
A Wife's Fierce Revenge
Chapter 3
I stood in the empty hallway outside my apartment, staring at the phone in my hand. Dr. Anderson's words echoed in my mind: 'They're too powerful. Margaret and I... we can't fight this.' The line had gone dead, leaving me in suffocating silence.
Marcus wasn't just silencing me. He was systematically destroying everyone who might help me.
I was completely alone.
Or maybe not. Not yet.
With trembling fingers, I dialed David Anderson's number again. No answer. I grabbed my coat and keys, driven by a desperate hope that I could reach him before it was too late. David had been more than my mentor—he'd been the father figure I needed through medical school, residency, and beyond. If anyone could help me expose the truth, it would be him.
The city lights blurred through my tears as I drove to his Upper East Side apartment. My mind raced with fractured thoughts: Emma's cold little hand in mine, Rebecca's bruised face at the morgue, Marcus's perfect mask of concern that never quite reached his eyes.
"David," I called, pounding on his door. "It's Victoria. Please, I need to talk to you."
The door opened, but it wasn't David who greeted me. Margaret Anderson stood there, her elegant face drawn with worry.
"Victoria," she whispered, glancing nervously down the hallway. "You shouldn't be here."
"I need to see David. Please."
She hesitated, then stepped aside. David sat at his desk, surrounded by medical journals and hospital files. When he looked up, I barely recognized him. The confident, compassionate physician who had guided generations of doctors was gone, replaced by a hollow-eyed ghost.
"I've been looking into Sterling's influence at the hospital," he said without preamble, his voice flat. "The corruption goes deeper than you know, Victoria. Much deeper."
He showed me financial records, board minutes, emails—a tangled web connecting Marcus's pharmaceutical company to key hospital decisions. Including the one that had killed Emma.
"We can use this," I said, hope flickering for the first time in days. "We can prove what they did."
"It's not that simple." David rubbed his temples. "They've already frozen my accounts. Margaret's gallery received notice this morning that their lease is being terminated—the building was just purchased by a subsidiary of Sterling Pharmaceuticals."
"There must be something—"
My phone rang. Mount Sinai Hospital. For one wild moment, I thought it might be about Emma—that there had been a mistake, that she was alive.
"Dr. Hayes," the voice was clinical, detached. "We're calling about Margaret Anderson. She's been admitted with symptoms consistent with an acute ischemic stroke."
I looked up in horror. Margaret stood in the kitchen doorway, perfectly fine.
"There must be some mistake," I said. "I'm with Mrs. Anderson right now."
"The patient was admitted twenty minutes ago. Her husband, Dr. David Anderson, provided identification."
The blood drained from my face as I realized what was happening. "This is Dr. Victoria Hayes. I need you to place an immediate security hold on that patient. She is not Margaret Anderson."
"I'm sorry, Dr. Hayes, but your hospital privileges have been suspended pending review. We cannot accept your orders."
David was watching me, understanding dawning in his eyes. "They're using my wife's name to test an experimental drug, aren't they? One of Lily's protocols?"
I nodded, unable to speak.
We spent the next six hours calling every contact we had—hospital administrators, medical board members, even journalists. No one would help. Every door slammed shut before we could even explain.
"It's over," David finally said, his voice hollow. He took Margaret's hand. "We can't fight them."
Three days later, I received the news. David and Margaret Anderson had jumped from the balcony of their fifteenth-floor apartment. The police called it a suicide pact.
I raced to their apartment, bribing the doorman to let me in. The police had already processed the scene, but something told me to look. In David's study, I found a torn piece of paper tucked inside his favorite medical text. His handwriting, shaky but legible: "Evidence in safety deposit box #247, Manhattan Trust. Key in—"
The rest was missing.
I tore the apartment apart looking for the other half of the note, for the key, for anything that might lead me to the evidence David had collected. Nothing.
When I returned to the living room, I found two men in suits methodically going through David's papers. One of them held the torn piece of note I'd just discovered.
"Mrs. Sterling," one said smoothly. "Your husband sent us to collect Dr. Anderson's research materials. For safekeeping."
I backed away, understanding with crystal clarity that I was watching Marcus erase the last hope I had of proving what he'd done.
Two weeks later, I stood at the back of the Waldorf Astoria ballroom, watching my husband accept an award for Sterling Pharmaceuticals' contributions to pediatric health research. The irony was so bitter I could taste it.
"And in memory of my beloved daughter, Emma," Marcus was saying, his voice breaking perfectly on cue, "we are establishing the Emma Sterling Foundation for Children's Health."
The crowd rose in a standing ovation. Beside him on stage, Lily Chen smiled demurely, her hand resting on his arm in a gesture that was just a fraction too intimate.
Something snapped inside me. I strode forward, pulling from my purse the statement I'd prepared—the truth about Emma's death, about Rebecca, about the Andersons.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I said, my voice cutting through the applause as I approached the stage. "I'd like to tell you what the Emma Sterling Foundation really stands for."
Security guards materialized beside me before I could reach the microphone. Marcus's expression shifted from shock to calculated concern.
"Victoria," he said, his voice amplified by the microphone he still held. "My poor wife. She's been unwell since our tragic loss."
As the guards dragged me away, I saw the pity in the audience's eyes. Not for Emma. Not for the truth. For Marcus—the grieving father burdened with an unstable wife.
In that moment, as the ballroom doors closed behind me and I was escorted to the street like garbage being removed, I realized that Marcus hadn't just taken my daughter and my sister.
He had taken my voice.
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