Share

4

Author: Alissa Nexus
last update publish date: 2026-05-14 00:59:23

JUNE

When I returned home, my father didn’t say I told you so and that alone nearly broke me again. The moment I stepped through the gates with my suitcase in hand, he walked toward me without hesitation and pulled me into his arms.

I cried like something inside me had finally shattered beyond repair. I knew I was only hanging by a single thread, but I didn't think this was all I needed to finally let it all loose.

Sobs raked my entire being as tears slid down my cheeks, but he didn't pull away.  Father simply held me tighter with one hand against the back of my head like he used to do when I was little.

“It’s okay, darling” he said softly. “You’re home now, everything's okay.”

For some strange reason, that made me cry harder, because nothing was okay. Not really. My life had just been shattered in the blink of an eye, and here he was, comforting me like I still had a tiny bit of hope to hold on to.

I stayed locked inside my room for an entire week afterward, and my father let me.

He didn’t pressure me to come downstairs, didn’t force conversations, didn’t ask invasive questions through the door either. He just waited, his mantra being, “Whenever you're ready.’

The room looked exactly the same as I left it ten years ago. It still held the same cream curtains, the same bookshelf and the same framed degree hanging proudly on the wall.

My father hadn’t changed anything. At first I didn’t understand why, then one evening when he came upstairs to leave food outside my door, I finally asked him.

“You kept everything the same?” he didn't look surprised by my question. “Why?”

He looked at me quietly for a moment before answering. “I knew my daughter would come home eventually.

Those words touched my heart more than he could ever imagine, and after a week, I finally walked downstairs on my own.

My father was sitting in his study reading through paperwork when I entered. He looked up immediately but didn’t overwhelm me with concern.

Instead he simply closed the file in front of him and asked gently. “Tea?”

I nodded, and that was how the conversation started. It wasn't dramatic or angry, just tea between a father and daughter while my entire life collapsed around me, and slowly, I told him everything.

I filled him in on the fake marriage certificate, the lies, Diane, Angel, the bone marrow match, and the years I spent believing I was building a family when in reality I was just convenient.

By the time I finished speaking, my father’s face had gone frighteningly still. He wasn't emotional or shocked, but furious.

“That bastard,” Pure fury simmered quietly beneath his skin as he said softly.

I had never heard my father sound like that before, but clearly he wasn't done.

“He used you.” he hissed. “I should have him dealt with, his company will go bankrupt in no time. I stared down at my untouched tea. “How dare he?” My father stood abruptly and began pacing.

“Dad…” I'd barely gotten any more words out before he cut in again.

“No.” His voice sharpened immediately. “He manipulated you for ten years, June. He has to pay.” I rubbed my temples tiredly. “He isolated you from your career with stupid demands just to keep you in his kitchen, running his house.” He continued. “And now he wants your bone marrow for his daughter?”

The silence afterward felt horrible as my father looked at me with heartbreak in his eyes. That hurt worse than his anger. Angel was a daughter I’d thought I would call my own for life.

“Dad, I have something else to say.” I inhaled shakily before forcing myself to say the next words. “I want to work again.”

“What, really?” His brows lifted slightly and I swallowed.

“I know I’ve been out of the field for ten years, but I’ve been studying.” I looked up at him carefully. “I stayed updated on procedures, advancements, research…”

Because some part of me had known, maybe not consciously, but deep down, I think I always feared losing myself completely.

So while everyone believed I had become nothing but a housewife, I continued learning quietly in the background. I kept late nights studying medical journals, online seminars, case studies, and most importantly, Angel needed me knowledgeable.

My father watched me silently for several long seconds. Then finally, he spoke up.

“I trust your abilities.” Relief nearly knocked the breath out of me, but then he continued calmly “But you still have to prove yourself.”

I nodded immediately.

“There’s a medical evaluation exam next month.” He folded his hands together. “If you take first place, your old position as Head of Surgery will be returned to you.”

My heart stopped at his words.

Head of Surgery. The title I once carried proudly before throwing everything away for love. The same title Rick made sure Diane took from me.

“You mean that?” I whispered smiling despite my heart still aching.

“I don’t hand out favors, June. Prove to me that you still got it, then we’ll see.” He finished and I sighed in relief. There was a chance after all.

And after that, I studied like my life depended on it, because maybe it did. For the next month, I barely slept. Day in and day out, I reviewed surgical procedures until my vision blurred. I practiced diagnostics, and read medical journals until dawn.

There were nights my back hurt so badly from sitting that I had to lie flat on the floor just to rest, but for the first time in years, I felt alive again. I was exhausted and broken, but still alive.

Time blew by faster than I thought and the day I arrived at the hospital for the examination, my stomach twisted with nerves.

The building looked almost exactly the same. I recalled the polished floors, the sharp antiseptic scent and the quiet urgency in the air.

For a moment, memories nearly overwhelmed me. Then someone's voice cut through my thoughts.

“June?” I turned quickly and froze. Two familiar faces stared back at me in disbelief before immediately rushing toward me.

“Oh my God.”

“You’re actually here.”

I laughed shakily as they hugged me one after another. They were my old colleagues, my old friends and people Rick slowly pushed out of my life over the years until eventually the calls stopped coming altogether.

“You disappeared,” one of them complained dramatically.

“Literally vanished.”

“Yeah, I'm sorry about that.” I smiled weakly. “Life happened.”

Their expressions softened slightly like they knew there was more to the story, but thankfully neither pushed. Instead they started rambling excitedly about hospital gossip, surgeries, ridiculous residents, and who got divorced.

For the first time in a long time, I genuinely laughed.

“You better pass this exam,” one of them warned. “We refuse to lose you again.”

“We should celebrate afterward,” the other added quickly.

“Sure.” I nodded before I could overthink it. “I’d like that.”

Then, my smile disappeared instantly, because standing several feet away was Rick and Diane. Rick looked terrible, actually terrible, like a ghost of the man I once knew.

His hair was messy like he hadn’t slept properly in days, dark circles shadowed beneath his eyes, and his clothes looked thrown on carelessly. Not polished and nothing like the man I remembered.

“June?” The second he saw me, his entire body went rigid.

Then he walked toward me quickly, too quickly. I immediately turned to leave, but his hand suddenly wrapped tightly around my arm.

“June.” I flinched instinctively as his grip tightened. I had no idea what he had up his sleeve, but his next words caught me off guard.  “Are you done with this tantrum yet? The house is a mess with you gone, come home right now.”

I stared at him in disbelief. Of all the things he could start with, of all the things he could say, this was all he could think of?

A tantrum? Again?

I stared at him and realized he looked irritated rather than emotional, like my pain inconvenienced him.

“I know why you’re here,” he continued coldly. “You must have heard Diane and I would be here today.” I slowly pulled my arm but he wouldn’t let go.

I said quietly. “You’re wrong, Rick. I’m here to take the exam.”

“What?” The second the words left my mouth, his expression darkened. “Stop this nonsense, June.” His tone turned sharp. “Come home. This isn’t the place for you to act out.” He stepped closer, lowering his voice. “I’ve already given you enough time to cool down. Stop this at once!”

Cool down, like my entire life hadn’t been destroyed. Before I could answer, one of the officials stepped outside the hall.

“All candidates, please proceed inside.”

“Get your fucking hands off me,” I tried to pull back, but Rick yanked me to himself. “You’re not going in there. You're coming with me. You don’t belong here anymore.”

My chest tightened violently. Then he said the one thing that finally killed every remaining feeling I had left for him.

“You’re my wife,” he snapped quietly. “I decide your future.”

Silence crashed through my head, and before I could stop myself, I slapped him. It was so hard the sound echoed loudly enough that nearby conversations stopped.

Rick froze completely while I stared directly into his shocked face.

“If you want to take your wife home,” I said coldly while pointing toward Diane, “then take her.”

For the first time since I met him, Rick genuinely looked speechless. His grip loosened slowly and I stepped back a few steps from him.

“I was never your wife,” I continued, my voice trembling slightly. “So you don’t get to control me anymore.”

Then I turned and walked toward the hall.

“June…stop right there…” Behind me, Diane suddenly spoke sharply.

“The only reason you became number one,” I looked back once as I said quietly, “is because Rick spent ten years holding me down.” I smiled faintly loving the expression on her face. She was afraid. “Not anymore.”

Then I walked inside. By the time the exam ended hours later, my entire brain felt fried, but I felt lighter somehow, like slapping Rick had knocked loose years of buried rage

My friends practically dragged me out afterward

“No escaping this time,” one warned immediately.

“You owe us drinks for disappearing for a decade.”

I laughed weakly, and somehow, I let myself go with them. The bar was loud and crowded and alive when we arrived.  Music vibrated through the floor while lights flashed overhead. At first I just sat there awkwardly nursing one drink.

Then another, then another, and eventually, I laughed, really laughed as I danced badly with my friends. I got teased for having terrible alcohol tolerance now and I forgot myself for a few precious moments.

By the time I stumbled back toward the counter slightly tipsy, someone stepped into my path.

He was tall, with broad shoulders. He looked younger than Rick and unfairly handsome. His mouth curved slowly into a smile as he looked at me.

“Well,” he said smoothly, “we meet again, stranger.”

I blinked at him in confusion as my brain struggled to catch up.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Wife He Never Married   83

    JUNEI shook my head. “No,” I replied but my voice came out barely above a whisper. “I’m just…” My voice disappeared. “So exhausted.”He nodded once and the understanding in his eyes made something inside me ache.“I’ll take you home.”As he reached for the door, I caught his sleeve. “My dad…” He looked back immediately. “How is he?”“He’s been doing fine.” I searched his face for any sign that he was lying. “The old man’s stronger than you think.”A shaky breath escaped me. “As long as he’s okay…” My throat tightened. “…I’ll be okay too.”He didn’t answer, instead, he simply looked at me and his hand rose slowly until both palms cradled my face, his thumbs brushing lightly beneath my eyes.There was so much in his gaze that I couldn’t name from relief to fear to affection to gratitude.He leaned closer, instinctively, I stopped him. “My breath probably smells terrible.”For the first time all day, the corner of his mouth lifted. “June, baby. I'm only going to say this once. I don’t g

  • The Wife He Never Married   82

    JUNEThe click of the handcuffs unlocking echoed through the interrogation room louder than it should have and for a second, I simply stared at my wrists. Finally, thank God. The metal fell away, leaving behind angry red marks that circled my skin like bruised bracelets, I rubbed them instinctively, my fingers trembling as feeling slowly returned.Across from me, the commissioner remained standing, his expression wasn’t warm, but it wasn’t accusing anymore either. “You can go.”Just like that with no apology or explanation, just… go. For days, it had felt like these walls would become my entire world. The cold gray room, the buzzing fluorescent lights overhead, the smell of stale coffee and disinfectant that had seeped into everything, even into me but I was free yet my legs didn’t move immediately because freedom felt strangely unfamiliar.One of the officers stepped forward and placed a clear plastic bag on the table, inside were my belongings.“My things?”He nodded and I reached

  • The Wife He Never Married   81

    DANTE“Diane made me do it and I… I needed money.” She covered her face. “And she was offering so much for me to keep an eye on June. I did just as I was instructed to do.”I remained perfectly still. “Is that why you also stole her research?”She nodded, unable to look at me, lowering her hands again.“I thought…” Another shaky breath. “…I thought I could just look the other way.”Her tears finally spilled over and guilt covered every inch of her face, but I didn’t give a fuck about that, she did what she did and now June is being blamed for it. “You made my wife upset,” I let out, my voice as calm as I could muster. “She spent another night behind bars because of you and she fucking cried because of you.” I held her gaze without blinking. “You don’t get to apologize and walk away from that, you’re definitely going to pay for it.”She nodded almost immediately. “Okay.” Her voice was small. “First,” I spoke again, “get your phone, go on Instagram and do a live video. I want you to t

  • The Wife He Never Married   80

    DANTEBy the time Raphael parked outside the small duplex, the knot in my chest had tightened into something almost unbearable.The neighborhood was quiet… too quiet even though children rode bicycles farther down the street while an elderly woman watered flowers on her porch, completely unaware that a few doors away sat someone who might hold the answers that had turned June’s life upside down.I looked up at the modest cream-colored house to see that the curtains were drawn, but one car was parked outside, which meant that someone was home.Raphael shut the laptop. “This is the address.”I nodded once. “Let’s go.”Raphael had texted Enzo the address and he walked over to us as we stepped out of our own car. Enzo rolled his shoulders beside me. “I’ve been sitting in cars all day.”Raphael glanced at him. “Try acting like a civilized human being for five minutes.”Enzo looked offended. “But I always do.”“No, you don’t.” Raphael deadpanned. “You convince yourself that you do.”“Can y

  • The Wife He Never Married   79

    DANTEEveryone looked to see that the woman wore a distinctive bracelet around her right wrist, it was silver, thick and impossible to miss.I turned toward Raphael. “June doesn’t own anything like that.”He nodded slowly. “She hasn’t worn jewelry except—”“Her engagement ring.” The words left my mouth instantly. “She’s worn it every day.”Raphael zoomed in and the bracelet became clearer but there was no ring on her fingers. “I’ll see if we can identify whoever this is.”“Be fast about it.”The detective suddenly pushed back his chair.“That’s enough.” His tone hardened. “I’ll take it from here, this is my job not yours.”I looked at him but I didn’t answer him, instead I turned toward the chief.“If the investigation had already answered these questions…” I gestured toward the frozen screen. “…we wouldn’t be sitting here.”The chief’s expression remained unreadable, then he finally spoke.“Detective.” The man looked over. “I expect cooperation.” A brief silence followed. “You’ll wor

  • The Wife He Never Married   78

    DANTEI stood beneath a wall of cameras and microphones pointed toward my face as reporters called out questions over one another until every word blended into meaningless noise.The detective looked pleased, not openly because he was smarter than that but I had spent my entire life reading people. His shoulders were too relaxed, his answers came too easily and he wasn’t investigating anymore, he was selling a story.Raphael stepped beside me, tablet tucked beneath one arm.“Everyone,” he said calmly, his voice somehow cutting through the chaos without needing to rise. “Before conclusions are made, there are several facts the public deserves to know.”The detective’s jaw tightened but Raphael finished explaining to the reporters and whoever was watching.The cameras immediately turned toward him and I folded my arms across my chest.“Now everyone knows something else.” Every head turned back to me. “The child’s mother isn’t beyond scrutiny either, she is far from being a saint.”The d

  • The Wife He Never Married   2

    JUNEFate had to be mocking me. There was no other explanation for this kind of cruelty.My father had warned me from the very beginning, and somehow that made everything hurt worse.I gripped the steering wheel so tightly my fingers ached while tears blurred the road ahead of me.I could still hea

  • The Wife He Never Married   1

    JUNEThe first thing I saw when I opened my eyes was Rick.He was asleep on his stomach, one arm stretched across my side of the bed like even in sleep he expected to find me there. Morning light spilled through the curtains, soft gold sliding over his bare shoulders, over the silver strands beginn

  • The Wife He Never Married   5

    DANTE“Send me everything you can find out on what Angelo has been up to lately. I want to know what that fucker plans to do next before he does it.” I whispered to Enzo as he took a seat next to me.He nodded, pouring himself a drink and I lifted a brow.“Are you…”“Listening? Of course, I am boss

  • The Wife He Never Married   3

    JUNEI pushed the front door open slowly and stepped inside the house that had once felt like the safest place in the world. Now it felt unfamiliar and cold, like I was walking through a stranger’s life.The silence pressed against my ears as I dropped my bag beside the couch and stood there starin

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status