At 10:03 PM, A Hospital Call Tore Open A Three-Month Divorce-congtien

At 10:03 p.m., ninety-three days after Luke Mercer signed the divorce papers and told Elena Ross he did not love her anymore, his phone rang in the dark.

The sound cut through his Tribeca penthouse with a sharp little buzz against the glass table, small and ordinary, like every other call he had ignored that week.

Outside, Manhattan shimmered under a wet spring rain, the towers across the river blurred by mist and headlights.

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Inside, the apartment smelled like old coffee, leather, and the wool coat he had tossed over a chair when he came home too tired to pretend he had eaten dinner.

Luke looked at the unknown number until the screen went black.

Then it lit again.

He had spent the last three months teaching himself not to answer anything that might pull him back toward Elena.

Not her friends.

Not her attorney.

Not the old house manager who had texted once to say Elena had left a scarf behind and did he want it mailed.

He had told himself silence was mercy.

He had told himself cruelty was a wall.

He had told himself that if Elena hated him enough, she would stay away from the people who hated him more.

The phone buzzed a third time.

Luke answered.

“Mr. Mercer?” a woman asked.

Her voice was brisk in the way hospital voices get after midnight, clipped tight around fear because too much softness makes families fall apart before the facts are finished.

“Yes.”

“This is St. Catherine’s Medical Center. Your ex-wife was admitted twenty minutes ago. She’s unconscious.”

Luke stood still.

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