Dinner for Him, Divorce for Her
During the holiday break, my wife, Jayda Glover—the hospital's star surgeon and Chief of Cardiac Surgery—suddenly "had to work overtime." Our third-anniversary hot springs trip? Canceled.
That night, I was scrolling social media when a post from her intern, Dillon Tripp, popped up.
My ice-queen wife always said her "golden hands" were only for patients.
Apparently, they cook now too.
She was in a cartoon apron, calmly chopping vegetables.
The caption read:
[Thank you, Dr. Glover, for personally cooking to comfort me after I was bullied by a patient's family!]
I tapped like and left a comment.
[White coat to apron. Very domestic.]
Ten minutes later, the whole hospital knew Cardiac Surgery's untouchable beauty had broken her rule—just to cook for a younger guy.
Jayda called.
Dishes clattered in the background.
"You really had to embarrass me in public? He got hot water thrown on him by a patient's family today. I was just doing my duty as his mentor!
"A pampered professor's kid like you wouldn't know the first thing about how hard broke med students have it.
"Apologize to Dillon right now. Otherwise, no matter how much you beg later, I'm not going on that trip with you!"
Beg her?
I looked at the divorce papers that had just arrived on the coffee table and let out a quiet laugh.
I wasn't begging anymore.
From this moment on, we were strangers.