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Terminal Diagnosis: The Obedient Wife's Rebellion

Terminal Diagnosis: The Obedient Wife's Rebellion

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Chapter 1 

Word Count: 1370    |    Released on: Today at 15:27

examination table, her thumb rubbing back and forth against that sharp edge until th

e blew directly onto her bare arms, raisi

eyes fixed on the floor tiles as he walked straight to his desk. That simple, evasive m

the polished mahogany desk. His voice was thick with professional sympathy, t

She pulled the report toward her, her eyes dropping to

Pancreati

ast

twisting into a vio

iet room like stones dropping into a dry well. "Maybe les

the fingers resting on her lap began to tremor. A fine, uncontrollable shaking that started in her

d a slice of dry grapefruit to maintain the exact dress size Arch Ferguson demanded of his wife. Swallowing the bile in her throat when Arch walked past her in the hallway

ls. Constance heard none of it. A high-pitched ringing filled her ears, drowning out his

elonged to someone else, heavy and disc

People brushed past her. No one looked twice at the woman in the flawles

and stepped into the humid New York air.

he air inside smelled of expensive le

t her eyes in the rearview m

p edge of the medical report burning against her skin through her purse. The diagnosis wasn't a death sentence. It was a starting pistol. The realization hit her

s raspy, scratching against

rgue. He put the car in drive and merged into the heavy Man

nt. Constance sat across from the branch manager, a balding

ate investment portfolios," Constance said. She did not blink. "As for the prenuptial tru

tly. "But Mrs. Ferguson, your husband's accounts are separate. Thes

weight of a steel beam. "Every penny I brought into this marriage. I want

ve concerns regarding

flinch. She stared at him, her eyes dead and unyielding, until

uidation documents and the massive cashier's checks. The heavy weight of the paper in her hand sent a ru

East Side. The massive iron gates o

, Mrs. Foster, the head housekeeper

er said, her posture rigid. "He

ld rush to the kitchen, inspect the organic produce, and ensure a

housekeeper. The muscl

," Constance said. "Or or

stal water glass sliding dangerously close to th

eper, her high heels clicking sharply against the imported marble

aster bedroom. She walked straigh

ination. Beige, slate gray, pale blue, muted cream.

and she yanked it off the velvet hanger. She threw it onto the hardwo

coats, and slacks from the racks. She threw them all into a massive, chaotic pile on t

purse, her phone

en lit up with the caller I

umb hovered over the green accept bu

nging. Then it start

utton. The screen went black. She tossed the dea

ss open. The cold evening wind rushed in, biting at her cheeks and filling her lungs. The Ma

shadow across the floor, casti

e window sill. Her k

was barely a breath, but it carried the force of

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Terminal Diagnosis: The Obedient Wife's Rebellion
Terminal Diagnosis: The Obedient Wife's Rebellion
“For two years, Constance Mcfarland played the perfect, invisible wife. She woke up at 5:00 AM every day, surviving on half a cup of plain oats just to maintain the exact dress size her billionaire husband, Arch, demanded. Then, the doctor handed her a medical report with bold black letters: Stage IV Pancreatic Cancer. Six months to live. In a fraction of a second, memories of her pathetic existence flooded her mind. She remembered swallowing her bile when Arch walked past her without a single glance. She remembered biting her cheek until it bled while her mother-in-law publicly mocked her cheap upbringing. She remembered constantly bailing out her parasitic brother, only for her own family to treat her like a disposable ATM. She had starved and silenced herself to build a flawless facade for people who wouldn't even care if she dropped dead tomorrow. The realization hit her like a physical blow. Why had she spent her only life locked in a gilded cage, shrinking herself to please a man made of ice? The diagnosis wasn't a death sentence. It was a starting pistol. Constance didn't shed a single tear. Instead, she went straight to the bank and liquidated every penny she owned. She went home, threw her entire conservative wardrobe onto the floor, and fried a dripping bacon and cheese sandwich in front of her horrified husband. "No, this is freedom." Putting on a blood-red silk gown and five-inch stilettos, Constance smiled. She was going to spend her last six months burning the Ferguson empire to the ground.”