Chapter 1
Wife Escapes Betrayal
Chapter 1
I smoothed the crimson tablecloth one last time, adjusting the crystal wine glasses until they caught the light from the candles just right. Our fifth anniversary deserved something special. Five years of building our life together, of supporting each other through residencies, fellowships, and finally attending positions at Mass General. Five years of love that had only grown deeper with time.
Or so I thought.
I stepped back to admire my handiwork. Our Beacon Hill townhouse looked magical, transformed by dozens of candles and delicate fairy lights strung across the dining room. The scent of Marcus's favorite osso buco filled the air, a recipe I'd spent days perfecting. I'd even picked up a bottle of the Barolo we'd shared on our first date.
"Ti amo più di ieri, meno di domani," I whispered, practicing the Italian phrase I'd memorized for our toast. I love you more than yesterday, less than tomorrow. My pronunciation was probably terrible, but Marcus would appreciate the effort.
I glanced at my watch. 7:30 PM. He'd promised to be home by 5:30. I tried his cell again, but it went straight to voicemail.
"This is Dr. Marcus Sterling. Leave a message."
I hung up without speaking. This wasn't the first time he'd been late, especially in the past few months. Surgeons kept unpredictable hours—I understood that better than anyone. Still, a text would have been nice.
I checked my appearance in the hallway mirror, smoothing down the emerald dress I'd worn on our first date. It was a little tighter now, but Marcus had always said green brought out the gold flecks in my eyes. My grandfather's voice echoed in my head: "Katydid, you look beautiful when you're excited about something."
Grandfather. The thought of him made me smile. I couldn't wait to tell Marcus about the breakthrough in Grandfather's research. After years of work, we were finally seeing promising results with the modified cardiac valve procedure. It would be the perfect anniversary gift—professional success to match our personal happiness.
The sound of keys in the door jolted me from my thoughts. I hurried to the entryway, excitement bubbling up inside me.
"Surprise!" I called as the door swung open.
Marcus stood there, briefcase in hand, looking startled and... something else. Distracted? Annoyed?
"Kate," he said, his eyes darting around the decorated space. "What's all this?"
My smile faltered. "Our anniversary? Five years today?"
A flash of recognition crossed his face, followed quickly by what looked like resignation. "Right. Of course." He set down his briefcase and loosened his tie. "I'm sorry I'm late. Surgery ran long, and then there was an emergency consult."
I swallowed my disappointment. "It's okay. The food's still warm."
He glanced at his watch. "Two hours late. I really am sorry."
But the apology felt hollow, automatic. He moved past me toward the stairs. "I need a quick shower."
"Marcus," I called after him, "I have news about Grandfather's research. The modified valve procedure—we're seeing incredible results in the trial."
He paused on the stairs, his back to me. "That's great, Kate."
No questions. No excitement. Just four words delivered with all the enthusiasm of someone acknowledging the weather forecast.
Twenty minutes later, we sat at the candlelit table, the food growing cold between us. Marcus picked at his osso buco, his mind clearly elsewhere.
"How was your day?" I asked, desperate to bridge the growing silence.
"Fine. Busy." He took a sip of wine. "This is good."
My phone buzzed on the table. I glanced down, ready to ignore it, when the image on the screen froze me in place.
It was a text from Lena Petrova, a colleague from cardiology. "Sorry, wrong recipient! Delete please!"
But it was the attached photo that turned my blood to ice. Marcus—my husband—standing in the hospital parking garage with his hand tenderly cupping the face of Ashley Chen, the new cardiothoracic resident. The gesture was achingly familiar—the same way he used to touch my face in our early days together. His expression was one I hadn't seen directed at me in months: complete adoration.
"Kate?" Marcus's voice seemed to come from far away. "What is it?"
I turned the phone toward him, my hand trembling. "Care to explain?"
The color drained from his face as he stared at the image. Then, something shifted in his eyes—not guilt or shame, but annoyance. As if I'd inconvenienced him by discovering his betrayal.
"It's not what you think," he said automatically, then stopped himself. His shoulders straightened as he met my gaze. "Actually, no. It is what you think. Ashley and I have been seeing each other."
The room tilted. "How long?"
"A few months."
"A few months," I repeated, my voice hollow. "On our anniversary."
He set down his fork with deliberate calm. "It's just a temporary derailment, Kate. These things happen in long marriages."
"Five years is a long marriage?"
"Don't make this more dramatic than it needs to be." His voice hardened. "And I'd appreciate if you didn't pressure Ashley about this. She's young, and this is difficult for her too."
The words hit me like physical blows. Difficult for her? I stared at my husband—this stranger across the table—and realized with sickening clarity that the man I'd married was gone. Perhaps he'd never existed at all.
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
I barely slept that night, my mind replaying the conversation at our anniversary dinner over and over. Marcus's cold eyes, his dismissive tone when he said Ashley was having a difficult time—as if I were the intruder in my own marriage. When morning came, I dragged myself to the hospital, hoping work would provide some escape from the nightmare my life had become.
The familiar antiseptic smell of Mass General's surgical floor usually comforted me. Today, it made my stomach turn. I kept my head down as I walked to the attending lounge, avoiding eye contact with colleagues. Did everyone know? Were they all whispering about poor, clueless Dr. Morrison?
"Morning, Kate." Dr. Lena Petrova's voice was unnaturally high-pitched. She hovered by the coffee machine, her face flushed with embarrassment. "About that text—"
"Don't worry about it," I cut her off, forcing a professional smile. "You did me a favor, actually."
Lena's eyes widened, then filled with pity—the one thing I couldn't bear. "Kate, I—"
The lounge door swung open, saving me from her sympathy. But what came through was worse.
Ashley Chen glided in, her scrubs perfectly pressed, dark hair cascading over her shoulders despite hospital protocol. She wasn't alone. Marcus followed, his hand briefly brushing against the small of her back before he caught sight of me.
"Dr. Morrison," Ashley nodded with mock deference, her lips curving into a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "I was just telling Dr. Sterling about my ideas for the new cardiac valve study."
My cardiac valve study. My grandfather's life's work.
Marcus cleared his throat. "Ashley has some innovative approaches. Fresh perspective."
I felt Lena shift uncomfortably beside me as Ashley moved closer to Marcus, her body language unmistakably possessive. She reached up to straighten his surgical cap, her fingers lingering at his temple.
"We should prep for the Jacobsen procedure," Ashley purred. "I've been reviewing your technique, Dr. Sterling. It's... masterful."
The double entendre hung in the air. Marcus didn't even have the decency to look embarrassed. Instead, he watched her with that same possessive smile I'd seen in the photo—a look that once belonged to me.
"I'll see you in OR 3," he said, his voice warm in a way it hadn't been with me for months.
As they walked out, Ashley deliberately brushed past me, the scent of her expensive perfume lingering like a taunt. The message was clear: she was marking her territory, and that territory included my husband and possibly my research.
Two hours later, I was reviewing charts in the nurses' station when I heard Ashley's voice from the adjacent lounge. The door was ajar, and she was holding court with a group of wide-eyed interns.
"The challenge with established programs," she was saying, her voice carrying just enough to ensure I heard, "is that they're often run by senior physicians past their prime. Clinging to glory days instead of embracing innovation."
A male intern laughed nervously. "But Dr. Morrison's cardiac valve work is groundbreaking, isn't it?"
"Was groundbreaking," Ashley corrected. "Ten years ago, maybe. Now it's just... safe. Predictable."
Her eyes flicked toward the door, meeting mine with calculated precision. She'd known I was there all along.
That evening, alone in our townhouse, I did something I rarely allowed myself. I broke down. Tears streamed down my face as I scrolled through old photos of Marcus and me—happier times that now seemed like elaborate fiction. On impulse, I posted a quote to my rarely-used Instagram story: "Loyalty is a rare gem in a world of glass hearts."
It was passive-aggressive and beneath me, but in that moment, I needed some small act of defiance.
Marcus arrived home an hour later, his face thunderous. He thrust his phone in my face, my Instagram story displayed on the screen.
"Delete this," he demanded. "Now."
"Why?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt. "It's just a quote."
"Don't play innocent, Kate. It's beneath you." He pocketed his phone, his expression shifting to something colder, more calculated. "By the way, I meant to tell you—the funding for your grandfather's cardiac research has been reallocated."
The floor seemed to drop from beneath me. "What? You can't—that's my project. Grandfather's legacy."
"The hospital board felt another priority deserved the resources." His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Ashley's residency project, actually. Something about innovative approaches to cardiac valve procedures."
In that moment, I understood. This wasn't just an affair. This was systematic destruction—of my work, my legacy, my very self. And it had only just begun.
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
My footsteps echoed through the empty corridor as I raced toward the research office, my heart pounding against my ribs. This couldn't be happening. Not Grandfather's project. Not the work we'd dedicated years to perfecting.
I burst through the door, startling the administrative assistant who nearly dropped her coffee.
"Dr. Morrison," she stammered, "I wasn't expecting—"
"The cardiac valve research funding," I interrupted, struggling to keep my voice steady. "There must be some mistake."
She wouldn't meet my eyes. "Dr. Davies asked to see you if you came by."
Robert Davies, Head of Cardiothoracic Surgery and notorious department politician, was waiting in his office, his expression carefully neutral as I entered without knocking.
"Kate," he said, gesturing to a chair I had no intention of taking. "I assume you're here about the funding reallocation."
"Reallocation?" My voice cracked. "That research was approved through next year. My grandfather's entire legacy—"
"The board made its decision." Davies shuffled papers on his desk, still not meeting my gaze. "Dr. Sterling made a compelling case for redirecting those resources to more... promising avenues."
"You mean to Ashley Chen." The words tasted bitter on my tongue.
Davies finally looked up, his eyes cold. "Dr. Chen's proposal shows remarkable potential. Sometimes we need fresh perspectives."
"Those were my grandfather's exact words in his proposal," I said quietly. "The one Ashley is now mysteriously championing."
A flicker of discomfort crossed his face before he hardened again. "I suggest you focus on your clinical duties, Dr. Morrison. The decision is final."
* * *
Three days later, my grandfather was admitted for his scheduled procedure—the very one his research had pioneered. I stood beside his bed, trying to hide my mounting panic as I reviewed the equipment inventory.
"Something wrong, Katydid?" he asked, using the childhood nickname that usually made me smile.
I forced brightness into my voice. "Just double-checking everything, Grandfather."
But everything wasn't fine. The specialized monitoring equipment we'd ordered—funded by the now-redirected grant—hadn't arrived. We were proceeding with standard equipment that lacked the sensitivity his condition required.
"Dr. Morrison." The circulating nurse's voice was low. "We're ready."
I squeezed my grandfather's hand. "I'll see you soon."
His eyes, so like my own, crinkled at the corners. "I'm proud of you, Kate. Never forget that."
The procedure began smoothly, but halfway through, his vitals began to fluctuate. The standard monitors failed to detect the subtle changes until it was too late. By the time the alarms sounded, his heart was in a fatal arrhythmia.
"Crash cart!" I shouted, moving automatically through the resuscitation protocol while my own heart seemed to stop.
For forty-seven minutes, we fought to bring him back. For forty-seven minutes, I refused to accept what the flatline was telling me. When I finally called time of death, my voice belonged to someone else—hollow and distant.
Outside the OR, I found Marcus waiting, his expression a practiced mask of concern.
"Kate, I just heard—"
"Don't." The word cut through the air between us. "The specialized monitors would have caught it earlier. The ones our funding was supposed to purchase."
He had the decency to flinch, but recovered quickly. "You can't know that for certain. He was elderly, with multiple comorbidities."
"He was my family," I whispered. "The only family I had left."
Marcus reached for my shoulder, but I stepped back. His touch would break me, and I refused to shatter in front of him.
* * *
The funeral was held in Cambridge, where my grandfather had taught for thirty years before joining Mass General. Rain fell in a gentle mist, turning the cemetery grass emerald green—his favorite color.
I stood alone by the casket, accepting condolences from colleagues and former students, when a murmur rippled through the gathered mourners. Marcus had arrived, but not alone. Ashley Chen walked beside him, her hand tucked into the crook of his arm, her face a perfect mask of somber respect.
"Kate," Marcus nodded as they approached the graveside. "Ashley wanted to pay her respects. She's been quite affected by Arthur's passing."
Ashley squeezed his arm, her eyes glistening with tears that never fell. "He was such an inspiration to young surgeons like me. I hope to honor his legacy through my work."
My work. My grandfather. My husband. Everything that was mine, she was claiming before my eyes.
Colleagues moved toward them, offering condolences as if they were the bereaved couple. I watched from beside the casket, suddenly invisible at my own grandfather's funeral.
As they lowered his casket into the ground, I made a silent promise. This would not be the end of his legacy. Or of mine. Whatever it took, whatever I had to become—I would reclaim what was being stolen from me.
I just didn't know yet how steep the price would be.