Kennedy waited at the penthouse dining table with a positive pregnancy report hidden in her pocket. But her billionaire husband, Jackson, walked in and threw a divorce agreement directly over her medical report. He coldly announced his first love, Janine, was back, and he was giving her the life she deserved. Desperate, Kennedy pulled out the pregnancy report as her last shield. Jackson barely glanced at it before giving a ruthless command. "Get rid of it." He said he wouldn't let an accident derail his plans to make things right with Janine. Her heart turned to ice. She signed the papers without a word, taking nothing but a single suitcase, and vanished into the night. Five years later, Kennedy had rebuilt her life as a world-renowned cardiothoracic surgeon, raising their genius twins alone. But her five-year-old hacker son exposed her location by attacking Jackson's company to avenge his mother. Jackson hunted her down, violently dragged her back to his estate, and locked her up like a criminal. To make matters worse, Janine threw herself down the stairs and faked a severe brain hemorrhage to frame Kennedy. Jackson believed the lie instantly, threatening her life and demanding she apologize to the woman in the VIP hospital bed. Instead, Kennedy calmly glanced at the vital signs monitor. "I should apologize for not pushing you harder. Because for a woman with a severe concussion, your intracranial pressure is perfectly normal." As the legendary surgical genius they had yet to recognize, she was finally going to make them pay for their stupidity.
Kennedy ran a finger over the rim of the wine glass, leaving a faint smudge on the crystal. Her heels were silent on the plush Aubusson rug of the penthouse dining room.
She adjusted the silver candlestick in the center of the table, her fingertips trembling just enough to make the flame dance. The tremor wasn't from the chill of the early winter air outside the panoramic windows, but from the paper folded in the pocket of her apron.
Her hand slipped into the pocket, the crisp edges of the hospital report a grounding, terrifying reality against her palm. It was a single sheet of paper that held the weight of a new world.
With a deep breath, she pulled it out and smoothed it flat on the polished mahogany, right beside the empty space reserved for her husband's plate. She tried to press out the crease marks, as if she could erase the nervous energy she had folded into it over the past hour.
The sharp, clean click of the fingerprint lock at the entryway sliced through the quiet.
Her head snapped up.
Jackson Clements pushed open the heavy walnut door, bringing a gust of cold Manhattan air with him. He was a portrait of power in a dark, tailored suit, his presence filling the vast space instantly.
"You're home," Kennedy said, her voice softer than she intended. She moved to take his cashmere coat.
He sidestepped her, his movement economical and cold. "Don't bother."
He walked past her, his leather shoes echoing on the marble floor of the foyer before falling silent on the dining room rug. The sound was a countdown.
He stopped at the head of the table, his gaze sweeping over the perfectly cooked steak, the roasted asparagus, the flickering candles. A frown creased his brow, a subtle signal of his impatience.
Kennedy came to his side. "Jackson, I wanted to show you something-"
He didn't look down. Instead, he reached into his briefcase and pulled out a thick, document-bound folder. He tossed it onto the table.
It slid across the polished surface, a predator in motion, and came to a stop with a dull thud.
Perfectly covering her hospital report.
Her eyes locked onto the bold, block letters on the cover. DIVORCE AGREEMENT.
The air in her lungs turned to ice. She looked up at him, searching his handsome, unyielding face for a sign, a flicker of a joke, anything but this cold finality.
He loosened his silk tie, the knot giving way with a soft rasp. His voice was flat, devoid of any emotion, as if discussing a quarterly report.
"Janine is back."
Each word was a physical blow.
"She needs me. I'm giving her the life she should have had."
Kennedy stumbled back a step, the edge of a dining chair digging into the small of her back. Her heart felt like it had been seized by a frozen fist.
She took a ragged breath. Her hand, shaking violently now, pushed the heavy folder aside. She uncovered the pregnancy report, her last, desperate shield.
She snatched the paper and held it up to him, a fragile white flag in a war she hadn't known she was fighting.
"I'm pregnant," she pleaded, her voice cracking.
For the first time, his gaze dropped to the paper. His pupils contracted for a fraction of a second, a flicker of something unreadable in the depths of his gray eyes. Then, it was gone.
He looked back at her, his expression unchanged.
"Get rid of it."
The words were quiet, a simple command, but they detonated the world around her. Kennedy's breath hitched. She stared at the man she had shared a bed with for three years, a stranger wearing her husband's face.
"It's a child, Jackson. Our child," she whispered, the first tear finally breaking free and tracing a hot path down her cold cheek.
"I will not have an accident derail my plans to make things right with Janine," he said, his voice cutting her off. "This ends now."
She looked into his eyes, searching for the man she had once loved, but found only the ruthless CEO of Clements Global. There was no negotiation here. Only a hostile takeover of her life.
And in that moment, something inside her, the part that had spent years bending and compromising to keep this fragile marriage alive, simply snapped. The deep, aching well of hurt didn't erupt into screams or sobs. It cooled, hardened, and became a sheet of pure, unadulterated ice.
She raised a hand and wiped away the tear, the gesture rough, leaving a red streak on her pale skin.
Her eyes were dry now. Empty.
Without a word, she reached for the Montblanc pen resting beside the folder. She didn't read a single clause. She flipped directly to the last page, to the line waiting for her signature.
The nib of the pen scratched against the heavy paper, the only sound in the cavernous room.
She signed her name. Kennedy Dominguez. Not Kennedy Clements.
Then, with a final surge of strength, she pushed the signed agreement back across the table, shoving it into his chest.
She turned and walked towards the bedroom. Her first step was a stumble, her legs threatening to give way. But with the second, her spine straightened. By the time she reached the hallway, her stride was firm, powerful, and resolute.
Jackson stood frozen, watching her go. A slight frown touched his lips, a flicker of surprise at her swift, silent compliance. He had expected tears, hysterics, a negotiation. Not this... finality.
Thirty minutes later, Kennedy emerged from the bedroom. She was no longer wearing the soft dress of a wife waiting for her husband. She was in practical jeans and a sweater. She pulled a single black suitcase behind her.
She walked past him, past the cold dinner, past the three years of her life, and didn't look back once.
She pulled the heavy walnut door open and stepped out into the hallway, leaving the warmth of the penthouse for the cold uncertainty of the night. The door clicked shut behind her, the sound as final as a gravestone settling into place.
The Unwanted Wife Is A Genius Surgeon
Gong Moxi
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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