — reasonable, measured, the part where I pointed out that I had *shown up*, that I had *tried*, that I had left an entire surgical day early to be there by eight and she hadn't even—

The apartment was dark.

Not just empty. Dark in the specific way of a place where no one has been for hours — the particular stillness of rooms that have been waiting.

I put the cake in the refrigerator. Stood in the kitchen for a moment with the cold air on my face.

Then I walked into the living room to find my phone charger, and I saw it.

On the coffee table. A single sheet of paper, folded once, the kind of thing that gets left out and forgotten. I almost didn't pick it up — it looked like a bill, or a form, something administrative.

But I saw the letterhead. St. Aldine Medical Center. And below it, in the clean serif font of a form letter:

*Dear Mrs. Vale, your 12-week prenatal scan is scheduled for—*

I stopped.

Read it again.

And again.

*12-week.*

I sat down on the couch. Not because I decided to — my legs simply stopped holding me up in the way they had been.

Twelve weeks. Three months. She would have known — she would have known for months. She was a meticulous woman, Sloane, the kind of person who confirmed restaurant reservations three weeks in advance and left Post-it notes on coffee makers. She did not forget things. She did not overlook things.

She hadn't told me.

The cake sat in the refrigerator. The apartment sat around me, dark and perfectly still.

I turned the letter over in my hands, as if the back of it might explain something the front had failed to. It didn't. It was just paper. Just a standard form, the kind the hospital sent automatically, addressed to a woman who had apparently been carrying something for twelve weeks without saying a word.

*Why didn't she tell me?*

The question moved through me slowly, settling somewhere between my ribs — not grief, not yet, not anything I had a clean name for. Something closer to the feeling of reaching for a door handle in the dark and finding the door already open.

Outside, a car passed. Its headlights swept across the ceiling and were gone.

I sat there for ten minutes and did not move.

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