MY HUSBAND SAID HE WAS A DOCTOR AT A HOSPITAL — BUT ONE PHONE CALL EXPOSED HIS LIE.
My husband Nathan is a doctor. He’s dedicated, respected, the kind of doctor people trust without question.
So when he told me he had transferred to a new hospital three months ago, I believed him. Why wouldn’t I?
But then my father’s cardiologist found something concerning. I needed Nathan’s advice, urgently. I called. Once. Twice. I texted. No response. Hours passed.
Worried, I called his hospital—just to leave a message.
But what they told me made my stomach drop.
“I’m sorry, ma’am, but we don’t have a Dr. Nathan on staff here.”
I Googled the hospital’s website and didn’t find him in the list of doctors!
My mind raced through a thousand possibilities—had Nathan been fired? Was this some clerical error?
But deep down, something darker clawed at my chest.
So I drove to the hospital to confront the receptionist in person. A doctor overheard my questions and approached me. “Mrs. *, I know your husband. Please come with me. I think we should talk somewhere private.”
The Truth About Nathan
My hands trembled as I followed the doctor down the hallway.
This was a mistake. It had to be.
Nathan was a doctor—he had always been a doctor. We met in med school, for God’s sake!
The doctor led me into a small office, shutting the door behind us.
“Please,” he said gently, gesturing for me to sit. “I know this is going to be difficult to hear.”
I sat, my heartbeat pounding in my ears.
“Where is Nathan?” I demanded. “Why isn’t he on staff? Has he been fired?”
The doctor sighed, rubbing a hand over his face.
“No,” he said. “He was never hired.”
My stomach dropped.
“What?” I whispered.
He looked at me with genuine sympathy.
“Nathan… was never a doctor.”
The world tilted.
I shook my head. “No, that’s not true! He went to med school, we met during our residency interviews—”
The doctor’s expression darkened. “I know. I remember him from years ago. But Nathan never passed his board exams. He never got his license. And without it… he couldn’t practice medicine.”
My mouth went dry.
“No,” I breathed. “That doesn’t make sense. He leaves every morning in scrubs. He has shifts. He—”
The doctor cut me off with a pointed look.
“Has he ever taken you to his hospital? Introduced you to colleagues?”
I blinked.
No. He never had.
Whenever I suggested visiting his workplace, he always brushed it off. “Hospital policies,” he’d say. Or, “It’s too hectic, babe, you’d hate it.”
A cold chill ran down my spine.
I licked my lips. “Then where… where has he been going every day?”
The doctor hesitated. “I don’t know. But Mrs. *, I think you need to start asking him some very serious questions.”
I didn’t even respond.
I just grabbed my bag and ran out.
Confronting the Lie
I drove home in a daze. My mind spun through a thousand terrifying possibilities.
What was Nathan doing every day if he wasn’t at the hospital?
Where was he getting his money?
By the time I pulled into the driveway, my hands were shaking.
I pushed open the front door. The house was silent.
And then—
A voice behind me.
“You went to the hospital.”
I turned.
Nathan stood there. Still in scrubs.
His expression?
Cold. Unreadable.
Like he already knew everything.
I swallowed hard. “Where do you really go every day, Nathan?”
He smiled.
But it wasn’t a smile at all.
“You don’t want to know,” he said. “Trust me.”
But I did want to know.
And I was about to find out the truth—no matter the cost.