
Wife's Revenge on Her Unfaithful Husband
Chapter 2
"She's already a lost cause. What's the point of resuscitation?"
My husband's words filtered through the haze of my pain like ice water. I tried to open my eyes, to protest, to remind him of the life we'd created together still fighting inside me. But my body refused to obey, trapped in a limbo between consciousness and darkness.
"Get him out of here!" A different voice cut through the chaos of the emergency room—sharp, authoritative, and filled with barely contained fury.
Footsteps approached rapidly, followed by the squeak of rubber soles against linoleum. Through my half-closed eyelids, I caught a glimpse of Steven's retreating back as a figure in blue scrubs pushed past him.
"Dr. Chen, this isn't your department." The attending physician's voice held a warning.
"I'm taking this case." The newcomer—Dr. Chen—spoke with quiet intensity. "She has multiple fractures, internal bleeding, and she's eight months pregnant. Every second counts."
"You can't just—"
"Watch me." Two simple words, delivered with such conviction that the protest died instantly. "Prep OR Three. Now."
Hands gently adjusted the IV in my arm. I felt the gurney move, the ceiling lights blurring above me in rhythmic succession.
"Rebecca." Dr. Chen leaned close, his face coming into focus. Michael Chen—I recognized him from hospital functions, always quiet in the background while Steven commanded the spotlight. "I'm going to take care of you and your baby. Do you understand?"
I managed the slightest nod, tears spilling from the corners of my eyes.
"Fight," he whispered, his dark eyes intense with determination. "Just fight."
The operating room blazed with harsh white light. Through the fog of medication, I heard snippets of urgent conversation as the surgical team assembled.
"Dr. Chen, you're not authorized—"
"Note my objection in the record," Michael interrupted, already scrubbing his hands with methodical precision. "Then either assist me or step aside."
The anesthesiologist leaned over me. "Count backward from ten, Dr. Matthews."
I never made it past eight.
When consciousness returned, it came in fragments—the steady beep of monitors, the antiseptic smell of the ICU, the dull throb of pain beneath a blanket of medication. I became aware of a presence beside my bed, a gentle pressure on my hand.
I forced my heavy eyelids open, blinking against the light. Michael Chen sat beside me, still in scrubs, dark circles shadowing his eyes. His normally immaculate appearance was disheveled, his surgical cap clutched in one hand.
"The baby?" My voice emerged as a rasp, barely audible.
Michael's exhausted face softened. "She's stable. Five pounds, three ounces. In the NICU, but fighting hard—just like her mother."
A daughter. Relief flooded through me, followed immediately by a wave of pain as I tried to move.
"Easy," Michael cautioned, adjusting something on my IV. "You have three broken ribs, a fractured pelvis, and internal bleeding we managed to control. It was...touch and go for a while."
Memories crashed back—the concert, the panic, Steven's face as he turned away, using my body as leverage to save Amanda instead.
"Steven?" I whispered, part of me still unable to believe what had happened.
Something flickered across Michael's face—anger quickly masked by professional composure. He hesitated, choosing his words carefully.
"He's otherwise occupied," he finally said, his tone neutral but his eyes betraying deeper emotion.
"He left me there." The words emerged as a statement, not a question. Saying it aloud made the betrayal crystallize into something solid and irrefutable.
Michael's hand tightened almost imperceptibly around mine. "I saw the ambulance bring you in. When I heard it was you..." He stopped, composing himself. "When I heard Steven's response, I couldn't—" He shook his head, unable to finish.
"You saved us," I murmured, the full weight of his actions beginning to register through the medication haze.
"Anyone would have—"
"No," I interrupted, suddenly certain. "Not anyone. Not Steven."
Michael fell silent, his eyes meeting mine with an intensity that communicated what he wouldn't say aloud: that my husband had abandoned me in the most fundamental way possible, had deemed me expendable.
"Rest," he finally said, gently releasing my hand. "I'll check on your daughter and be back soon."
As he reached the door, a nurse rushed in, her expression tense. "Dr. Chen, there's someone at the nurses' station asking about Dr. Matthews' condition. She says she's the wife."
Michael froze, turning slowly back toward me, confusion etched across his features.
"The wife?" I whispered, the final piece of betrayal sliding into place.
You may also like





