
The Heart He Chose Over Mine
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The hospital room was suffocatingly quiet.
Clara sat upright in the uncomfortable, vinyl-covered bed, her back resting against the stiff pillows. In her lap rested a thick manila folder. The top sheet of paper was entirely clinical, a brutal summary of her physical destruction.
*Patient: Clara Hayes Vance.*
*Diagnosis: Spontaneous Abortion secondary to severe blunt force trauma. Emergency Dilation and Curettage performed.*
She read the words over and over again, letting the cold medical terminology wash over her. It was easier to read it like this. It was easier to process the loss of her child as a sterile data point rather than a shattering tragedy. If she let the emotion in, she knew she would scream until her throat bled. And she couldn't afford to scream. She had exactly one week to pack up her life, sever her ties, and vanish to Geneva.
The heavy wooden door of her hospital room suddenly swung open, hitting the rubber wall stopper with a sharp *thwack*.
Julian walked in.
He didn't look like a man who had just survived a building collapse. He had clearly washed his face and changed into a fresh set of scrubs. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his jaw tense with irritation rather than worry. He checked his expensive wristwatch before he even looked at her.
"Finally," Julian sighed, pulling the door shut behind him. "I've been looking all over this wing for your room. Why didn't you answer your phone? I called you three times."
"It was on silent," Clara said, her voice perfectly even.
Julian frowned, stepping closer to the bed. He looked her up and down, his eyes performing a rapid, detached triage. "The nurses at the front desk told me you were refusing to be discharged. Clara, I know it was a chaotic situation this afternoon, but please don't be dramatic. I reviewed your chart in the system. You have a few minor lacerations and some bruising. It’s just a scratch. Why are you occupying a bed that a real trauma victim might need?"
Clara stared at him. The man she had loved for five years. The man she had worshipped as her savior. He was looking at her as if she were a stubborn child throwing a tantrum in a grocery store.
"A scratch," Clara repeated, her tone devoid of any inflection.
"Yes, a scratch," Julian said, crossing his arms over his broad chest. "You were pinned, yes, but your x-rays are completely clear. No broken bones. No internal bleeding. You were perfectly safe under that beam."
"Safe," Clara echoed.
Julian rolled his eyes, clearly losing his patience. "Yes, Clara, safe. Serena, on the other hand, inhaled a massive amount of toxic fumes. Her oxygen saturation dropped to terrifyingly low levels. Do you have any idea how close she came to a full respiratory collapse?"
Clara slowly slid the manila folder containing the miscarriage report under her pillow, hiding it from view. She smoothed the blanket over her lap, her hands perfectly steady. "I imagine it was very stressful for you."
"Stressful doesn't begin to cover it," Julian snapped, stepping up to the side of the bed. "You know how delicate her immunosuppressants make her. If her body goes into distress, it could trigger a rejection cascade. You didn't see her face in the rubble, Clara. She was pale. She was sweating. She looked exactly like Elise did on the operating table the day I lost her."
Julian’s eyes glazed over for a second, haunted by the crushing guilt of his past failure. He shook his head, refocusing on Clara with a stern, reprimanding glare. "I couldn't lose her again. I couldn't let Elise's heart stop again. You, of all people, should understand that. You work in the medical field."
"I am a medical illustrator, Julian," Clara said, her voice a quiet, chilling monotone. "I draw anatomy. I don't triage it."
"Exactly," Julian said, pointing a finger at her. "You don't triage. I do. And my professional triage assessment in that corridor was that you were stabilized by the debris, and Serena was going into acute respiratory distress. I made the right call."
Clara looked up at him, her eyes dark and unreadable. "I told you I was pregnant."
Julian let out a short, dismissive scoff and waved his hand in the air. "You were panicked, Clara. Women say all sorts of wild things when they're in a state of shock. It’s a natural physiological response to trauma. You hallucinate, you exaggerate, you say whatever you think will get the rescuer's attention."
Clara froze. The sheer magnitude of his obliviousness hit her like a physical blow.
"You thought I lied," Clara said softly.
"I thought you were hysterical," Julian corrected, using his clinical, doctor voice. "We haven't been intimate in weeks, Clara, and we certainly haven't been trying to conceive. I knew immediately that you were just trying to force me to prioritize you over Serena. It was manipulative, frankly, but I forgive you because of the shock."
Clara stared at him, absorbing the absolute cruelty of his delusion. He had completely rewritten reality to justify his obsession with Elise’s heart. He didn't just choose Serena over her; he had erased their child from existence in his mind to protect his own ego.
"I see," Clara said, her voice dropping to a whisper. The last lingering thread of attachment she had to this man snapped cleanly in two.
"I had to stay clinical," Julian continued, oblivious to the death of his marriage happening right in front of him. "I am a surgeon. I make the hard choices. And I need you to be reasonable about this."
Clara pulled her hands back and folded them neatly in her lap. She looked him directly in the eye. "You're right, Julian. I was hysterical. It’s just a scratch. I'm completely fine."
Julian let out a massive sigh of relief, his tense shoulders dropping. "Good. Thank God. I'm glad you're finally being reasonable. I really don't have the time or the energy for a tantrum today."
"I wouldn't dream of throwing one," Clara said stoically.
"Excellent," Julian said, checking his watch again. "Because I have to monitor Serena's ECG for the next forty-eight hours. Her heart rate is still elevated, and I refuse to leave her side until she is fully stabilized."
"Of course you do," Clara said seamlessly. "You should go to her."
Julian paused, narrowing his eyes slightly. He seemed momentarily confused by her easy, frictionless agreement. Usually, Clara would argue. Usually, she would cry and beg for a scrap of his attention. Her total compliance was unsettling, but Julian was too self-absorbed to question it for long.
"Are you sure you don't need a ride home?" Julian asked, offering a pathetic, tone-deaf olive branch. "I can have my driver pick you up once you sign the discharge papers."
"I'll take a taxi," Clara said. "Don't worry about me."
Before Julian could respond, his cell phone buzzed loudly in his scrub pocket. He pulled it out, his face immediately tightening with intense focus as he read the screen.
"Yes, Dr. Aris," Julian answered, turning his back to Clara and walking toward the window. "Her troponin levels are rising? No, do not administer the beta-blockers yet. I’m on my way back to the ICU right now."
As Julian spoke frantically into his phone, completely ignoring the wife bleeding in the bed behind him, the door to the hospital room opened with a soft, deliberate squeak.
Clara looked up.
Serena Croft wheeled herself into the room in a standard hospital wheelchair. She was dressed in a plush, designer hospital gown, her hair perfectly brushed. There were no oxygen tubes. No IV lines. She looked radiantly healthy.
Serena stopped the wheelchair just inside the doorway. She glanced at Julian’s back, ensuring he was entirely engrossed in his phone call.
Then, Serena looked at Clara.
The fragile, dying victim act vanished instantly. Serena’s lips curled into a wicked, triumphant smirk. She leaned forward in the wheelchair, her eyes gleaming with pure malice as she took in Clara’s pale face and empty hospital bed.
Serena raised a hand to her mouth, hiding her smile from Julian’s peripheral vision, and whispered across the room to Clara.
"He didn't even look back at you, did he?"
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