Chapter 3

I watched from the shadows of the hospital corridor, my own pain a dull counterpoint to the sharp agony in my chest. Carlton, clad in his expensive suit, his face pale and drawn, was signing papers at the nurse's station. His hand trembled slightly as he scrawled his signature, his eyes fixed on the form. My ears, straining, caught the nurse's question.

"Relationship to the patient, Dr. Mejia?"

He hesitated for a fraction of a second, then looked up, his voice clear, though strained. "Her husband."

The word "husband" slammed into me, knocking the air from my lungs. My "husband." He had once refused to even acknowledge our relationship publicly for fear of "professional repercussions." He had insisted we keep our engagement a secret for months, citing his need to "maintain an objective image." He cherished his reputation above all else. But for Carmen, he would throw it all away. For Carmen, he was willing to lie, to risk everything.

He then rushed back to Carmen's room, his eyes filled with a raw, agonizing worry I had never, ever seen directed at me. He was capable of such profound emotion. Just not for me. He was broken for her, just as he was for his public image. He would break all his rules, abandon all his principles, for this woman.

He felt my stare, his head snapping up. But I was already gone, melting back into the shadows of the hospital, leaving him to his new life, his new "wife."

When he finally returned home hours later, the first thing he did was head straight to the laundry room. I watched him, hidden in the shadows of the living room, as he meticulously, almost reverently, hand-washed the blood-stained shirt he' d worn. That same shirt he' d been so careful not to let me see. The man who wore white gloves to change a lightbulb, now scrubbing away Carmen' s blood. The irony was a bitter pill.

He walked past me, still oblivious, heading straight to the kitchen. "Carmen had a rough night," he said, avoiding my gaze. He began preparing a steaming bowl of broth, the rich aroma filling the house. He didn't offer me any. He didn't even look at me.

He carefully poured the broth into a thermos, grabbed a bouquet of fresh flowers, and headed for the door. "I'm going back to the hospital. She needs me." He paused, then added, "It was a mistake to leave her alone."

I watched him go, the thermos of broth in his hand, the flowers clutched tight. His concern, his devotion, was all for her. My own dinner, left cold on the table, was a stark reminder of my place in his life: nowhere.

My phone buzzed. A notification. Carmen Hodges. A new post on her social media. A photo of her, pale but smiling, nestled against Carlton' s shoulder, his arm around her. The caption: "My hero. He saved me again. So much pain, but his love makes it bearable."

My hero. His love. I remembered the times I had been sick, injured. He had offered clinical advice, a prescription. Never this tender embrace, this public declaration. My stomach churned, a familiar wave of nausea washing over me, but this time it wasn' t just the tumor. It was pure, unadulterated disgust.

A faint tightness in my chest, a suffocating pressure. I needed air. I needed to breathe. And I needed answers.

Carlton's study. His "sanctuary." A place he guarded with fierce possessiveness, claiming it was for "deep thought" and "patient confidentiality." It was the one place in our house he always kept locked, the one place I had never entered. I used to joke about it, "It's where he keeps all his secrets, darling," hoping to coax a playful confession. Now, I knew it was where he kept her secrets.

The door was unlocked. A careless oversight, or perhaps he was too consumed by Carmen to remember. My heart pounded as I pushed it open. The air was thick with the faint scent of his cologne, mingled with something sweet and cheap-Carmen's perfume.

My eyes scanned the room, landing on his desk. Amidst scattered medical journals and patient files, a small, floral-patterned notebook lay half-hidden. Carmen' s diary. My fingers trembled as I picked it up.

I flipped it open, my eyes devouring the hurried scrawl.

October 15th. He looked at me today. The way he looks at his precious patients. So kind. So worried. If only he knew the mess I' m in. If only he knew the man I' m married to.

November 3rd. He offered me a gift card for a grocery store. To help with the "abuse." He's so easy to manipulate. He thinks he's helping. He thinks he's saving me.

November 20th. He fired me today. My heart shattered, but it's part of the plan. Make him feel guilty. Make him miss me. I saw the look in his eyes. He wants to help.

December 1st. He visited me! He said he couldn't stop thinking about me. We talked for hours. He was so gentle. So understanding. He even touched my hand.

December 15th. He came again. This time, in his study. He said it was just "somatic therapy." But his eyes, they wandered. He wants me. I know it. And I want him. His money, his fame. All of it.

December 17th. Our anniversary. Today! I knew he' d come. He couldn' t resist. He' s mine now. He's so good in bed, so passionate. He pretended it was therapy, but we both knew. He feels guilty, though. He promised me a huge sum of money, a house, a new identity. Just for being "his patient." He' s worried about his reputation, but he cares more about me. He told me he'd handle Alexis. She's so clueless, she won't even suspect.

My vision blurred, not with tears, but with a cold, blinding rage. Every word was a fresh stab, every sentence a revelation of grotesque betrayal. They had been sleeping together for weeks, probably months. In his study. In our house. While I, the dutiful wife, was planning our anniversary. While I was carrying his child, our miracle baby.

He didn't just betray me. He orchestrated my emotional torture. He let me believe his lies, let me suffer, all while giving Carmen a blueprint for deceit. "He'd handle Alexis." What a monster.

I felt like an utter fool. A pawn in their disgusting game. The tumor in my head throbbed, a relentless drumbeat against my skull, but it was nothing compared to the agony in my heart. My marriage was dead, long before I found them. It had been murdered, slowly and meticulously, by the two people closest to me.

My hands clenched around the diary, my knuckles white. Tears finally streamed down my face, hot and stinging, blurring the vile words. How could he? How could I have been so blind?

Why didn't you just tell me? I screamed inwardly at Carlton. Why the elaborate charade? Why the cruelty?

My phone was still in my hand. I switched to the camera, my fingers steady despite the trembling in my body. Click, click, click. Every page, every incriminating word, captured. Evidence.

I carefully placed the diary back where I found it, a faint smile playing on my lips. He was still at the hospital, playing the hero to his "patient." He wouldn't know. Not yet.

I left the study, the door closing softly behind me, erasing the scent of Carmen. My next call was to my CEO. I needed to arrange some things at the company. I needed to move fast. I needed to be gone.

Chapter 4

The lobby of my company buzzed with the usual morning chaos-executives in sharp suits, designers with colorful scarves, the low hum of productivity. I walked through it, my mind focused on the upcoming board meeting, the plans for expanding our tech empire. Then, a blur of movement. A figure detached itself from the crowd near the reception, dropping to her knees with a dramatic thud. Carmen Hodges.

Her hair was disheveled, her eyes wide and tearful, a perfect picture of distraught innocence. "Alexis! Please! You have to help me!" she wailed, her voice carrying across the polished marble floor.

Heads turned. Phones came out. A nervous energy rippled through the crowd. I felt a surge of nausea. This was her. This was her new performance.

"What do you want, Carmen?" I asked, my voice flat, devoid of the irritation I felt bubbling beneath the surface. I detested her theatrical displays.

She sniffled, tears streaming down her face. "They… they fired me! From the new job Carlton got me! Someone sent anonymous emails, threatening to expose me, calling me a homewrecker! No one will hire me now!" She looked up at me, her eyes pleading. "It was you, wasn't it? You told them!"

A ripple of murmurs spread through the crowd. Some faces looked sympathetic towards Carmen, others shot accusatory glances at me. "Disgusting," someone whispered. "Targeting an abuse victim."

"Carmen, I don't engage in petty backbiting," I stated, my voice steady, my gaze unwavering. "If I have something to say, I say it to your face."

Just then, the glass doors of the lobby swung open, and Carlton strode in, his face a mask of controlled fury. His eyes landed on Carmen, then on me. He rushed to Carmen, helping her up, his arm protectively around her.

"Alexis!" he snapped, his voice sharp, "What is the meaning of this? Why are you harassing Carmen?"

My heart squeezed, a cold, painful clench. He didn't even ask. He simply assumed. "Harassing her? Carlton, she came here, making a scene, accusing me."

"She's distraught, Alexis! Someone is actively trying to ruin her life, spreading malicious rumors." He looked at me, his eyes filled with a chilling accusation. "And I know who."

"You think I'd stoop to such tactics?" I asked, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "I prefer to fight my battles head-on, Carlton. Unlike some people." I cast a pointed look at Carmen, who quickly averted her gaze.

"You're just jealous, Alexis!" Carlton retorted, his voice low and dangerous. "Jealous that Carmen is finally finding some peace, some recovery. Jealous that someone else needs me."

My breath caught in my throat. Jealousy. That was his convenient label for all my pain, my justified anger. He turned, pulling Carmen closer, and they walked away, leaving me standing in the center of the gawking crowd. He didn't even glance back. He never did.

My vision swam. The vibrant colors of the lobby blurred. A searing pain shot through my skull, followed by a wave of dizziness so intense I swayed, clutching my head. My legs gave out. I collapsed to the polished floor.

"Someone call an ambulance!" a voice shrieked. "She's pregnant!"

The next thing I knew, I was lying in a hospital bed, the sterile smell burning my nostrils. The same doctor from before stood over me, his face grim. "Alexis, you need to manage your stress. The tumor… and the pregnancy… they are both extremely vulnerable to emotional distress. This baby, Alexis, it' s a high-risk pregnancy already. If you don't calm down, we might lose it." He paused, then added gently, "Perhaps, it's time to consider a decision about the pregnancy. For your own health."

My heart felt numb. Lose the baby. My miracle baby. The only thing I had left. I just stared at the ceiling, my eyes dry. "Do what you have to do," I whispered, my voice hollow. I couldn' t fight anymore. I was too tired.

A few days later, I gathered my strength and went to Carlton's clinic. I needed to talk to him. I needed to end this. As I approached his office, I saw Carmen, her arm in a sling, chatting animatedly with his assistant. She seemed perfectly fine, her "distress" a distant memory.

She saw me, and her smile faltered, replaced by a practiced look of fear. "Oh, Alexis. I… I shouldn't be here. I'm sorry."

"Don't be," I said, my voice cold. "You seem quite at home."

Carlton emerged from his office, his eyes narrowed when he saw Carmen's sling. "What happened?" he asked, rushing to her side.

"Alexis…" Carmen began, her voice trembling.

"She fell," I interrupted, my gaze fixed on Carlton. "Again. She's clumsy. Always has been."

He glared at me, then back at Carmen. "Carmen is now working for me, Alexis. As my personal assistant. I can keep an eye on her here." His announcement was a punch to my gut. He truly was replacing me with her, even in his professional life.

"Fine," I said, my voice unnervingly calm. "Then I think it's time we talk about a divorce. I've already signed the papers." I pulled a neatly folded document from my purse and placed it on his desk.

He looked at the papers, his face paling. "Alexis, don't be ridiculous. This is just a misunderstanding. A temporary setback. We can work through this."

"Misunderstanding?" I laughed, a harsh, brittle sound. "You call sleeping with our housekeeper, lying to me, and abandoning me for her a misunderstanding? What do you say, Carlton? Does Carmen have any STDs I should be worried about from your experimental 'therapy' sessions?"

Carlton's face contorted in rage. "Alexis! How dare you! Apologize to Carmen, now!" he hissed, his voice barely a whisper, but filled with venom.

Carmen, seeing her cue, dropped to her knees, clutching her sling-bound arm. "Oh, I'm so sorry, Alexis! I'm so sorry! It's all my fault!" She started hitting herself, soft, theatrical slaps to her own cheeks. "Punish me! I deserve it!"

My stomach churned. Her grotesque performance was too much. I turned to leave, but Carmen lunged, grabbing my arm. "No! Don't go!" she shrieked, then, with a practiced slump, she twisted, falling backwards. Her grip on my arm tightened, and I was dragged down with her, tumbling down the short flight of stairs leading to the clinic's lower level.

We landed in a heap. Carmen lay at the bottom, looking pale and fragile, her eyes wide with feigned fright. Carlton rushed down, his face a mask of horror. He scooped Carmen into his arms. "Carmen! Are you alright? What happened?"

"She… she pushed me, Carlton," Carmen whimpered, her voice weak. "She was angry…"

"No! I didn't!" I cried, trying to sit up, my head pounding. "She grabbed me! Check the surveillance cameras!"

Carlton glared at me, his eyes blazing. "The cameras haven't been working for days, Alexis! And I saw you! You pushed her!"

"No, I never did!" I protested, a wave of nausea washing over me.

Carmen, still in Carlton' s arms, weakly shook her head. "No, Carlton, don't blame her. It was an accident. I… I just stumbled." But her eyes, just for a split second, met mine. And in them, I saw it. A glint of triumph. A malicious flicker of pure, unadulterated evil.

Then, a gasp from Carmen. A dark stain spread across her dress, just below her waist. "Oh, no! My baby!" she wailed, clutching her abdomen. "My baby! It's gone!"

Carlton' s face went white. He looked at the spreading stain, then at me, his eyes filled with a murderous rage. "You bitch! You killed my baby!" He picked Carmen up and rushed towards the emergency exit.

"Carlton! No!" I screamed, a searing pain erupting in my own lower abdomen. "I'm pregnant! My baby! My baby!"

He paused, a flicker of uncertainty in his eyes. I saw it. A brief hesitation. But then Carmen clutched his arm, whimpering. "My baby, Carlton! Our baby!"

His gaze hardened. He looked at me, lying on the floor, clutching my stomach, then scoffed. "Don't play games, Alexis. You're just trying to get attention." He pushed open the emergency door and disappeared with Carmen.

The pain intensified. A hot, gushing sensation between my legs. My hands, when I looked, were covered in blood. My baby. My miracle baby. It was gone. My world, already shattered, splintered into a million irreparable pieces. My heart sank, heavy and cold as a stone.

Chapter 5

The sterile white of the hospital ceiling swam above me. The doctor' s voice was a distant hum, confirming what I already knew. "The baby is gone, Alexis. We did everything we could, but the trauma was too severe. And the tumor… it' s reacting badly to the stress. We need to schedule surgery soon, or the prognosis will worsen."

A nurse, her face etched with pity, patted my arm. "You need to rest, dear. Avoid any more emotional distress." Emotional distress. The words were a cruel joke. My husband hadn't even shown up. No call, no text. Nothing.

My phone buzzed on the bedside table. A social media notification. Carmen Hodges. A photo of her, looking delicate and tearful, nestled in Carlton's arms on a sun-drenched beach. His arm was wrapped protectively around her, his face a mask of tender concern. The caption: "Healing with my hero. He's always there for me, even through the darkest times. Our little angel will be watching over us."

My stomach lurched. The physical pain was nothing compared to the fresh wave of nausea, the burning bile in my throat. I squeezed my eyes shut, tears finally streaming down my temples, wetting my hair. My baby. My precious, miracle baby. I had lost it. And no one was here to mourn with me. No one was here to even acknowledge its existence.

Days later, a ghost of myself, I discharged myself from the hospital. The house felt alien. As I stepped through the front door, the familiar, comforting scent of my home had been replaced by a cloying, sweet floral perfume. My eyes landed on the shoe rack. My favorite silk slippers, the ones Carlton had bought me in Paris, were gone.

Carlton stood in the living room, his face taut, a faint frown on his lips. His eyes fell on my blood-stained skirt, and a flicker of disgust crossed his face. "Alexis, you're bleeding all over the carpet. Go clean yourself up."

My heart felt nothing. No anger, no pain. Just a hollow ache. He thought it was just "blood." He had no idea what that blood represented. He wouldn't care anyway. I reminded myself to stay calm, to not let the anger surge. The tumor. My precarious health.

Then, she appeared. From the kitchen, humming a cheerful tune. Carmen. Wearing my silk slippers. She walked towards us, a soft, domestic smile on her face. "Oh, Alexis, you're home. Carlton made your favorite tea." She gestured towards the teapot. Mine. The one I had brought to him on our anniversary morning.

"Carmen is moving in, Alexis," Carlton announced, his voice devoid of emotion, as if stating a weather forecast. "She needs a safe place to recover. And after everything, I feel responsible."

Carmen nodded demurely. "I told Carlton I could work for free, as a housekeeper. Just until I get back on my feet. I don't want to be a burden."

They stood there, a united front, waiting for my reaction. My blood ran cold, then boiled. But I couldn't scream. I couldn't rage. My head throbbed. I simply turned, walked to our bedroom, and began methodically packing a suitcase.

Carlton followed me, his voice low and chastising. "Alexis, don't make a scene. Carmen has been through enough. You need to be understanding."

"Understanding?" I turned, my voice trembling with suppressed fury. "Understanding of the woman who killed my child? The woman you chose over me, over our baby?"

His brow furrowed. He glanced at my skirt again, a look of vague discomfort on his face. "Alexis, you're not making sense. You need rest. You're unwell."

Before I could retort, a theatrical shriek erupted from the bathroom. "Oh! My hand! I cut myself!" Carmen.

Carlton sprinted out of the room, leaving me alone with my packed suitcase. I heard his frantic murmurs, Carmen's delicate whimper. He came back, carrying a small basin of water and a first-aid kit.

Carmen, trailing behind him, her face tear-streaked, clutched her bandaged finger. "Oh, Carlton, I'm so clumsy. I was just trying to help, to do the laundry. I'm so sorry."

"It's alright, Carmen," Carlton said, his voice soft, gentle. "You rest. I'll take care of it." He knelt down, then, to my horror, picked up a lacy, delicate item from the laundry basket-Carmen's underwear-and began to gently handwash it in the basin.

My eyes widened. Carlton, with his impeccable hygiene, his obsessive cleanliness, who once recoiled from a drop of my own blood, was now tenderly washing another woman's intimate apparel. He used to make me feel disgusting for existing, for being human, for having a body that sometimes bled or sweated. He had made me feel like an inconvenience. For Carmen, he broke every single one of his rules.

A bitter, humorless laugh escaped my lips. He truly loved her. This was not just lust. This was a profound connection, built on her manufactured vulnerability and his savior complex. He had finally found someone who made him feel like a hero, someone who wasn't strong or independent like me, someone he could "save."

I slammed my suitcase shut. This was it. No more.

I walked back into the living room, a strange sense of calm settling over me. I pulled out the divorce papers, already signed and notarized, and placed them on the coffee table. "Sign them, Carlton. It's over."

His face, usually so composed, contorted into a mask of rage. With a violent sweep of his arm, he sent a teacup flying, shattering it against the wall. "No! I won't! You're being dramatic, Alexis! This is a phase!" Carmen, startled, gasped and rushed to him, trying to gently restrain him. "Carlton, darling, calm down!"

"Don't you dare touch him, Carmen!" I snapped, my voice finally cracking. "You manipulative leech! You repaid my kindness by destroying my life!"

Carmen's face went pale. She stumbled back, trying to stammer a denial. But I didn't wait. I turned, grabbed my suitcase, and walked towards the door.

"Alexis! If you walk out that door, don't you ever come back!" Carlton roared, his voice thick with fury. "You'll regret this! You'll regret everything!"

I paused at the threshold, then, for the first time in what felt like forever, I genuinely smiled. A slow, chilling smile of absolute freedom. "I doubt it," I said, my voice clear and strong.

Then I walked out, leaving the chaos, the betrayal, the empty promises behind me.

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