Two weeks had passed since the boardroom betrayal, and I'd managed to maintain a facade of professionalism despite the whispers that followed me through Skyline's corridors. The humiliation burned like acid in my chest, but I refused to give Bradley and Paige the satisfaction of seeing me break.
I was crossing the parking garage after a grueling fourteen-hour surgery when I heard the sharp click of heels echoing off concrete walls. The sound made my skin crawl—I'd grown to recognize Paige's deliberately loud footsteps, as if she wanted the world to know she was coming.
"Kenna." Her voice carried that false sweetness that made my teeth ache. "I've been hoping to catch you alone."
I didn't turn around, continuing toward my car with measured steps. "I have nothing to say to you, Paige."
"Oh, but I have something to say to you." She moved to block my path, her perfectly manicured hand resting on her hip. "I think it's time we had an honest conversation about your... situation."
The way she said 'situation' made my blood run cold. There was something predatory in her smile, a gleam that spoke of secrets weaponized.
"My situation is that I'm tired and want to go home." I stepped to the side, but she mirrored my movement.
"Your situation is that you're a failure as a wife." The words hit like a physical slap. "All these years, and you couldn't give Bradley what every woman should be able to give her husband."
My heart stopped. She couldn't know. No one knew about the miscarriage except Bradley and me. The infection during the pandemic, the choice we'd had to make, the baby we'd lost—it was our private tragedy.
"I don't know what you're talking about." But my voice betrayed me, coming out thin and shaky.
Paige's smile widened, revealing teeth that looked too sharp in the harsh fluorescent lighting. "Oh, Kenna. Sweet, barren Kenna. Did you really think Bradley wouldn't tell me about your... inadequacies?"
The parking garage spun around me. The concrete walls seemed to close in as her words carved into wounds I'd thought had healed.
"You lost that baby three years ago, didn't you?" Paige continued, her voice dropping to a mock whisper. "And now you can't even get pregnant again. Meanwhile, I gave Bradley what you never could—a son. A healthy, beautiful boy who carries on the Nelson name."
Rage exploded through my chest like a detonation. Before I could think, before I could stop myself, my hand flew across her face with a crack that echoed off the concrete walls.
Paige stumbled backward, her hand pressed to her reddening cheek, her eyes wide with shock that quickly transformed into triumph.
"You psychotic bitch!" she shrieked, but there was satisfaction in her voice. "You just assaulted me!"
Footsteps pounded across the garage. Several staff members appeared from behind parked cars—Dr. Mitchell from the nursing station, two orderlies, and worst of all, Bradley, his face a mask of controlled fury.
"What the hell is going on here?" Bradley's voice boomed off the walls.
Paige immediately shifted into victim mode, tears springing to her eyes with practiced ease. "She attacked me, Bradley. I was just trying to have a civil conversation, and she hit me."
"That's not—" I started, but Bradley cut me off.
"Kenna, apologize to Paige. Now." His tone was the one he used in board meetings, cold and commanding.
I stared at him, this man I'd been married to for twenty years, and saw a stranger. "You told her. About the baby. About everything."
Something flickered in his eyes—guilt, maybe, or annoyance at being caught. "That's not relevant right now. You need to apologize."
"I will not apologize for defending myself against her cruelty." My voice carried across the garage, and I saw Dr. Mitchell's expression shift from confusion to understanding.
Bradley stepped closer, his presence suddenly menacing. "You will apologize, or there will be consequences."
The threat hung in the air like smoke. Around us, the small crowd of witnesses shifted uncomfortably, some looking away, others staring with the morbid fascination of people watching a car crash.
I looked at Paige, still holding her cheek with theatrical flair. I looked at Bradley, his jaw clenched with barely contained anger. I looked at the faces surrounding us—colleagues who'd respected me hours ago and now saw me as the unstable wife who couldn't control herself.
"No." The word came out steady and clear. "I will not apologize for being human."
Bradley's face darkened. "Kenna—"
But I was already walking away, my heels clicking against the concrete in a rhythm that matched my racing heart. Behind me, I heard Paige's voice, high and vindictive, painting me as the villain in her carefully constructed narrative.
I didn't look back. I couldn't. Because if I did, I might have done something far worse than slap her.
That evening, I sat in the hospital's family lounge, staring at the empty chair where I usually held vigil beside my father's bed. The nursing station had been strangely evasive when I'd asked about his location, citing "administrative transfers" and "updated care protocols."
When Bradley appeared in the doorway with a manila folder in his hands, I knew. The satisfied smile playing at the corners of his mouth told me everything I needed to know about where my father had gone and why.
"Looking for someone?" he asked, settling into the chair across from me with the casual confidence of a man who held all the cards.
Bradley slid the manila folder across the small table between us, his movements deliberate and predatory. The fluorescent lights above cast harsh shadows across his face, making him look like a stranger—though perhaps that's what he'd always been, and I'd just been too blind to see it.
"I think it's time we discussed your future at Skyline," he said, his voice carrying that false warmth that had once fooled me into believing he cared.
My hands trembled as I opened the folder. The first document was a new employment contract, dense with legal language that made my head spin. But certain phrases jumped out like wounds: "Reduced to staff surgeon status," "Salary adjustment to $180,000 annually," "No administrative responsibilities."
Eighty thousand dollars less than my current salary. No leadership role. No research opportunities. Essentially, I'd be a glorified resident after fifteen years of building my career.
"This is insulting," I whispered, flipping to the second document. My blood turned to ice as I read the header: "Revised Prenuptial Agreement."
"Keep reading," Bradley said, leaning back in his chair with the satisfaction of a cat cornering a mouse.
The prenup was worse than the employment contract. All marital assets would be placed under Bradley's sole control. Our house, our investments, even my personal savings account—everything would require his approval to access. I'd become financially dependent on him, trapped like a bird in a cage.
"You can't be serious." I looked up at him, searching for any trace of the man I'd married. "Bradley, this is—"
"Fair compensation for your recent behavior," he interrupted. "The board is concerned about your stability after the incident with Paige. This arrangement protects everyone's interests."
"My interests? How does this protect my interests?"
His smile was razor-thin. "It keeps you employed and married. Many women would consider that generous, given your... limitations."
The word hit me like a physical blow. Limitations. As if my inability to carry a pregnancy to term was a character flaw rather than a medical tragedy we'd faced together.
"And if I refuse?"
Bradley's expression shifted, becoming almost gentle. It was that false kindness that made what came next so much more devastating.
"Well, that would be unfortunate. You see, your father's care at Riverside Extended Care has become quite expensive. The facility is struggling financially, and they've had to make some difficult decisions about which patients they can continue to accommodate."
My heart stopped. "What are you talking about?"
"There's a state-funded facility about four hours north. Pine Valley Care Center. The accommodations are... basic. But they have space for patients whose families can't afford private care."
The room tilted around me. "You bastard. You moved him?"
"I transferred his care, yes. As his medical proxy—a responsibility you signed over to me years ago when his condition deteriorated—I felt it was necessary to explore more cost-effective options."
I shot to my feet, the chair scraping against the floor. "Bring him back. Right now."
Bradley remained seated, unruffled. "Sign the papers, Kenna. Sign them, and your father returns to Riverside tomorrow. Refuse, and he stays at Pine Valley. Four hours away. Visiting hours are limited, and the drive is... challenging, especially in winter."
The trap closed around me with surgical precision. He'd found the one thing I couldn't fight—my father's wellbeing. My hands shook as I stared at the documents, each page representing another piece of my independence being sold.
"I need time to think."
"You have until tomorrow morning. I'll need your decision before the board meeting at nine."
I left the hospital in a daze, driving through empty streets without seeing them. At home, I sat in my father's old study, surrounded by his medical journals and research papers about AI emergency technology—dreams he'd never see realized.
By midnight, desperation had hollowed me out completely. I found myself dialing a number I hadn't called in twenty years, my fingers moving from memory.
"Winston Gardner."
His voice was exactly as I remembered—warm, careful, tinged with the slight accent he'd never quite lost.
"Winston, it's... it's Kenna." My voice cracked on my own name.
A pause. Then, softer: "Kenna. Are you alright?"
The kindness in his voice broke something inside me. Twenty years of careful control shattered, and I found myself sobbing into the phone like a lost child.
"I'm sorry," I gasped between tears. "I know we haven't spoken in years, and I have no right to call you, but I don't know who else—"
"Hey, breathe," Winston's voice was gentle but firm. "Whatever it is, we'll figure it out. Just tell me what's wrong."
So I did. I told him everything—Bradley's betrayal, Paige's cruelty, the impossible choice I was facing. The words poured out of me like poison from a wound, and with each confession, I felt simultaneously lighter and more ashamed.
"He's using my father against me," I finished, my voice barely a whisper. "I built that cardiac wing, secured fifteen million in funding, and now he's taking everything away unless I sign my life over to him."
Silence stretched between us, filled only by my ragged breathing.
Finally, Winston spoke: "Kenna, listen to me very carefully. You're not alone in this. And you're not powerless, no matter what he's made you believe."