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My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby
My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby

My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby

8.1
/ 10
Seven years married to the city's most acclaimed neurosurgeon. Sloane Carrow had learned to wait—through midnight calls, missed anniversaries, dinners gone cold on the counter. She was twelve weeks pregnant the morning she started bleeding. She called her husband Roman. He didn't pick up. She drove herself to his hospital. The receptionist told her Dr. Vale was in OR 3, performing an elective rhinoplasty—on Dr. Eden Hale, the resident he had known since medical school. Sloane lost the baby on Table Five while her husband fixed another woman's nose three doors down. She didn't tell him. She signed the discharge papers under her maiden name. She emptied the joint account. She filed for divorce while he was still scrubbing out. What Roman doesn't know: the hospital he runs sits on land owned by a woman whose name has been on his marriage certificate for seven years. By the time he learns who his wife really is, his hospital, his career, and the only child he will ever almost have—are already gone.

Chapter 1 of My Surgeon Husband Operated on His Mistress While I Lost Our Baby

The blood was the color of rust.

I noticed it at 6:14 in the morning, sitting on the cold tile of our bathroom floor with my back against the tub. I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I sat there and counted the weeks three times, the same way I double-check a medical translation before submitting it — methodically, because mistakes cost people something they can't get back.

Twelve weeks. Three days.

I picked up my phone and called Roman.

It rang four times. I listened to his voicemail — *You've reached Dr. Roman Vale, please leave a message* — and hung up. Called again. And again. On the fourth try, he picked up.

"Roman." My voice came out steadier than I expected. "I'm bleeding. I think it might be the baby."

There was noise on his end. The particular hum of a pre-op suite, the soft beep of monitors, the controlled bustle of people moving with purpose. Then a woman's voice, clear and close: *Roman, patient's ready for anesthesia.*

I knew that voice. Everyone at St. Aldine knew Dr. Eden Hale.

"Sloane." Roman's tone shifted into the one he used with anxious family members — calm, measured, slightly removed. "I'm about to go in. I'll call Marisol to drive you. Just hold on."

The line went dead.

I sat there for another minute, listening to the silence of our apartment. Somewhere outside, a garbage truck groaned down the street. The faucet dripped. I thought about Marisol, our neighbor, who was sixty-three years old and drove like she was perpetually lost.

I got up, gripped the edge of the sink, and looked at myself in the mirror.

*Hold on,* I told my reflection. Then I grabbed my keys.

---

The drive to St. Aldine took eleven minutes.

I talked the whole way. Not to anyone in particular — just to the windshield, to the red lights, to the pale gray sky beginning to lighten over the city. *撑住,* I kept saying, the Mandarin slipping out before the English could catch up. *Hold on. Hold on.*

I didn't know if I was talking to the baby or to myself. Maybe there was no difference anymore.

The emergency entrance slid open and the fluorescent light hit me like a verdict. The triage nurse — young, dark-haired, with reading glasses pushed up on her forehead — looked up from her screen and went still when she saw my face.

"Ma'am, can I get your name?"

I opened my mouth to say *Vale.* Seven years of marriage. It should have been automatic.

"Carrow," I said. "Sloane Carrow."

She typed it without blinking.

---

The ultrasound technician was professional and kind, which is the worst possible combination in that room, in that moment.

She looked at the screen for three seconds. Then she turned away from me and picked up the phone.

I didn't need her to say anything. I have spent ten years translating medical documents — discharge summaries, surgical notes, oncology reports. I have learned every way that medicine finds to say the unsayable. I recognized the particular set of her shoulders, the careful neutrality of her face when she finally turned back.

I had seen that look in the mirror once, when I called my mother to tell her about my father.

The attending came in. He also looked at the screen for three seconds.

"Ms. Carrow," he said gently.

*Ms. Carrow.* The name felt like a room I hadn't been inside in years — dusty, familiar, mine.

"I know," I said. "Tell me what happens next."

---

OR 5 smelled like every operating room I had ever translated in — antiseptic and cold air and something underneath that was neither.

The anesthesiologist was a compact man with kind eyes above his mask. He ran through the standard questions with practiced efficiency, then paused.

"Your husband — is he here with you? We'll need a signature on the consent forms."

I almost laughed. The sound that came out wasn't quite laughter.

"He's in OR 3," I said. "Don't page him."

The nurse at the supply cart glanced up. "What procedure is Dr. Vale—"

"I didn't say it was Dr. Vale." I kept my voice even. "What's in OR 3 right now?"

She checked her tablet. A small hesitation. "Elective rhinoplasty revision. Dr. Hale's case."

The room was very quiet for a moment.

*Seven years of marriage. She had learned which lights to turn off, which floorboards creaked, which silences meant tired and which meant gone. She had never learned the silence that meant a baby slipping out of her.*

*He was three doors down. Three doors. She could have walked.*

"Don't page anyone," I said. "I'll sign myself."

The nurse set the clipboard in front of me. I signed *Sloane Carrow* in handwriting that didn't shake.

As they positioned the mask over my face, I heard myself ask one more question — I hadn't planned it, it just surfaced, the way things do when the body knows it's running out of time to ask.

"Is it Eden Hale? In OR 3."

The nurse hesitated. "Yes."

I closed my eyes.

Last night Roman had come home at 1 a.m. I had been awake, lying on my side, listening to his key in the lock. On the nightstand I had left a small envelope — inside was the ultrasound photo from yesterday morning, the one I had been saving for tonight. Our anniversary dinner. I had imagined sliding it across the table at that restaurant he loved, watching his face.

Before I left the apartment this morning, I had taken the envelope back out of the nightstand.

I had put it in the drawer.

I wasn't sure why. I only knew I didn't want him to find it.

The anesthesia pulled me under like a tide going out.

---

The recovery room had the particular hush of a place where people are waiting to feel like themselves again.

I came back slowly — ceiling tiles first, then the soft pressure of a blood pressure cuff, then the awareness of my own body, which felt hollowed out in a way that had nothing to do with surgery.

The nurse sitting beside me had a kind face. She leaned forward when she saw my eyes open.

"You did well," she said. "How are you feeling?"

I didn't answer that.

She checked my chart, made a note, then said — carefully, gently, the way people say things they think might be welcome news: "Your husband's procedure just finished too. He and Dr. Hale stepped out for lunch. Would you like me to go find him?"

I looked at the ceiling.

The tiles were white and perfectly ordinary. There were nine of them that I could count from where I lay.

"No," I said. "Start my discharge paperwork. Use Carrow. My maiden name."

She nodded and went to get the forms.

I don't know exactly when she looked back at me. I only know what she saw, because she told a colleague about it later — the woman in bed four, the one who had come in alone and left alone, whose husband was three doors down eating lunch with his surgical partner on their wedding anniversary.

She was crying. Silently, completely, tears sliding sideways across her temples and into her hair.

But her face was perfectly still.

Not grief. Not anger. Something past both of those — the expression of a woman who has just decided something, and is not going back.

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