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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 2

Eloise POV:

The words had barely left my lips when Dawson' s phone buzzed in his pocket. The insistent melody, a chirpy pop song I had come to associate with dread, sliced through the heavy silence. I didn't need to see the caller ID to know who it was. Campbell. Always Campbell.

Dawson glanced at his phone, a flicker of irritation, then concern, crossing his face. My declaration of divorce, our shattered marriage, the raw wound he'd just inflicted-none of it mattered as much as that insistent ringtone.

"Dawson, don't," Sarah pleaded, stepping forward, her hand reaching out to him. "Not now. Please."

But he ignored her, his fingers already sliding across the screen to answer. "Hello?" His voice, which had just been sharp and accusatory towards me, softened instantly. "Campbell? What's wrong? Are you okay?"

My heart, already a hollowed-out cavern, seemed to clench, a phantom pain. He was leaving. Again. For her. While our marriage lay bleeding on the floor between us.

"Dawson, if you walk out that door right now," I said, my voice dangerously low, "it's over. For good. There's no coming back from this."

He paused, phone pressed to his ear, and finally met my gaze. His eyes held a mixture of frustration and impatience. "Eloise, this is important. She's apparently having a panic attack. I need to go."

"No, you don't!" Mark interjected, stepping in front of him. "Dawson, look at her! You just tore her apart! You can't just leave!"

"This is not the time, Mark," Dawson said, pushing past him. "Eloise will calm down. She always does." He looked at me, a hint of patronizing pity in his eyes. "We'll talk later, when you're rational."

"Rational?" I laughed, a bitter, broken sound. "You think I'll just 'calm down'? You think after everything, after what you just said, that I'll still be here, waiting for you to decide our fate?"

"We've been together for nearly two decades, Eloise," he said, shaking his head. "You don't just throw that away over a bit of money and a misunderstanding. We're stronger than this." He believed it, truly. He believed our history, our shared past, was an unbreakable chain. A chain I was now desperate to sever.

I watched him turn, his back to me, already halfway out the door. The bitter laugh died in my throat. I heard the soft click as the front door closed, sealing his departure, sealing our fate.

My gaze fell to the floor near my feet. A framed wedding photo, a cherished memory from a lifetime ago, lay shattered. In the heat of our argument, I must have knocked it off the side table. My smiling face, his arm around me, forever frozen in a moment of naive joy. Now, shards of glass reflected the harsh overhead light, mirroring the fragmentation of my life.

A single tear escaped, tracing a path down my cheek, landing on a sliver of broken glass. It glistened, then disappeared. This wasn't the first tear, and it wouldn't be the last. But it felt different. It was a tear of finality, of acceptance.

For too long, I had excused his behavior, rationalized his choices, convinced myself that the Dawson I loved was still buried beneath layers of success and ego. The Dawson who cried with me after our first loss, the Dawson who cherished our shared dreams. But that Dawson was gone. Replaced by this entitled stranger who weaponized our pain and prioritized another woman's manufactured crisis over my very real heartbreak.

I couldn't lie to myself anymore. This wasn't a marriage to save. It was a wound that needed to heal, away from the source of infection.

My legs felt heavy, each step a monumental effort, but I moved. I found my car keys, drove to a clinic across town. The sterile smell, the quiet hum of fluorescent lights, the hushed voices of nurses-it was all too familiar, a grim echo of the past.

"Your uterus is severely scarred from the previous procedure, Ms. Saunders," the doctor said gently, her voice barely a whisper in the quiet consultation room. "Another termination... it carries significant risks. Future pregnancies would be very difficult, highly unlikely even."

I nodded, numb. The words registered, but they held no emotional weight. It felt like she was discussing someone else's body, someone else's future. My future, my hopes for motherhood, had died a long time ago, killed by a thousand small cuts and one final, brutal stab.

The surgery was quick, efficient. I lay there, eyes open, staring at the ceiling, feeling nothing. No tears, no pain, just a profound emptiness. My mind drifted back to the first time, the raw grief, Dawson's tear-streaked face, his whispered promises. Now, there was just silence. No hand to hold, no comforting words. Just the cold, clinical reality of a choice made in utter solitude, a desperate act of self-preservation.

The nurse, her face kind but distant, rattled off post-op instructions. "No heavy lifting. Take your medication. Rest." I nodded, a puppet on strings.

When I finally walked out of the recovery room, still feeling weak and disoriented, the hospital corridor seemed to stretch endlessly before me. My steps were sluggish, my body a heavy shell. I just wanted to disappear, to find a quiet corner where I could cease to exist for a little while.

And then I saw him.

Dawson.

He stood near the reception desk, his arm wrapped tightly around Campbell. She was leaning into him, her head resting on his shoulder, a picture of fragile vulnerability. He was stroking her hair, murmuring something I couldn't hear. His gaze was fixed on her, filled with a tenderness, a protective affection, that he hadn't shown me in months.

My breath caught. It was a scene straight out of my worst nightmares, played out in the harsh fluorescent light of a hospital corridor. The place where I had just quietly, privately, ended our second chance at a family, while he was here, publicly, openly, comforting the woman who had stolen everything from me.

A strange calm settled over me. There was no more pain, no more tears. Just a vast, empty space where my heart used to be. The last flicker of hope in me died, extinguished by the sight of his devoted face, his comforting hands. I was truly, utterly, completely empty.

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