MasukMy husband’s doctor saved his life… then claimed mine. When Daniel fell into a coma, Dr. Adrian Cole became my lifeline. One kiss was all it took to fall into eight months of forbidden nights. Now my husband’s awake, I’m pregnant with Adrian’s baby— and the man I love has turned into the man I fear.
Lihat lebih banyakThe sound of porcelain shattering against tile should not have been the sound that unraveled her life.
But that’s what Eva Mitchell remembered most clearly.
The mug slipping from Daniel’s hand. The startled widening of his eyes—like he wanted to laugh at his own clumsiness, maybe apologize for making a mess—before his entire body lurched forward, crashing against the kitchen floor with a sickening thud.
“Daniel!” Her scream ripped from her throat raw, torn by panic. She dropped beside him, knees cracking against the hard tiles, her fingers clutching his shoulders, shaking, willing him to move. “Please, wake up, open your eyes—”
Nothing.
His lips were drained of color, his chest heaving in short, irregular bursts, every breath like it was being stolen from him. His skin felt clammy under her trembling hands, and for one horrifying second, Eva thought she was already holding a corpse.
Her phone slipped once before she managed to unlock it, digits blurring through tears. She barely heard her own voice as she screamed at the emergency dispatcher, “My husband—he’s not breathing right, he just collapsed—please, send someone! Please, hurry!”
The dispatcher’s calm, trained instructions only fueled her terror. She threw the phone aside and returned to Daniel’s side, pressing her palms to his chest, the rhythm of compressions the only thing holding her together.
“One, two, three, four—” Her voice broke, catching on sobs. “Stay with me, Daniel, please don’t leave me.”
Tears slid hot down her cheeks, dripping onto his shirt as she bent over him, desperate. They’d just celebrated their second wedding anniversary two months ago. Just two months since he surprised her with a candlelit dinner, kissed her forehead, and promised her they had forever to go. And now, forever was slipping through her fingers on their kitchen floor.
The sirens came too slow. Too far away.
By the time paramedics burst through the door, her arms were numb, her hands shaking violently. She was pulled back as strangers swarmed Daniel, attaching monitors, delivering shocks, pumping oxygen into his lungs. The room spun, her vision narrowing until all she could see was the jagged line of his chest refusing to rise on its own.
The ambulance ride was nothing but a blur—shouted orders, metallic clangs, the shriek of equipment, and Eva’s own heartbeat pounding like a drum she couldn’t quiet. She sat squeezed against the cold wall, gripping the edge of the stretcher as though her touch could tether him to life.
---
At St. Luke’s Hospital, chaos reigned. The emergency room pulsed with motion—shoes squeaking against polished linoleum, machines beeping, the sharp smell of antiseptic burning her nose. Nurses darted around her, trading clipped words she couldn’t understand.
And then he arrived.
The doctor.
Eva’s gaze locked on him as though gravity itself had shifted in the room. He moved with unhurried confidence, each stride precise, coat swaying around him like the edge of a storm. His features were sharp, sculpted, his mouth set in a hard line of determination. But it was his eyes—dark, piercing, unsettling in their stillness—that rooted her to the spot.
He was too stunning to look at.
He didn’t flinch. He didn’t hesitate. With a single sweep of his gaze over Daniel’s body, he barked commands in a voice so low and commanding that everyone else obeyed instantly.
“Push one of epi. Get him on oxygen. Charge to 200.”
For one suspended heartbeat, his eyes cut to hers—sharp, unflinching, and far too aware. Eva felt her chest tighten as though he had looked through her, stripping away her defenses and leaving her completely exposed.
She clutched her own hands so tightly her nails bit into her skin, whispering prayers under her breath, bargaining with God, anyone who would listen.
And then—finally—Daniel’s heart monitor steadied, beeping into a fragile but stubborn rhythm.
Relief staggered through her body so violently she nearly collapsed. A sob escaped her lips, half-prayer, half-exhaustion.
“Vitals are stabilizing,” a nurse confirmed.
The words should have soothed her. But the doctor didn’t look relieved. Not even a flicker of it crossed his face. He only looked… focused. Intense. Like his mind was already moving three steps ahead.
His gaze flickered back to her, and this time it lingered. Long enough that her stomach knotted under the weight of it.
“You’re his wife?” His voice was calm, steady, but beneath it lay an edge she couldn’t name—authority, perhaps, or something colder.
“Yes,” she whispered, swallowing hard. “Eva. Eva Mitchell.”
“Mrs. Mitchell,” he said, repeating her name slowly, deliberately, as though committing it to memory. “I am Dr. Adrian Cole. Your husband is alive, but he’s critical. We’ll run full diagnostics. Until then—” his eyes locked on hers, unblinking “—stay strong.”
Stay strong. Not a comfort. A command. As though he knew she would crumble if he didn’t order her otherwise.
When Adrian turned back to Daniel, Eva realized she hadn’t taken a full breath since he entered the room. Her lungs burned, her hands shook, and yet, for a fleeting, forbidden second, a feeling more dangerous than fear coursed through her.
It was something else. Something dangerous.
And beneath the storm of terror for her husband’s life, a single, treacherous thought whispered like smoke through her mind:
Who is this beautiful man?
Eva drove home with her hands trembling on the wheel, the streetlights smearing into streaks of gold through the film of sweat and exhaustion glazing her eyes. Her body still ached with the memory of Adrian—his mouth, his hands, his heat, his voice whispering I love you against her skin.And she had said it back.The guilt hit her in slow, nauseating waves.By the time she parked in front of the house, her legs were barely steady enough to carry her up the porch steps.She pushed the door open.Daniel was on the couch, half-asleep with the TV humming quietly in the background. He lifted his head at the sound.“There you are,” he said, voice groggy. “I was getting worried.”Eva froze.He looked at her with soft eyes—tired, hopeful. The same eyes of the man she married. The man she once loved enough to move mountains for.And she had been in another man’s bed.Her pulse hammered painfully.“I’m—sorry,” she managed. “I… went for a drive.”“At night?” He frowned gently. “You hate driving
Eva's resolve cracked in a single heartbeat.She tried—God, she tried—to push him away, but her hands fisted in his shirt instead, pulling him closer, needing something she couldn’t name.He lifted her effortlessly onto the counter, his hands sliding to her hips as his mouth devoured every protest she failed to voice.“Eva,” he whispered against her lips, “I told you. You belong here.”“Adrian…” she whispered, already trembling. “Please don’t—”“Don’t what?” he breathed, kissing the hollow of her throat. “Don’t remind you how much you want me?”She gasped, fingers clutching his shoulders.He kissed her again — softer this time, but deeper, drawing a sound from her she tried to swallow.“This isn’t fair,” she whispered brokenly.He lifted her face. “I’m not trying to be fair. I’m trying to keep what’s mine.”Her breath shook.“Adrian…” she gasped.He swallowed her name like a promise.She was supposed to end things.She was supposed to be strong.She was supposed to remember Daniel.Bu
Eva stood outside Adrian’s apartment door for nearly a full minute, her hand frozen above the handle, her breath shallow with dread. She had told herself she wouldn’t come. She had rehearsed a dozen speeches — firm, final, reasonable.We have to stop.Daniel is back.Whatever we had can’t continue.But the moment Daniel had fallen asleep and his quiet, trusting breathing filled the bedroom, guilt had slithered up her spine like a phantom. The truth pressed against her ribs until she could barely breathe.She needed to end this.She needed to walk away.But here she was anyway.Because Adrian had said tonight, and something in his voice had told her he meant it.Her fingers trembled as she finally knocked.The door opened almost instantly, like he’d been standing right behind it in a black T-shirt, hair slightly tousled, eyes sharp and unreadable. The apartment behind him was dimly lit, warm, quiet — far too intimate.Adrian stepped aside silently, his eyes never leaving hers.“Come in
The next day, Eva had spent the entire morning trying to keep her nerves from fraying. Daniel was stronger today — showered, dressed, even trying to make his own breakfast despite her protests. His recovery was almost unreal, a rapid bloom of strength that made the doctors ecstatic.Except one.Adrian.She hadn’t seen or heard from him al day — a silence that felt too intentional to be comforting. But his last message from last night still clung to her mind like cold fingers:“If you won’t talk, I’ll come to you.”She tried to ignore it, tried to shove it into the darkest corner of her thoughts.Until the doorbell rang.A sharp, insistent chime that made her spine go rigid.Daniel looked up from the couch. “Expecting someone?”“No,” Eva whispered, already feeling her pulse spike.She walked slowly toward the door — part of her praying it was a neighbor, a delivery, anyone else. But her hand trembled on the lock.When she opened the door, her breath caught.Adrian stood on the doorstep
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