The poor student my wife supported loved to show off his wealth. The first time, he took the Patek Philippe watch I had just bought and blinked his innocent eyes.
“Brother-in-law, I think this color suits me perfectly. It even matches Emily’s watch. We look like a brother-sister pair, don’t you think?”
The second time, he came to my company’s annual gala with a group of loud friends and declared, “Eat all you want, play as much as you like, everything’s on me.”
The third time, he called all the company drivers to help one of his so-called brothers.
I had to take taxis for my business meetings and became a joke among my colleagues.
Each time, my wife comforted me, saying he was just poor and wanted to experience new things, that he didn’t mean any harm. Because I loved her, I endured it all.
But when my mother fell seriously ill, Grant used the money I had saved for her surgery to buy a Maybach. Emily Vasquez still defended him.
“You’re not short on money. It’s just a surgery. You can take more from the company.”
I looked at her closely, realizing deep down that our marriage had already fallen apart.
——
My mother lay on a hospital bed, breathing through a ventilator. I had just called my secretary, asking her to gather the money as soon as possible, when Emily and Grant walked in, laughing together.
A new Maybach key hung from Grant’s fingers, which he spun with pride.
I gave a cold smile. “Nice car. Just bought it? How much did it cost?”
Emily frowned right away. “That’s enough. It’s just a Maybach. Why are you being so sarcastic? Are you really that short on money?”
I laughed in disbelief. My mother was lying in the hospital, waiting for the surgery funds, and my wife, my own wife, wasn’t even here for her. Yet when I showed my frustration, she scolded me instead.
“Mom’s surgery is soon. Are you staying here with me or not?”
I held back my anger, wanting to give Emily one last chance.
She turned to Grant and hesitated, saying nothing. In that moment, I understood everything.
Grant lifted the hand he was holding with hers and smiled.
“Sorry, brother-in-law, but Emily already agreed to go to the bar with me for my birthday. You’re a bit late.”
What? Go to a bar for his birthday?
I couldn’t believe what I heard and stared at Emily in shock. Could it be that, in her heart, my mother’s surgery meant less than celebrating Grant’s birthday?
“You kept pestering me,” she said, playfully pinching Grant’s nose. “I had no choice but to agree.”
A painful feeling spread through my chest. So it was true.
“I knew Emily loved me the most,” Grant said with a smug grin, glancing at me with open challenge.
“Brother-in-law, you don’t mind, right?”
Then he looked down at the Patek Philippe on his wrist, the one I had recently bought.
“It’s about time. If you’ve got no objection, brother-in-law, I’ll take Emily with me now.”
I kept my face calm and said nothing. Seeing this, Emily grew impatient.
“Grant’s asking you something. Do you have a problem or not? Just answer quickly and don’t waste our time.”
She clearly saw nothing wrong with leaving her mother-in-law on the brink of surgery to go celebrate another man’s birthday. She could sense my anger, yet she didn’t care.
“I’m not a doctor. I can’t help with the surgery anyway. You’re here, that’s enough. Handle it however you want.”
Hearing her words, a deep disappointment filled me.
Before our marriage, she said she was afraid of getting along poorly with my mother and causing problems at home.
But after six years of marriage, it had always been me taking care of Mom, and she had never once lifted a finger to help.
Right now, with Mom about to have surgery, I wasn’t asking for much, just for Emily to stay at the hospital with me so I could feel at ease.
Yet something that simple turned into a heavy disappointment.
“Since you’ve said it like that, then go ahead. I hope you two have fun.”
As soon as I spoke, Grant put on that fake innocent look again. “Emily, maybe we should drop it. If I make you two argue because of me, I’d feel really bad.”
After saying that, he started walking toward the door. “Who told you to leave!”
Emily grabbed his arm and glared at me with clear annoyance. “What do you want now? It’s just a surgery.”
“Why are you being so irritable and sarcastic? Who are you trying to impress?”
“I already promised Grant. Do you want me to break my word?”
“Do you even know how hard Grant’s life has been all these years? Now he just wants me to spend his birthday with him, to make him feel a little better. Can’t you let him have that?”
My throat tightened, and my eyes felt dry. I looked at Emily as if she were a stranger, unable to understand how the woman who once cared only for me could change so completely, all because of Grant.
Her arms were crossed, brows drawn together, her eyes cold and distant. At that moment, she looked unbearable to me.
“Hmm, you should think about what you’ve done.”
Emily took Grant’s hand and started toward the door. Before leaving, she stopped and, without looking back, said coldly.
“If you still want this marriage to last, you’d better learn to control your temper. If you can’t, then learn from Grant.”
“You’re already in your thirties, yet you can’t even compare to a boy in his twenties. You make me lose face.”
Her words hit me hard, leaving me frozen as I watched Emily and Grant walk away.
A warm wetness slid down my face. I touched it, then brought my fingers to my lips; it was bitter and salty.
I let out a small, bitter laugh. Because of Emily, I had cried more times than I could count. From the day we met until our marriage, I had given her everything.
For her birthday, she said she wanted to see fireworks, so I bought every firework in the city and lit up the whole night sky just for her.
She said she wanted a job where she could earn money without working, so I used every connection I had and drank until I threw up blood, all to get her one.
She said her parents had worked hard raising her, so I gave them a branch company to manage, and to keep it running well, I even sacrificed the main company’s profit.
Everything I could do, and even what I shouldn’t have done, I did for her.
I thought I could completely win her heart. But everything changed the moment she started sponsoring Grant.
There were no boundaries between them. They could share the same utensils while eating, lie on the same bed, and sometimes I even found Grant’s underwear on our bed.
Her reason?
“Grant studies so hard. I just let him take off his clothes, and I wash them for him at night.”
Was it really just washing clothes?
I didn’t dare think about it. I lied to myself, forcing myself to believe that Emily wasn’t that kind of person.
I kept lying again and again, my heart already too fragile to bear more. But today, it finally broke completely, and I couldn’t fool myself anymore.
Once, every look, every smile from Emily could touch my heart. When she was happy, I felt her joy, and when she was sad, I cried with her.
Today, I cried because of her again, but this time, it would be the last.
Emily, I didn’t love you anymore.
Lauren Sanders, my secretary, arrived just in time to pay for the surgery. The light above the operating room turned on.
“President Anderson, why don’t you take a break? I can stay and keep watch,” Lauren said.
I shook my head. With Mom still in surgery, how could I rest?
“There’s something I need you to handle,” I said, looking at her. “Take back the branch company I gave to Emily’s parents, and make an official announcement about my divorce from her. Also, run a full investigation on Grant. I want the results within a week.”
“Yes, sir,” Lauren replied firmly before leaving.
After she left, I sat down on the bench outside the operating room, feeling drained. My phone kept ringing, relatives and friends calling to ask about Mom. But not one call came from Emily.
Three hours into Mom’s surgery, Grant posted on social media. He and Emily were sitting together in a bar booth, surrounded by his noisy friends, the table full of empty bottles.
Emily’s face was flushed, her eyes half-closed as she leaned against Grant’s chest.
I clicked like on the post. Before I could even lower my phone, Emily called.
I couldn’t describe what I felt. While my mother was fighting for her life in surgery, Emily hadn’t made a single call to ask about her, yet the moment it involved Grant, she called right away.
As soon as I answered, her sharp voice came through the phone.
“What’s with your like? So what if I had a few drinks with Grant and his friends?”
“Just because I married you, I can’t even choose who I drink with anymore?”
Before I could speak, Grant’s voice came from the background.
“Emily, don’t say that. He’s just worried about you.”
“Worried? He doesn’t trust me; he just wants to control me.”
“Alright, alright, Emily, stop. It’s late. I’ll take you home.”
“Go home? No way. We’re drinking till morning! Come on, keep drinking!”
“Haha, Emily, you’re amazing!”
“Emily, cheers to you!”
The noise from Grant’s friends filled the line.
“Brother-in-law, don’t be angry. I’ll talk to Emily. Don’t worry, I’ll make sure she gets home on time tonight.”
Hearing that, I hung up without a word. Make sure she gets home on time? Whatever. I didn’t care anymore.
In the fifth hour of Mom’s surgery, Emily’s number showed up again.
“Brother-in-law, something’s wrong! Emily was in a car accident. Come quickly!”
My heart clenched, and I stood up before catching myself. I forced my voice to stay calm.
“If she’s in an accident, call the police and the insurance company.”
“Brother-in-law, she’s bleeding a lot! She keeps calling your name!”
Hearing that made my chest ache. No matter what had happened, my feelings for Emily weren’t something I could just erase.
I looked at the light above the operating room that was still on and called Lauren.
“Come stay at the hospital for me for a bit. I’ll be back soon.”
“Yes, President Anderson.”
After hanging up, I grabbed my car keys and rushed to the bar.
When I arrived, I saw Emily leaning against Grant, her face flushed as she laughed with his drunk friends.
I froze, then it hit me: she had lied to me, right when my mother was still in surgery. A cold feeling ran through me, followed by a wave of anger.
Grant smirked at Emily. “Emily, didn’t I tell you? In your brother-in-law’s heart, you’ll always come first. Even when his mom’s in surgery, one call from you and he comes running.”
“Hmm.”
Emily lifted her chin slightly, a look of satisfaction on her face.
“Good job.”
Around them, Grant’s friends burst out laughing.
“Emily, you lost. Shouldn’t you keep your promise?”
Grant looked at me, pretending to hesitate.
“That’s not really right, is it? Brother-in-law is here, and we were only joking.”
“What’s wrong with it? A bet’s a bet,” Emily said confidently, waving her hand.
“It’s just feeding a drink mouth-to-mouth. If he minds that, he’s too petty.”
After that, Emily didn’t pause. She took a sip of wine, turned, and pressed her lips against Grant’s.
“Nice! Emily always keeps her word, so daring!”
Grant’s friends clapped and cheered loudly.
In that moment, I felt like a fool standing there just for their amusement.
Emily pulled out a napkin, wiped her mouth, then waved her hand at me like brushing off a bug. “Alright, you can go now. Go back to the hospital.”
“Grant will send me home later.”
Hearing that, I took out my phone and transferred two hundred dollars to Emily.
She frowned. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Oh, I just thought it might be too tiring for him to take you all the way home. Why not find a nearby hotel instead? It’ll be easier for him to take care of you.”
As soon as I said that, Emily’s glass shattered in anger. She stood up suddenly and shouted, “Caleb, I’m warning you, don’t cross the line!”
“There’s nothing improper between Grant and me. Don’t accuse us! Apologize to both of us now!”
Grant quickly stepped forward, acting calm and trying to hold her back. “Emily, don’t be mad. Brother-in-law didn’t mean it.”
“He’s just filthy-minded. That’s why he sees everything as dirty.”
I let out a short, cold laugh. “You’re right. I am filthy-minded. But I’ve never seen a ‘pure’ brother-sister relationship feeding each other drinks mouth-to-mouth.”
That struck a nerve. Emily pointed at me, her face red with anger.
“Caleb, you’re crazy! Fine, didn’t you call me dirty? Then I’ll show you dirty!”
She turned and grabbed Grant’s hand. “Come on, let’s go get a room.”
Grant tried to calm things down. “Emily, don’t get upset. Don’t do something you’ll regret later.”
He said that, but his hand still held onto hers. Seeing her still angry, he looked at me.
“Brother-in-law, say something nice to her, okay?”
I didn’t move.
Emily’s face grew darker, her voice cold. “Caleb, you’re pushing me too far. Don’t regret it later.”
She pulled Grant toward the door, but stopped when she passed me. “Caleb, if you apologize right now, I can act like none of this happened.”
Before I could speak, Grant said, “Emily, he’s just upset. Let’s go. I’ll talk to him later.”
Emily hesitated for a moment, then nodded. Soon, the private room was empty, leaving me alone in silence.
I felt lightheaded and had to grab the wall to keep my balance. Then my phone rang, it was Lauren, her voice filled with relief.
“President Anderson, the surgery was a success! Your mother has regained consciousness.”
“Really? That’s great.” I let out a long breath, then asked, “What about the other matter I told you to handle?”
“Everything’s ready. Once you say the word, we can make the announcement.”
I pressed my hand against the wall, stood up straight, and said calmly, “Do it.”
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