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Too Late, Husband: Watch Me Shine Novel Cover

Too Late, Husband: Watch Me Shine

My husband gave $250,000 of our life savings to his mistress for a fake surgery. I had sacrificed my own career to build his, and this was my reward. When I confronted him, he twisted our deepest shared trauma into a weapon. "You were so quick to get rid of our first baby, weren't you?" he sneered. His words hit me just hours after I had secretly terminated our second pregnancy-a choice his cruelty had forced upon me. I found him at the hospital comforting her, and he shoved me to the ground in front of a crowd, calling me heartless. He brought her back to our home, wrapping her in my favorite blanket on my sofa, while I was still reeling from the loss of our child. He thought our twenty years together meant I would always forgive him, that our love was a fortress. He was about to learn it was a house of cards, and I was holding the match.
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Chapter 1

My husband gave $250,000 of our life savings to his mistress for a fake surgery. I had sacrificed my own career to build his, and this was my reward.

When I confronted him, he twisted our deepest shared trauma into a weapon.

"You were so quick to get rid of our first baby, weren't you?" he sneered.

His words hit me just hours after I had secretly terminated our second pregnancy-a choice his cruelty had forced upon me. I found him at the hospital comforting her, and he shoved me to the ground in front of a crowd, calling me heartless.

He brought her back to our home, wrapping her in my favorite blanket on my sofa, while I was still reeling from the loss of our child.

He thought our twenty years together meant I would always forgive him, that our love was a fortress.

He was about to learn it was a house of cards, and I was holding the match.

Chapter 1

Eloise POV:

My husband, Dawson Bowman, the man I' d shared my life with since college, had just signed away $250,000 of our joint savings. Not for an investment, not for charity we' d discussed, but for a manipulative young bartender named Campbell Dejesus and her supposed life-saving surgery. The news hit me like a physical blow, stealing the air from my lungs.

I stared at him across our living room, the space that had once held so much love and laughter now felt like a battleground. My hands trembled, not with fear, but with a raw, consuming rage. "$250,000, Dawson?" My voice was a shaky whisper, then it gained strength, rising to a roar. "Are you out of your mind? Our savings! The nest egg we worked for, sacrificed for, for her?"

Dawson flinched, his charismatic CEO facade cracking slightly, revealing a flicker of guilt. But it was quickly replaced by that familiar, self-righteous pity he wore whenever Campbell's name came up. "Eloise, don't be so dramatic. It's a loan, she needs it. Her condition is critical."

"Critical?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "What about our condition, Dawson? What about the condition of our marriage? Is that not critical to you?" My voice was thick with unshed tears, but I refused to let them fall. Not yet.

He ran a hand through his perfectly styled hair, avoiding my gaze. "You're overreacting. It's just money. We can make it back."

"Just money?" My jaw dropped. "Do you even hear yourself? That's half our savings! The down payment for our dream house! The money we put aside for our future, for our family!" The words, "our family," hung in the air, a cruel irony I hadn't yet fully processed.

He sighed, a long-suffering sound. "You always make everything about money, Eloise. You've changed. You used to be so understanding, so empathetic."

His words struck a nerve, an icy wave washing over me. "I used to be understanding? I used to be empathetic? I quit my high-paying architecture job, Dawson, to take a stable, lower-paying corporate role, so you could chase your startup dream! I was your financial bedrock, your emotional support, the quiet co-founder of your success! And you call me un-empathetic?" Each word was a punch, aimed squarely at his thinly veiled hypocrisy.

"That's not fair," he mumbled, shrinking slightly.

"Fair?" I advanced on him, my chest heaving. "What's fair, Dawson? Is it fair that I supported you, believed in you, while you poured our life savings into some conniving girl's sob story? Is it fair that you've been having an emotional affair, disguised as 'charity,' right under my nose?"

His eyes narrowed, a cold, hard glint appearing. "Watch your tone, Eloise. You're being hysterical."

"Hysterical?" I repeated, my voice now trembling with a dangerous calm. "I am not hysterical. I am furious. I am heartbroken. And I deserve an explanation, not your condescending dismissiveness."

He squared his shoulders, a cruel resolve hardening his features. "You want an explanation? Fine. Maybe I'm just tired of your constant judgment. You're so pragmatic, so calculating. You wouldn't understand what it's like to truly help someone in need, someone who's actually suffering."

"Suffering?" I laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "And I haven't suffered, Dawson? What about our suffering? What about the suffering we went through together?" My voice cracked, betraying the raw wound I was trying to protect.

He took a step closer, his eyes cold and unforgiving. "Oh, you want to talk about suffering? Let's talk about it then. Let's talk about how you just threw away our first chance at a family, back in college. You were so quick to get rid of it, weren't you? So quick to move on, to pretend it never happened."

The words hit me like a physical blow, a vicious, unexpected sucker punch. My breath hitched. The air left my lungs, replaced by a suffocating emptiness. That dark, unspoken secret, our deepest, most painful trauma, weaponized against me. By him. The man who had held my hand, who had cried with me, who had promised me we would get through it together.

My vision blurred. A wave of nausea swept over me, making my knees weak. He had taken our shared pain, our mutual tragedy, and twisted it into a weapon to shame me. The betrayal was so profound, so absolute, it eclipsed even the quarter-million dollars he'd given away. This wasn't just about money or another woman anymore. This was about the very core of my being, ripped open and exposed.

In that instant, something inside me snapped. A quiet, decisive voice echoed in the void where my heart once was. No more. No more pain, no more betrayal, no more shared suffering with this man. A new, terrifying secret bloomed in my mind, a chilling determination. I had just discovered I was pregnant again. A tiny, fragile life growing inside me, a second chance. But with Dawson's words still ringing in my ears, scorching my soul, I knew with absolute certainty that this life, too, would not see the light of day. Not if it meant being tethered to him, to this pain.

The room fell silent, a heavy, suffocating stillness. My friends, Sarah and Mark, who had been trying to mediate the escalating argument, stood frozen, their faces pale with shock. Their eyes darted between Dawson and me, horror etched into their features. Their silence, their shocked expressions, were all the validation I needed.

My mind reeled, flashing back to that sterile clinic room, years ago. I was barely twenty, scared, alone, Dawson's hand gripping mine, his face pale and tear-streaked. "We'll get through this, Eloise," he'd whispered, his voice thick with guilt and sorrow. "I'll always be here for you. We'll try again, when the time is right, when we're ready." He' d held me for hours afterward, murmuring reassurances, vowing to make it up to me. He' d seemed so genuinely heartbroken, so full of remorse for the choices we' d made, the life we' d lost.

Now, that same man, the man who had witnessed my vulnerability, my profound grief, had thrown it back in my face like a stone. You were so quick to get rid of it. The words echoed, a cruel, mocking refrain. My stomach churned, a sharp, twisting pain. My body, already fragile and secretly carrying a new life, felt like it was shutting down.

"Eloise?" Dawson's voice, now laced with a hint of belated regret, broke the silence. He took a hesitant step towards me, his hand reaching out. "I… I didn't mean that."

"Yes, you did," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "You meant every word."

Sarah, tears welling in her eyes, stepped forward. "Dawson, how could you? That was unforgivable."

Mark put a hand on Dawson's shoulder, his expression grim. "Dude, that was out of line. Way out of line."

Dawson pulled away, defensively. "She pushed me! She's always so dramatic about everything! It's just a loan, for charity!" He looked at Mark, pleading for understanding. "She's always been like this, making a big deal out of nothing."

"Nothing?" Sarah cried, stepping between us. "Your 'charity' has been going on for months, Dawson! The late nights, the canceled dates, the excuses! We all saw it, but Eloise kept making excuses for you, saying you were just being 'kind-hearted'!"

She was right. I had built a fortress of excuses around him, brick by painstaking brick. His escalating emotional and financial entanglement with Campbell had been a slow, insidious poison, seeping into the foundations of our marriage. It started with small favors, rides home, then late-night texts, then the "emergency funds" he'd send her. Each time, I'd rationalize it, telling myself he was just a good person, a generous soul. He was helping someone truly in need, I' d convinced myself.

Then came the articles. A local gossip site had caught him leaving an expensive restaurant with Campbell, his arm casually around her waist, their heads close together, laughing. "Tech CEO Dawson Bowman and mysterious companion," the headline screamed. I'd confronted him, my heart a raw, bleeding wound. He'd sworn it was innocent, just a business dinner, a client. My gut told me otherwise, but I desperately wanted to believe him.

"It won't happen again, Eloise," he'd promised, his eyes full of what I thought was genuine remorse. "I swear it. I'll cut off all contact. She's just a troubled kid, I was trying to help."

But it did happen again. And again. The arguments became a dull, constant ache in our home. Cold dinners, colder nights. His patience for me evaporated, replaced by a brittle irritation. My questions were met with sighs, my tears with indifference. He saw my pain as an inconvenience, my needs as a burden.

Now, standing before him, reeling from the cruelest blow, I realized the excuses had run out, the fortress had crumbled. There was nothing left but dust and ruins. This wasn't just a bump in the road; it was the end of the road.

"I want a divorce," I said, my voice shockingly steady, cutting through the tense silence. It was a statement, not a question, a decree.

Dawson' s head snapped up, his eyes widening. He stared at me, then at the silent, horrified faces of Sarah and Mark. "A divorce?" he scoffed, a disbelieving laugh escaping him. "Eloise, don't be ridiculous. You're just upset about the money, about Campbell. We'll work it out, like we always do. You always come around." His eyes held a flicker of his usual arrogance, that infuriating certainty that I would always forgive him, always come back.

He thought our love was unbreakable, a fortress. He was about to learn it was a house of cards, and I held the match.

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