Chapter 2

The plane touched down at Logan Airport with a jolt that matched the hollow feeling in my chest. Three days in Italy. Alone. With a wedding dress I never got to wear properly and memories I never got to make.

I wheeled my suitcase through the terminal, the weight of it nothing compared to the heaviness in my heart. James hadn't texted once since he'd left me standing in Rome. Not even to ask if I'd arrived safely.

My phone buzzed in my pocket—Sarah from Pediatrics.

"You're back early," she said when I answered. "Want to grab lunch in the cafeteria? I'm on break in twenty."

I hesitated. The last place I wanted to be was the hospital, but the alternative was an empty house filled with photographs of a marriage that existed only in frames.

"I'll be there," I said.

---

The hospital cafeteria hummed with the usual lunchtime chaos. I spotted Sarah waving from a corner table and made my way over, weaving between scrub-clad colleagues who suddenly seemed very interested in their food when they saw me.

I was halfway there when I heard it—my name, whispered between two nurses at the coffee station.

"That's Dr. Mitchell... Carter's wife."

I slowed my steps, pretending to check my phone.

"Poor thing," the second nurse murmured. "Did you hear about Italy?"

"Olivia always schedules emergencies when Dr. Carter's wife visits. It's like clockwork."

Their voices faded as they moved away, but their words stayed, burning into my consciousness. *Schedules emergencies*. Not emergencies that happen, but ones that are planned.

Sarah's smile faltered when she saw my face. "Emma? What's wrong?"

I sank into the chair across from her. "Nothing," I lied. "Just jet lag."

---

That evening, I stood outside Vincenzo's, a trendy restaurant downtown where soft lighting spilled onto the sidewalk. Through the window, I could see them—James, Olivia, and a dozen colleagues gathered around a table adorned with champagne glasses and laughter.

I hadn't planned to come. But after what I'd overheard in the cafeteria, something had shifted inside me. I needed to see for myself.

I pushed through the door, the warmth and noise enveloping me. No one noticed me at first. They were too focused on James, who had risen from his seat, glass in hand.

"To Olivia," he was saying, "whose dedication this past year has been nothing short of extraordinary."

He reached into his jacket and pulled out a familiar stack of papers—my research, bound with the blue cover I'd chosen myself. Six months of work, of late nights and early mornings.

"And to celebrate," James continued, "I'm proud to present our joint breakthrough—"

*Our?*

"—a revolutionary approach to pediatric trauma care that Olivia has been instrumental in developing."

The room erupted in applause. Olivia accepted the papers with practiced modesty, her fingers lingering on James's hand a moment too long.

I stood frozen, invisible despite standing in plain sight. The room seemed to tilt, voices becoming distant as blood rushed in my ears.

Dr. Richardson caught my eye from across the room, his expression shifting from surprise to something like pity. He knew. They all knew.

James finally noticed me when Olivia pointed in my direction, her smile never wavering. His face paled slightly, but he recovered quickly, raising his glass higher.

"And of course, to my wife, Emma, who's just returned from Italy. Come join us!"

All eyes turned to me. I forced my feet to move, approaching the table with a composure I didn't feel.

"Congratulations, Olivia," I said, my voice steady despite the earthquake inside me. "I'd love to hear more about your contribution to the paper."

A flicker of panic crossed her face. "Oh, it was mostly James's guidance. I just provided some clinical observations."

"I see." I turned to James. "Can I speak with you privately?"

---

The kitchen hallway was narrow, lined with stacked crates and the smell of garlic.

"What are you doing here?" James hissed, his charm evaporating the moment we were alone.

"That's my research," I said simply. "Six months of my work."

"It's hospital research, Emma. And Olivia needed a win."

"And I didn't?"

His eyes hardened. "Olivia's ambition is unparalleled. If you were more career-driven, I wouldn't need to mentor her so much."

The words struck like physical blows. Tears welled in my eyes, but I refused to let them fall.

"Mentor," I repeated. "Is that what you call it?"

James's phone buzzed. He glanced at it, then back at me with impatience. "We'll discuss this at home. I have guests waiting."

He turned and walked away, leaving me alone among the stacked crates and the smell of other people's celebrations.

As I watched his retreating back, something crystallized inside me—a cold, clear certainty. This wasn't about a research paper. It was about a life I'd been trying to save that was already long dead.

I wiped my eyes and straightened my shoulders. If James thought this was the end of the conversation, he was wrong.

It was just the beginning of the end.

Chapter 3

I didn't go home that night. I couldn't face the emptiness of our brownstone, the carefully arranged photos of a marriage that existed only in frames. Instead, I found myself back at the hospital, my sanctuary long before it became my prison.

The research wing was quiet at midnight, just the occasional squeak of orthopedic shoes against linoleum. I swiped my badge at the records room, grateful that even in my emotional state, I remembered the access code—James's birthday, of all things.

My fingers trembled as I navigated the digital archives. I wasn't even sure what I was looking for until I found it—a folder labeled "Carter-Reed Collaborative Research."

One file. Then another. And another.

I opened each one, my breath catching as familiar charts and statistics filled the screen. The pediatric trauma protocol I'd developed last winter. The medication adjustment algorithm from fall. The patient outcome analysis I'd completed during those sleepless weeks in February.

All my work. All bearing James and Olivia's names.

"This can't be happening," I whispered, but the evidence glowed mockingly from the screen.

I pulled out my personal notebook—the one where I'd meticulously documented every step of my research process. The dates matched perfectly. The data was identical. Even some of the phrasing was lifted directly from notes I'd shared with James.

I pressed my palms against my eyes, fighting back tears. This wasn't just betrayal—it was theft. Systematic, calculated theft of my intellectual property, my career advancement, my future.

The worst part? I'd handed it all to him, trusting him completely.

---

"You look like you haven't slept," Dr. Anya Sharma observed, sliding a cup of coffee across the café table toward me.

"I haven't," I admitted.

The café was tucked away in Cambridge, far from the hospital and anyone who might recognize us. Dr. Sharma had been my mentor at Harvard Medical School, the woman who'd seen potential in me when I was just another overwhelmed student.

"Tell me what's happened," she said, her dark eyes sharp with concern.

I told her everything—the canceled honeymoons, the stolen research, the public humiliation. As I spoke, her expression shifted from concern to controlled anger.

"I need out, Anya," I finished. "Not just from my marriage. From all of it."

"Doctors Without Borders," she said immediately, pulling out her tablet. "I'm on their advisory board. Your pediatric experience would be invaluable in the field."

"Would they take me on such short notice?"

"For someone with your qualifications? Absolutely." Her fingers moved rapidly across the screen. "There's a position opening in Syria next month. Emergency placement."

"Syria," I repeated, the word tasting like possibility on my tongue.

"It won't be easy," Anya warned. "But it will be real. The work you do there will matter in ways that hospital politics never could."

She turned her tablet toward me, showing the application form with my name already filled in. "I'll fast-track this. But Emma, are you certain?"

I thought of the wedding dress in its box, of research papers bearing someone else's name, of a husband who couldn't even see me standing right in front of him.

"I've never been more certain of anything."

---

The pediatric wing was my refuge, the one place in the hospital where I still felt like myself. I was checking on a post-op patient when I heard them—Olivia's voice, and the head nurse's, drifting from the medication room.

I froze, then quietly stepped closer to the partially open door.

"Dr. Carter mentioned you might need coverage again this weekend," the nurse was saying, her tone carefully neutral.

Olivia's laugh was light, practiced. "Yes, apparently his wife is planning another trip. Something about whale watching off Cape Cod."

My blood ran cold. I hadn't told James about those plans yet. I'd only researched the tour yesterday, hadn't even booked tickets.

"Should I schedule the usual emergency page for Saturday morning, then?" the nurse asked.

"Make it Friday night," Olivia replied. "Before they even leave the city. Less suspicious that way."

I pressed myself against the wall as they exited, my heart hammering in my chest. The usual emergency page. Less suspicious that way.

It had all been deliberate. Every canceled plan, every ruined weekend, every abandoned honeymoon—all orchestrated by the woman my husband had chosen over me.

As I watched Olivia walk away, her white coat swinging confidently with each step, something hardened inside me. The last fragile thread of hope I'd been clinging to snapped cleanly.

I pulled out my phone and texted Anya: "I need that application processed as quickly as possible."

Her reply came seconds later: "Already on it. But Emma, what are you planning?"

I stared at the screen, a cold clarity settling over me.

"Justice," I typed. "And then freedom."

Unlock Now
Show your support to inspire the writer to come up with more fantastic stories
Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter
Minishorts Logo
Enjoy full short drama episodes, No waiting, watch now!
MiniShorts Youtube
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
About us
support@minishorts.com
©2026 MiniShorts All Rights Reserved. CHASINGTOP HK LIMITED