The heavy oak door clicked open. Dr. Hayes walked in. He didn't look at her. He kept his eyes fixed on the floor tiles as he walked straight to his desk. That simple, evasive movement caused the muscles in Constance's back to pull tight. Her lungs stopped expanding.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Ferguson," Dr. Hayes said. He pushed the manila folder across the polished mahogany desk. His voice was thick with professional sympathy, the kind of tone reserved for the end of the line. "The results are conclusive."
Constance reached out. Her fingers were blocks of ice. She pulled the report toward her, her eyes dropping to the bold black letters printed on the crisp white page.
Stage IV Pancreatic Cancer.
Metastatic.
Her stomach dropped, twisting into a violent, sickening knot.
"Six months," Dr. Hayes said softly. The words hit the quiet room like stones dropping into a dry well. "Maybe less, depending on how your body responds to palliative care."
Constance did not cry. Her tear ducts remained completely dry. Her breathing did not hitch. Instead, the fingers resting on her lap began to tremor. A fine, uncontrollable shaking that started in her knuckles and vibrated up her wrists. It was the only physical leak in her perfectly constructed dam.
In a fraction of a second, her brain flooded with images of the past two years. Waking up at 5:00 AM every single morning. Measuring out exactly half a cup of plain oats and 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 without a glance. Biting the inside of her cheek until it bled while her mother-in-law, Doretta, made loud, pointed remarks about her cheap upbringing at every social gala.
Dr. Hayes kept talking. He mentioned pain management, hospice options, and clinical trials. Constance heard none of it. A high-pitched ringing filled her ears, drowning out his voice. The medical terms sounded like a foreign language broadcasted from a broken radio.
She stood up. Her legs felt like they belonged to someone else, heavy and disconnected. She walked out of the clinic.
The hospital corridor was a blur of white coats and fluorescent lights. People brushed past her. No one looked twice at the woman in the flawless beige Chanel suit. No one knew her world had just been reduced to ash.
She pushed through the heavy glass doors and stepped into the humid New York air. The black town car was waiting at the curb.
She slid into the leather backseat. The air inside smelled of expensive leather and sterile pine air freshener.
Mr. Sullivan, the driver, met her eyes in the rearview mirror. "Home, Mrs. Ferguson?"
Constance nodded out of pure muscle memory. Then, her jaw locked. Home? What home? A gilded cage where she was dying slowly anyway? She closed her eyes, the sharp 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 like a physical blow, shattering the obedient shell she had worn for two years. A strange, hot sensation bloomed in the center of her chest, pushing away the ice.
"No," she said. Her voice was raspy, scratching against her dry throat. "To the bank."
Mr. Sullivan's thick gray eyebrows shot up, but he didn't argue. He put the car in drive and merged into the heavy Manhattan traffic, heading straight for the Financial District.
Inside the VIP room of the bank, the air was thick and silent. Constance sat across from the branch manager, a balding man who was currently sweating through his tailored shirt.
"I want to withdraw the maximum cash limit from all my accounts and liquidate all my private investment portfolios," Constance said. She did not blink. "As for the prenuptial trust, I will be contacting my legal counsel to have it thoroughly reviewed and dismantled."
The manager pushed his glasses up his nose, his hands shaking slightly. "But Mrs. Ferguson, your husband's accounts are separate. These are your personal funds. The tax penalties for early withdrawal-"
"Not his. Mine," Constance cut him off. Her voice was flat, carrying the weight of a steel beam. "Every penny I brought into this marriage. I want it liquidated and moved to an account under my sole control, immediately."
"Mr. Ferguson might have concerns regarding the sudden movement of-"
"Do it," she snapped. The sharpness of her tone made the manager flinch. She stared at him, her eyes dead and unyielding, until he swallowed hard and started typing frantically on his keyboard.
When Constance walked out of the bank an hour later, she held a thick manila envelope containing the liquidation documents and the massive cashier's checks. The heavy weight of the paper in her hand sent a rush of adrenaline through her veins. The invisible collar around her neck snapped. She could breathe again.
The car took her back to the Upper East Side. The massive iron gates of the Ferguson estate parted for her.
As she stepped into the grand foyer, Mrs. Foster, the head housekeeper, hurried forward with a silver tray.
"Mr. Ferguson called," Mrs. Foster said, her posture rigid. "He will be home for dinner tonight."
Normally, this sentence would send Constance into a panic. She would rush to the kitchen, inspect the organic produce, and ensure a low-carb, high-protein meal was plated to Michelin-star standards.
Constance looked at the housekeeper. The muscles in her face relaxed.
"Let him cook for himself," Constance said. "Or order takeout. I don't care."
Mrs. Foster froze. The silver tray tilted, a crystal water glass sliding dangerously close to the edge. Her mouth opened, but no sound came out.
Constance didn't wait for a response. She walked past the housekeeper, her high heels clicking sharply against the imported marble floor. Each step was a hammer striking a nail into her old life.
She pushed open the door to the master bedroom. She walked straight into the massive walk-in closet.
Row after row of clothes hung in perfect color coordination. Beige, slate gray, pale blue, muted cream. The uniform of the perfect, invisible Mrs. Ferguson.
Constance grabbed a beige silk blouse. Her fingers gripped the fabric, and she yanked it off the velvet hanger. She threw it onto the hardwood floor. Then she grabbed a gray pencil skirt. She threw that down too.
Her movements sped up. Her breathing grew heavy, her chest heaving as she tore dresses, coats, and slacks from the racks. She threw them all into a massive, chaotic pile on the floor. She was ripping off her own skin, shedding the pathetic creature she had been.
From inside her purse, her phone began to vibrate.
She pulled it out. The screen lit up with the caller ID: Mother. Martha Mcfarland.
Constance stared at the name. Her thumb hovered over the green accept button. Her pulse pounded in her ears.
The phone stopped ringing. Then it started again. And again.
On the third ring, Constance pressed the power button. The screen went black. She tossed the dead phone into the pile of discarded beige clothes.
She turned her back on the mess and walked to the large bay window. She pushed the heavy glass open. The cold evening wind rushed in, biting at her cheeks and filling her lungs. The Manhattan skyline glittered in the distance, bleeding orange and purple under the setting sun.
The dying light stretched her shadow across the floor, casting it over the ruined clothes.
Constance gripped the window sill. Her knuckles turned white.
"Six months," she whispered to the wind. Her voice was barely a breath, but it carried the force of a hurricane. "I'm going to live every single day."