For six years, my marriage was a clinical trial. I was the doctor for my husband Jackson' s severe contamination OCD, enduring endless cleaning rituals just for a touch. Then I found a used condom wrapper in his car. I soon learned he was breaking every single one of his pathological rules for his mistress-kissing her feet, sharing greasy pizza. His "illness" was a lie, a weapon used only against me. When I confronted him, he chose her. To protect his reputation, he threatened to cut off my mother's life-saving cancer treatment. The price for her life? I had to publicly announce I was barren and welcome his mistress and their child into our home. My six years of sacrifice, my entire life, had been a lie designed to control and humiliate me. I was nothing more than a disposable tool. The next day, in front of a room full of reporters, he handed me the script for my public humiliation. I tore it to pieces. Then I stepped up to the microphone and said, "I am here today to announce that my marriage to Jackson York is over."
For six years, my marriage was a clinical trial. I was the doctor for my husband Jackson' s severe contamination OCD, enduring endless cleaning rituals just for a touch.
Then I found a used condom wrapper in his car. I soon learned he was breaking every single one of his pathological rules for his mistress-kissing her feet, sharing greasy pizza. His "illness" was a lie, a weapon used only against me.
When I confronted him, he chose her. To protect his reputation, he threatened to cut off my mother's life-saving cancer treatment.
The price for her life? I had to publicly announce I was barren and welcome his mistress and their child into our home.
My six years of sacrifice, my entire life, had been a lie designed to control and humiliate me. I was nothing more than a disposable tool.
The next day, in front of a room full of reporters, he handed me the script for my public humiliation. I tore it to pieces.
Then I stepped up to the microphone and said, "I am here today to announce that my marriage to Jackson York is over."
Chapter 1
Alyssa Carter POV:
My marriage felt less like a partnership and more like a never-ending clinical trial, with me as the sole, exhausted doctor. But even in that sterile, controlled experiment, I never expected to find a used condom wrapper in the glove compartment of his meticulously cleaned car, a car he never let anyone else touch.
It was our sixth anniversary. Six years of me meticulously managing Jackson York' s severe contamination OCD. Six years of turning our home into a pristine, almost surgical environment just for him. Six years of elaborate cleaning rituals, not just for the house, but for me, before he would even consider touching me.
Every intimacy began with a near-surgical scrub-down. My hands, my arms, my hair-every inch of me had to be disinfected. He' d inspect my nails for any trace of dirt, his gaze cold and critical. It felt less like desire and more like a medical procedure, a necessary evil he endured. I was a caretaker, not a wife.
But the wrapper, still slightly damp, smelled faintly of cheap, sweet perfume. It wasn' t the expensive, subtle scent I wore. It was cloying, almost sickeningly saccharine. It clung to the leather seats, a vulgar stain on his perfected world. My breath caught in my throat, a sharp, ragged sound that echoed in the silent garage.
I pushed the wrapper back into the glove compartment, my fingers trembling. I walked into the house, my legs feeling like jelly. Jackson was in his study, probably sanitizing his desk again. I found the courage, a tiny spark of defiance flickering in a heart I thought had gone numb.
I presented the wrapper to him, my voice flat, holding it between my thumb and forefinger as if it were contaminated. "Happy anniversary, Jackson."
He glanced at it, then at me, his face impassive. "Alyssa, what is this? Did a client leave something in the car?" His denial was immediate, dismissive, and utterly devoid of conviction. "You know I never let anyone else in my car, especially not clients." His voice was calm, too calm, like a flat line on a monitor.
The lie hung in the air, heavy and putrid, just like that cheap perfume. My stomach churned. I knew his car was his sacred space, a fortress against the world' s impurities. No one, absolutely no one, ever rode in it except me. And I certainly didn't smell like saccharine candy.
"Don't insult my intelligence, Jackson," I said, my voice barely a whisper. My own voice sounded foreign to me, a stranger's.
He simply shrugged, turning back to his screen. "I'm busy, Alyssa. Perhaps you're stressed. Why don't you get some rest?" He dismissed me like a faulty circuit board, an inconvenience to be ignored.
The dismissal solidified my decision. I needed proof, undeniable truth. I knew who to call. Jackson' s executive assistant, a nervous man named Arthur, had always harbored a quiet respect for me. He was the only one who saw the cracks in Jackson's perfect facade.
Arthur answered on the first ring, his voice tight with anxiety. "Dr. Carter? Is everything alright?"
"Arthur," I said, my voice low and steady, "I need you to tell me about Karma Underwood." I heard him suck in a sharp breath. The silence stretched, thick with unspoken truths.
He finally spoke, his words spilling out in a rush of guilt. "Dr. Carter, I... I saw them, last week. At the street festival. He was... kissing her feet. And they shared a slice of greasy pizza."
My world tilted. Kissing her feet? Sharing greasy pizza? This was the man who made me scrub myself raw, who recoiled from a speck of dust. My heart didn't just break; it shattered into a million chemical fragments, each one burning.
"He broke every single rule he ever forced on me," I whispered, the words catching in my throat.
Arthur' s voice was filled with a remorse I could almost taste. "I'm so sorry, Dr. Carter. I tried to warn you. She's... she's not who she seems. She's ruthless."
"Thank you, Arthur," I said, my focus narrowing. The shock was giving way to something cold and hard. "You' ve given me everything I need."
I hung up the phone. Divorce. The word echoed in the empty space of my mind, stark and inevitable. There was no going back.
The next morning, I drove to York Enterprises. My stomach was a knot of nerves, but a chilling resolve had set in. Arthur's frantic call had warned me that Jackson and Karma were in a "private meeting." Private, I knew, meant behind locked doors, where Jackson felt safe enough to indulge his hypocrisy.
I strode past Arthur, who looked like he' d seen a ghost, his face pale and drawn. He didn' t try to stop me. He just watched, his eyes wide with a mixture of fear and sympathy.
The door to Jackson's office was indeed locked. I didn't hesitate. I pulled out my emergency key card – a relic from a time when he trusted me, when my role was to manage his crises, not discover his betrayals. The lock clicked, a sharp, final sound.
The air inside was thick with the cloying sweetness of Karma' s cheap perfume. On Jackson' s pristine white leather couch, amidst scattered, crumpled papers that would usually send him into a frenzy, Karma sat on Jackson' s lap. Her hands were tangled in his hair, her bright red lipstick smudged across his jaw. His tie was loosened, his shirt slightly unbuttoned. It was a tableau of casual, dirty intimacy, a scene I had never been allowed to participate in.
A choked sound escaped my throat. Karma shrieked, scrambling off Jackson's lap, her eyes wide with shock. Jackson merely stared, his face a mask of disbelief and anger.
I didn't speak. I didn' t need to. I reached for the heavy silver paperweight on his desk, a gift from his father, and sent it crashing to the marble floor. The sound was deafening, a gunshot in the suffocating silence.
Jackson flinched, his gaze immediately dropping to the pristine marble floor. Not a crack in the glass. No, his concern was for the potential damage to his perfect, sterile environment. My heart twisted, a bitter, painful realization. Even now, his disorder trumped his infidelity.
Karma, ever the actress, burst into tears, clutching at Jackson' s arm. "Oh, Jackson! She... she just attacked me! She' s mad!"
I ignored her, my eyes fixed on Jackson. I pulled a stack of neatly printed divorce papers from my briefcase and tossed them onto his desk. They landed with a soft thud, stark white against the dark wood. "Sign them," I said, my voice flat and emotionless.
Jackson picked them up, his eyebrows furrowing. "Alyssa, don't be ridiculous. This is a misunderstanding. Karma is just a junior paralegal, she was helping me with some late-night files. We just... fell asleep." His eyes flicked to Karma, a silent instruction to play along.
Karma nodded, wiping away crocodile tears. "Yes, Dr. Carter, it's true! I was just so exhausted, and Mr. York was so kind to let me rest here."
"Really?" I asked, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "Because the used condom wrapper in your glove compartment, Jackson, smelled suspiciously like Karma' s cheap perfume. And Arthur told me about the pizza. And the feet-kissing." My voice was rising, a tremor of pure rage running through me.
Jackson' s face paled, the carefully constructed facade cracking. He glared at Karma, who swallowed hard, her innocent act crumbling.
"Alyssa, think about our family," Jackson said, his voice dropping to a low, coercive tone. "Think about your reputation. My parents. We can fix this. You're upset, I understand." He tried to reach for my hand, but I recoiled.
Then, he turned to Karma, his voice suddenly soft, comforting. "It's okay, sweetheart. I'll handle this. Don't worry about anything." He pulled her closer, pressing a kiss to her temple.
That was it. The final, searing blow. He was comforting her, in front of me. Six years of my life, six years of meticulous care, and he had thrown it all away for a cheap thrill and an even cheaper excuse.
Karma, emboldened by Jackson's affection, smirked at me. "Honestly, Dr. Carter, you're just jealous. Jackson deserves someone who appreciates him, not someone who treats him like a patient."
My hand moved before my brain could even register the thought. A sharp, stinging slap echoed through the room. Karma cried out, her hand flying to her cheek. The sickeningly sweet perfume seemed to intensify, mocking me.
Jackson leaped up, his eyes blazing, a primitive roar escaping his throat. "Alyssa! What the hell is wrong with you?!" He lunged, grabbing my arm, his grip bruising.
Karma, now truly sobbing, buried her face in Jackson' s chest, clinging to him. "She's trying to kill our baby, Jackson! She tried to poison me!"
I stared at Karma, then at Jackson, who was now holding her protectively. My vision blurred, not from tears, but from the sudden, overwhelming realization of what I had become. A woman capable of violence, driven by a hatred I hadn't known I possessed. Six years of sacrificing my own needs, suppressing my own desires, all for this man and his pathological need for control. He had broken me, piece by agonizing piece.
"You really think you can just replace me with this... this common floozy?" I spat, pulling my arm free from Jackson' s grip. My voice was cold, sharp, and utterly devoid of warmth. "You think my value is tied to your approval, Jackson? You think I'm just your glorified housekeeper and therapist?"
Jackson' s face was a mixture of rage and bewilderment. "Alyssa, don't make a scene. You' re disgracing yourself, our family."
"Disgrace?" I laughed, a harsh, brittle sound. "You want to talk about disgrace, Jackson? You broke every rule, every promise. You invited filth into my home, into our bed. And now you expect me to quietly disappear?" My eyes burned, fixed on his. "No, Jackson. Our family's rules are very clear. And you just broke the most sacred one."
I picked up the divorce papers again, holding them out to him. "Sign. Or I will make sure everyone knows exactly what kind of man you are." My voice was a steel trap, snapping shut on our past.
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