
A Wife's Fierce Revenge
Chapter 2
I sat beside Emma's hospital bed, clutching her tiny hand as the monitors beeped a weakening rhythm. The temporary stabilization wasn't enough. Her skin had taken on a bluish tinge, her breathing growing more labored with each passing hour.
"Dr. Hayes." A nurse appeared at the doorway, her expression grave. "Administration needs to speak with you."
"I can't leave her," I whispered, stroking Emma's burning forehead.
"It's about the life support equipment," she said softly. "They're... reallocating resources."
The words hit me like a physical blow. "What?"
"I'm so sorry."
I found myself facing the same administrator from earlier, his face now carefully arranged into an expression of regret that never reached his eyes.
"The board has reviewed your daughter's case," he said, sliding a document across his desk. "Given her condition and prognosis, we've determined that the ventilator currently assigned to her would be better utilized for a patient with higher recovery potential."
"You're taking away her life support?" My voice sounded distant, hollow. "She just needs time. The antibiotics haven't had a chance to—"
"Dr. Hayes, as a physician, you understand resource allocation decisions."
"As a mother, I understand you're killing my daughter." I stood, trembling with rage and terror. "Where's the equipment going?"
He wouldn't meet my eyes. "Dr. Chen's research protocol has priority."
I ran back to Emma's room, nearly colliding with technicians already disconnecting her machines. "Stop!" I screamed. "You can't do this!"
But they could. They did.
I held Emma as the monitors flatlined, as her last breath whispered against my neck. I held her as her body grew cold, as nurses tried gently to separate us, as security was called.
My scream echoed through the empty hallway, primal and raw. A mother's howl of grief that seemed to go on forever, bouncing off sterile walls that had witnessed too much death already.
Later—minutes, hours, I couldn't tell—I stood outside the ICU, watching through glass as Lily Chen worked confidently on her patient, the one who had received my daughter's ventilator. Our eyes met briefly. She looked away first.
I checked the allocation records at the nurses' station when no one was looking. The order had come directly from the hospital board, with a note referencing "donor priority consideration." Sterling Pharmaceuticals was mentioned specifically.
Marcus had killed our daughter.
---
Three days later, I sat in the conference room of Blackwell & Stern, Marcus's attorneys. My body felt hollow, a shell moving through motions it didn't understand. I hadn't slept. Hadn't eaten. The funeral home had Emma. Rebecca was still at the morgue.
"Victoria." Marcus's voice was gentle, concerned—the perfect performance of a grieving father. "These papers will help us move forward. The settlement agreement for Rebecca's case ensures her attacker will face consequences without dragging her name through a public trial."
I stared at the stack of documents, my vision blurring. "What consequences? The police haven't even made an arrest."
"We've identified the responsible party," Marcus's attorney interjected smoothly. "This ensures swift justice while protecting your family's privacy."
"And these?" I pointed to another set of documents.
"Standard medical forms," Marcus said, sliding a pen toward me. "Emma's arrangements. I've handled everything so you don't have to worry."
Something felt wrong, but grief had numbed my mind. I signed where they indicated, barely registering the words swimming before my eyes.
It wasn't until two days later that I discovered what I'd done. Emma's death certificate listed "organ donor" in stark black letters. Her perfect little heart, her unblemished kidneys—harvested while I sat in that conference room, signing papers I hadn't read.
---
I filed an ethics complaint with the hospital board the following week, detailing the corruption that had killed my daughter. The response came within hours—not from the board, but from Marcus's legal team.
The letter was clinical in its threats: defamation lawsuits, revocation of my medical license for "emotional instability," psychiatric evaluation, possible involuntary commitment.
I stood at our bedroom window, the letter crumpled in my fist, watching the sunset paint Manhattan in deceptive gold. In my other hand, I held Emma's favorite stuffed rabbit, its fur worn thin from years of love.
The phone rang—my mentor, Dr. Anderson.
"Victoria," his voice cracked with emotion. "They're coming after my practice. My wife's business. They're saying I helped you falsify records."
"David, I never—"
"I know," he said softly. "But they're too powerful. Margaret and I... we can't fight this."
The line went dead.
I stared at the silent phone, understanding dawning like a terrible sunrise. Marcus wasn't just silencing me. He was systematically destroying everyone who might help me.
I was completely alone.
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