
Chapter 1 of My Husband Left Me Bleeding to Comfort His Ex
The knife slipped.
I watched in horror as my index finger separated from the carrot, a thin line of red appearing where the blade had sliced through skin. Then the blood came—bright crimson against the orange vegetable, spreading like a watercolor left in the rain.
"Damn it," I whispered, grabbing a dish towel. The blood soaked through immediately, turning the white linen into a canvas of my carelessness.
It was our third anniversary. Three years since Dane had proposed in that charming Vermont Airbnb, three years since I'd said yes to a man who looked at me like I was his salvation. Three years of trying to be worthy of him.
I pressed the towel harder against my finger, but the blood kept coming. The pain was sharp now, radiating up my arm. I reached for my phone with my uninjured hand.
"Dane?" My voice cracked when he didn't answer. "Honey, I cut myself pretty bad. I need you to come home."
Voicemail. I tried again.
"Dane, please. It's bleeding really bad. I think I might need stitches."
Nothing. I called a third time, then a fourth. Each call went straight to his voicemail, that polished professional recording that told me he was unavailable.
Five calls. Six. Seven.
The towel was completely red now. I could see the bone in the deepest part of the cut. My vision blurred—from tears or blood loss, I couldn't tell anymore.
"You're being dramatic," I told myself, but the trembling in my voice betrayed me. "He'll call back. He's just in a meeting."
But even as I thought it, I knew better. Dane Franklin didn't forget important dates. He just didn't care about them.
I wrapped another towel around my hand and grabbed my keys. The drive to the hospital passed in a blur of rain and streetlights, my injured hand throbbing in time with my heartbeat. I kept glancing at my phone, willing it to light up with Dane's name.
It never did.
The emergency room was nearly empty. The nurse took one look at my hand and led me straight back.
"Six stitches," the doctor said, her eyes kind but clinical. "You were lucky you came in when you did."
Lucky. I almost laughed.
I sat in my car afterward, rain drumming on the roof, staring at the bandaged hand resting in my lap. The pain medication was starting to kick in, making everything feel distant and dreamlike.
My phone remained silent.
I started the engine and pulled away from the hospital, telling myself I was going home. But as I approached Le Coucou—Dane's favorite restaurant—something made me slow down.
There he was.
Dane stood under the restaurant's awning, his tall figure unmistakable even through the rain-streaked windshield. He wasn't alone. A woman with dark hair was facing him, her hands gesturing wildly as she spoke.
Claire Guzman. His college sweetheart. The woman whose name I wasn't supposed to know but had heard whispered in his sleep.
I pulled over, watching them through the rain. They were arguing—Claire's face flushed with anger, Dane's hands running through his hair in that familiar gesture of frustration.
Then I saw it. Dane pulled out his phone, looking at the screen. Seven missed calls from me. Seven.
My heart leapt. He'd seen them. He was going to call me back.
But instead of dialing, he pocketed the phone as Claire's face crumpled. Tears streamed down her cheeks, mingling with the rain. Without hesitation, Dane pulled her into his arms, holding her close as he stroked her hair.
The same way he used to hold me.
Something broke inside me then—the last fragile thread of hope that had kept me tethered to this marriage. I watched as my husband comforted another woman while my bandaged hand throbbed in my lap.
He had chosen her. Again.
I put the car in drive and pulled away from the curb, not toward our penthouse but away from it. Away from him. Away from the life I'd built around a man who had never truly seen me.
The Motel 6 on the outskirts of the city welcomed guests without questions. I paid cash for a room, ignoring the clerk's curious glance at my bandaged hand.
"Will there be anyone joining you?" he asked.
"No," I said firmly. "No one."
In the sterile room, I finally let myself cry—not from the pain in my hand, but from the ache in my chest. When I was finished, I turned off my phone and lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling.
For the first time in three years, I was making a choice for myself.
Not for Dane. Not for his mother. Not for the fairy tale I'd convinced myself I was living.
For me.
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