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The Surgeon's Revenge: No More Mrs. Montgomery

Chapter 6 No.6

Word Count: 522    |    Released on: 15/01/2026

ne, replaced by business-like efficiency. She snapped her fingers, and a bodyguard Ale

k of the Montgomery G

nelia said. This time,

armchair. Cornelia pushed t

gn

ader was bold and centered: DIS

dn't feel surprised. She felt n

aded. "Fletcher has a destiny. You were... a neces

ied for seven years." Seven years. Two thousand five hundr

elia asked softly. "No heirs. No social sta

A lump sum. An apartment in Brooklyn. But you sign a full NDA. You

as a gag order. It stripped

," Alexa said, c

tupid. You think Fletcher wants you here? Felici

r voice gaining strength. "Let him loo

" Cornelia scoffed. "He doesn

tood up. She grabbed the folder. "I'm keeping th

and contempt. "Have it your way. Drag it out. But remember, Alexa-there's the easy way o

marched out. The bodyguard follo

lead. She walked to the wall safe hidden behind a painting. She p

he divorce p

ger. A multi-car pileup on the FDR Drive

e papers, and went to the bedroom to put on her armor. When she walked out of the apartment te

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The Surgeon's Revenge: No More Mrs. Montgomery
The Surgeon's Revenge: No More Mrs. Montgomery
“I'm a top surgeon at Mount Sinai, but at 432 Park Avenue, I'm just the invisible "placeholder wife" of Fletcher Montgomery. After three months of silence, I didn't hear from my husband; I found out he was back in New York via a news alert tracking his private jet. When he finally walked into our penthouse, he didn't bring a greeting-he brought the scent of another woman's perfume and a heart full of ice. He looked at me with pure revulsion, telling me he was "tired of looking at mistakes" before slamming the bedroom door in my face. The humiliation escalated the next morning when his mother cornered me with a divorce agreement, calling our seven-year marriage a "charity project" that had run its course. She reminded me I was a "peasant" who owed the Montgomerys for saving my reputation, even as I spent my days saving lives in the OR. At a family dinner on Long Island, Fletcher turned our private struggle into a public execution. In front of his entire elite clan, he sneered that I should stop fixing other people's hearts and figure out why my own womb was a "wasteland." When I tried to defend myself, he dragged me into his car, only to kick me out on a dark, rain-slicked street in Queens. I stood there shivering in a thin blouse, without a phone or shoes, watching his taillights disappear while a group of men whistled at me from the shadows. I couldn't understand how seven years of devotion ended with me barefoot in the mud, or why the man I once loved now treated me like a stray he regretted picking up. The injustice burned hotter than the freezing rain, fueling a cold, surgical rage I hadn't felt in years. I eventually made it back to the penthouse, but I wasn't the submissive wife anymore. I rescued my cat from the freezing terrace, fired the malicious house manager, and deadbolted the master suite from the inside. When Fletcher's assistant called, I gave him a simple message: "Tell him the locks have changed, and the war has officially begun."”