Chapter 7

The sun had set hours ago when Fletcher's personal driver, Lewis, picked Alexa up from the hospital.

"We're not going home, ma'am," Lewis said, catching her eye in the mirror. He looked apologetic. "Mr. Montgomery requested your presence at the Estate. For dinner."

Alexa looked down at her simple slacks and blouse. "I'm not dressed for the Estate."

"He said it didn't matter," Lewis murmured.

The drive to Long Island took an hour. The Montgomery Estate was a sprawling gothic mansion that looked like it belonged in a horror movie about old money.

When Alexa walked into the dining room, the conversation stopped.

It was a full house. Fletcher's father, Preston, sat at the head. Cornelia was there. The long table was lined only with the inner circle of the Montgomery clan-uncles, aunts, and cousins who circled like sharks, smelling blood in the water. Fletcher sat on the right of his father.

He looked up as she entered. His eyes swept over her wrinkled clothes, her tired face. He didn't smile.

"You're late," he said.

"I was working," Alexa said, exhaustion a poor shield against their casual cruelty. She took the empty seat at the far end of the table-the children's seat, effectively.

A waiter placed a plate of soup in front of her.

"We were just discussing the merger," an uncle said, breaking the tension. "And Felicity's gallery opening. Where is Felicity, Fletcher? I thought she'd be joining us."

The table went quiet. All eyes turned to Alexa, then to Fletcher.

Fletcher took a sip of his wine. "She's busy. Curating art takes time. Unlike some people who spend their time cutting things open."

"It's noble work," Preston grunted, though he didn't look at Alexa.

"It's messy," Cornelia piped up. "And she brings that smell home. Just like that cat."

A ripple of laughter went around the table.

Fletcher swirled his glass. "Yes. Alexa has developed a fondness for strays. I think she prefers the company of animals. Maybe because they don't expect conversation."

"I heard she was feeding it milk on the marble floors," a cousin giggled. "Does she eat cat food too?"

Alexa gripped her spoon. Her knuckles turned white. "I am a cardiothoracic surgeon," she said, her voice cutting through the laughter. "I save lives. I don't eat cat food."

Fletcher slammed his wine glass down. The red liquid sloshed onto the white tablecloth like blood.

"A surgeon," he sneered. "You're so proud of your biology. Tell me, Doctor, if you're such an expert on the human body, why can't you fix your own?"

The silence that followed was absolute. It was a vacuum.

"Fletcher," Preston warned.

But Fletcher didn't stop. He stared down the length of the table at her. "We've been married seven years. And the nursery is still empty. Maybe you should spend less time fixing other people's hearts and figure out why your own womb is a wasteland."

The word wasteland hung in the air.

Alexa felt like she had been punched in the throat. The tears came instantly, hot and humiliating. This was their private struggle. Their secret pain. And he had just served it up as dinner conversation.

She stood up, her chair scraping loudly against the floor. "Excuse me."

She turned and ran. She didn't walk. She ran out of the dining room, down the long corridor lined with portraits of ancestors who all seemed to be judging her.

She made it to the powder room and locked the door. She gripped the sink, gasping for air. She looked at herself in the mirror. She looked broken.

"Did you hear what he said?" A voice drifted through the door from the hallway. Two maids were whispering. "Barren. That's why he's leaving her for Felicity. Felicity is a breeder."

Alexa turned on the tap full blast to drown them out. She splashed cold water on her face.

She couldn't stay here. She had to leave. She unlocked the door and stepped out, intending to find Lewis.

But Fletcher was waiting for her in the hallway. He was leaning against the wall, his arms crossed, his face a mask of stone.

Chapter 8

Fletcher didn't speak. He reached out and grabbed her wrist. His grip was bruising.

"Let go," Alexa gasped, trying to twist away.

He ignored her. He dragged her toward the side exit, bypassing the main foyer. He shoved the heavy oak door open and pulled her out into the night air. The wind was howling now, carrying the scent of rain.

Lewis was waiting with the town car. Fletcher opened the back door and practically threw Alexa inside. He climbed in after her.

"Drive," he barked at the partition.

The car surged forward. The privacy glass slid up, sealing them in a soundproof box.

"You are insane," Alexa cried, rubbing her wrist. "Why would you say that? In front of everyone?"

Fletcher loosened his tie, his breathing heavy. "Did I lie? Is there a child I don't know about?"

"It's a medical issue! It's complicated!" Alexa screamed. "It's not something you use to humiliate me!"

"Humiliate you?" Fletcher laughed, a dark, terrifying sound. "You humiliate me by existing, Alexa! Every time I look at you, I see a bad investment. I see a dead end."

"Then let me go!" she yelled. "Sign the papers! Cornelia gave them to me!"

Fletcher froze. The air in the car changed instantly. "She gave you the papers?"

"Yes! And I'll sign them! I'll sign anything to get away from you!"

Fletcher's face twisted. A vein throbbed in his temple. "You want to leave? You want to run away to your little doctor life?"

"Yes!"

"Stop the car!" Fletcher shouted at the intercom.

The car screeched to a halt. They were in the middle of a side street in Queens, miles from the penthouse, miles from safety. It was raining now, a cold, sleety drizzle.

Fletcher leaned over and opened the door on her side. The wind rushed in.

"Get out."

Alexa stared at him. "What?"

"You want to be independent? Start now." He pointed to the pavement. "Get. Out."

"Fletcher, it's raining. I don't have my coat. I don't have my purse."

"I don't care," he roared. He shoved her shoulder.

Alexa stumbled out of the car, her heels skidding on the wet asphalt. She caught her balance just as the door slammed shut.

She stood there, stunned, as the taillights of the Lincoln flared red. The car accelerated, tires spraying dirty water onto her legs. Within seconds, it turned a corner and vanished.

As the car rounded the corner, Fletcher's knuckles were white on the leather armrest. He picked up the intercom. "Lewis," he snarled, his voice tight. "Circle back. Keep a visual, but stay out of sight. Tell me where she goes." He slammed the receiver down, a muscle twitching in his jaw. She was his mistake to punish, not for the city to devour.

She was alone.

The rain soaked through her thin blouse instantly. She shivered violently. She patted her pockets. Nothing. Her phone was in her purse, which was still on the floor of the car.

A group of men were standing under a bodega awning across the street. They whistled. "Hey sweetheart! Need a ride?"

Panic set in. Alexa kicked off her heels. She couldn't run in them. The pavement was freezing and rough against her bare soles. She started to run.

She ran until her lungs burned. She ran until she saw the lights of a 24-hour diner. She burst inside, dripping wet, shaking uncontrollably.

"Please," she chattered to the waitress behind the counter. "Please. I need to use a phone."

She didn't call the penthouse. She didn't call a lawyer. She dialed the only place that had ever felt like home.

"Mount Sinai dispatch," a voice answered.

"This is Dr. Emerson," Alexa sobbed. "I need... I need help."

Chapter 9

Alexa woke up on a cot in the on-call room. Someone had draped a wool blanket over her. Her head felt heavy, stuffed with cotton, and her throat was raw. The ache in her bones was profound, a deep-seated weariness from nearly forty-eight hours of trauma.

She sat up, the memory of the rain and the asphalt rushing back. She looked at her feet. They were bandaged. A nurse must have cleaned the cuts while she slept.

It was 6:00 AM.

She forced herself up. She went to the showers, scrubbing her skin until it turned pink, trying to wash off the feeling of the rain and Fletcher's hate. She put on fresh scrubs. She tied her hair back tight.

When she walked out, she wasn't the woman shivering on a Queens street corner. She was Dr. Emerson.

She walked to the nurses' station. Dr. Susan Chang was there, holding a coffee, whispering loudly to a resident.

"Did you hear? Lewis told the night guard. Fletcher kicked her out of the car. Dumped her like trash."

The resident giggled. "God, that's brutal. Do you think she's homeless now?"

Alexa walked up behind them. She slammed a metal clipboard onto the counter. The sound was like a gunshot.

Susan jumped, spilling coffee on her hand. "Jesus!"

Alexa didn't blink. Her eyes were cold, hard flint. She channeled the last of her adrenaline into her voice, forging it into a weapon. "Dr. Chang. Unless you have a board certification in gossip, I suggest you check the drainage output on bed three. His levels are critical."

Susan opened her mouth to retort, saw the look in Alexa's eyes, and closed it. "Right. On it."

She scurried away.

Alexa spent the day in a fugue state of hyper-competence. She rounded on twenty patients. She caught a medication error that would have killed a man.

At noon, a nurse handed her a phone. "Your husband is texting you. He's called the main line five times."

Alexa looked at the screen. One message.

Come home.

No apology. No explanation. Just a command.

Alexa deleted the message. She handed the phone back. "Block the number."

"But... it's Mr. Montgomery," the nurse stammered.

"Block it," Alexa ordered.

She had a bypass surgery at 2:00 PM. It was a six-hour procedure. For six hours, she stood over a chest cavity, her hands steady, her mind focused entirely on the rhythm of a stranger's heart. It was the only heart she could fix.

When she scrubbed out, it was dark again. The adrenaline faded, leaving her hollow.

She walked out of the hospital entrance. Lewis was there, standing next to the car. He looked miserable. He held a bouquet of white roses.

"Ms. Emerson," he said, stepping forward. "Mr. Montgomery sent these. He... he says he regrets the incident. He was intoxicated."

"Intoxicated," Alexa repeated flatly. She didn't take the flowers. The cloying sweetness of the roses filled the car, a funereal scent that made her stomach turn.

"Please, ma'am. He wants you to come home."

Alexa looked at the car. She should walk away. She should go to a hotel.

But then she remembered the cat.

She had left the cat alone with him. With Martha.

"Open the door, Lewis," she said.

She got in. She sat as far away from the flowers as possible. The smell of roses made her want to retch.

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