“I Answered an Emergency Call as a Paramedic — The Patient Was My Wife”

Maybe more if they tie you to Alexander Clayton’s death.”

Her sharp intake of breath told him that struck home. “Alexander’s death was an accident—”

“Sure it was.

Just like our marriage was real. You’re a liar and a criminal, and you’re going to spend the rest of your life in prison knowing that I’m the one who put you there.”

He ended the call and blocked the number.

The trial came three months later.

The evidence was overwhelming—videos, recordings, testimony from victims whose lives had been destroyed. The plea deal was harsh: twenty-five years in federal prison with no possibility of parole for fifteen years. Three months after that, Tristan stood in his townhouse—legally his now, awarded in the divorce settlement since it had been purchased with criminal proceeds.

Everything of Colette’s was gone.

He’d donated her clothes, destroyed her paperwork, erased every trace of her existence. Devon knocked on the door carrying a six-pack of beer.

They sat on the back deck as the autumn sun faded, drinking in comfortable silence. “How are you doing?” Devon finally asked.

Tristan considered the question.

Three months ago, his world had imploded. He’d learned his marriage was a lie, that he’d been a pawn in a criminal enterprise. But he’d also learned he was stronger than he thought, that he could face betrayal and keep moving forward.

“I’m doing okay,” he said honestly.

“Better than okay. For the first time in years, I feel like I can breathe.”

“Any regrets?”

“No.

She chose her path. I just made sure she faced consequences.” Tristan took a long drink.

“I regret not seeing it sooner.

But trusting your wife—that’s not a character flaw. That’s what you’re supposed to do in a marriage.”

“A real marriage,” Devon corrected. “Not whatever you had.”

The next day, Tristan returned to work.

His first call was a cardiac emergency—an elderly woman experiencing chest pains.

He stabilized her, transported her to the hospital. In the ER waiting room, her granddaughter thanked him with tears in her eyes.

“You saved her life.”

Simple words. Honest words.

The kind of truth Colette had never known.

As Tristan walked back to his ambulance, he felt lighter than he had in months. The weight of betrayal was finally lifting. He’d been tested in ways he never imagined and had emerged intact on the other side.

Colette had thought she was smarter than everyone, that her schemes were foolproof.

She’d underestimated the paramedic she’d married as cover, the man she’d considered beneath her. In the end, she’d lost everything—her freedom, her money, her reputation—while Tristan had orchestrated her downfall simply by exposing the truth.

He climbed into his ambulance and picked up the radio. “Available for next call.”

His revenge was complete.

Not through violence or elaborate schemes, but through something simpler and more devastating: truth and justice.

He’d exposed who she really was and let the system do its work. And as Chicago’s skyline gleamed in the afternoon sun, Tristan Valentine drove toward his next call, toward his next patient, toward a future where he could finally be himself—without lies, without betrayal, without the weight of loving someone who’d never truly existed. He was free.

And that was the sweetest victory of all.

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