
When My Husband’s Protégé Took My Place in His Life
Chapter 3
The bell above the door chimed, pulling me from my thoughts. I looked up from the deck I'd been shuffling and froze.
Rosie Carpenter stood in the doorway of The Clarity Room, her eyes red-rimmed and puffy. She was even younger than I'd expected—maybe twenty-five, with auburn hair pulled back in a messy ponytail and wearing scrubs underneath a raincoat.
"Are you open?" she asked, her voice barely above a whisper.
I recognized her instantly. Not just from Damien's Instagram stories where he'd tagged "brilliant residents," but from the hundreds of text messages I'd scrolled through that night. The night everything ended.
"We are," I managed, my voice surprisingly steady. "Please come in."
She hesitated, then stepped inside, glancing nervously at the crystals lining the windowsill. "I've never done this before. A friend recommended you."
"First times are usually the most powerful," I said, gesturing to the chair across from me. "What brings you here today?"
Rosie sat down, her fingers fidgeting with the sleeve of her raincoat. "I need... clarity." A bitter laugh escaped her. "Isn't that what your shop is called?"
I nodded, keeping my expression neutral as I reached for my deck. "We all need that sometimes."
"I'm in love with someone," she blurted out, tears welling in her eyes. "He's a senior doctor at the hospital where I'm doing my residency."
My heart hammered against my ribs, but I remained composed. "Go on."
"He said he was unhappy at home. That his relationship was just... existing." Her voice cracked. "We talked for hours. About medicine, about life, about everything. He made me feel special."
I shuffled the cards slowly, giving her space to continue.
"I thought he would leave her. He gave me every reason to believe that." Fresh tears spilled down her cheeks. "But then she actually left him, and suddenly he's avoiding me. Won't return my texts. Acts like we were never anything."
The irony was so sharp I could taste it. "And you want to know why?"
"Yes." She wiped at her tears. "Was it all in my head? Did I misread everything?"
I spread the cards before her and instructed her to choose three. She selected them with trembling fingers.
The Knight of Cups reversed. The Magician reversed. The Eight of Pentacles.
I took a deep breath and began to interpret.
"The Knight of Cups reversed shows someone who is charming but manipulative," I explained gently. "He enjoys the pursuit but backs away from commitment."
Her eyes widened slightly.
"The Magician reversed indicates someone who uses their skills and intelligence for deception." I tapped the card. "He loves the idea of your admiration, not you."
"But he seemed so genuine," she protested weakly.
"He is using you to fill a void," I said, meeting her gaze directly. "But he is incapable of being full."
The truth hung in the air between us. Rosie's shoulders slumped as the last of her hope seemed to drain away.
"He's using his position of power," I continued softly. "And you deserve better than that."
She nodded, tears flowing freely now. "Thank you for being honest." She fumbled for her wallet. "How much do I owe you?"
I waved away her money. "This one's on the house."
After she left, I locked the door and leaned against it, my legs suddenly weak. The external confirmation was overwhelming. My intuition had been flawless all along.
---
Across town, Damien stood in the hospital corridor, staring at his phone for the fifth time in an hour. Still nothing from Mira. The block remained in place.
"Dr. Evans!" A nurse hurried toward him, her expression urgent. "Your patient in room 412 is showing signs of anaphylaxis."
"What?" Damien blinked, trying to focus. "That's impossible. I prescribed—"
"He's in distress," she interrupted. "We need you now."
Damien rushed to the room, his mind still half on Mira. Where was she? Why hadn't she reached out? She always came back before.
The patient was gasping for air, hives spreading across his neck and face.
"Epinephrine," Damien ordered, reaching for the medication.
Too late, he noticed the allergy note he'd missed during his distracted chart review. The patient was allergic to the very medication Damien had prescribed.
"Wait!" he called, but the nurse had already administered the dose.
The room erupted into controlled chaos as they stabilized the patient. By some miracle, the dose was small enough that the epinephrine countered rather than exacerbated the reaction.
An hour later, Dr. Patricia Hendricks, the Chief of Medicine, stood in Damien's office doorway, her expression grave.
"My office. Now."
The hearing was brief but devastating. Patient charts scattered across her desk showed a pattern of errors—all minor, until today.
"Your performance has declined significantly over the past month," Dr. Hendricks said, her voice clinical but firm. "You're distracted. You're making mistakes that could cost lives."
Damien tried to protest, but his voice sounded hollow even to his own ears.
"You're suspended pending a formal hearing," she continued. "Effective immediately."
As she dismissed him, Damien caught a glimpse of himself in the glass wall of her office. For the first time in years, he truly saw himself—not the brilliant doctor, not the desirable man, but someone empty and lost.
The perfect facade was cracking, one mistake at a time.
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