
After My Husband Planned My Murder, I Fought Back
Chapter 1
The charity gala had run later than expected. Donors with champagne glasses and million-dollar smiles, all wanting just five minutes of my time. By the time I slipped away, rain was already hammering the city, turning the streets into glossy black mirrors that reflected the distorted city lights.
"You sure you don't want me to call your driver, Mrs. Miller?" The valet had asked, concern etched across his young face as he handed me my keys.
"I'll be fine, thank you." I smiled, sliding into my Mercedes. "It's only twenty minutes home."
Twenty minutes. That's all it would have taken to reach the warmth of my house, to kick off my heels and tell Ethan about the two million we'd raised for children's cancer research. Twenty minutes that I never got.
I remember the rain intensifying, my windshield wipers struggling against the downpour. I remember calling Ethan, telling him I was on my way.
"Drive safe, Sophie," he'd said, his voice warm with what I thought was concern. "Madison's here. We're waiting for you."
I remember thinking how nice it was that my step-sister had come over. How, despite our complicated history, we were finally becoming the family I'd always wanted.
I remember approaching the intersection, the light turning green. I remember pressing the brake pedal as a truck appeared from nowhere, its headlights blinding.
I remember the pedal going straight to the floor. Nothing happening. No resistance.
I remember thinking: *The brakes aren't working.*
Then came the impact. Metal screaming against metal. The airbag exploding into my face. My body jerking forward then back, my head snapping with a force that sent lightning through my spine. The world spinning, glass shattering around me like diamond rain.
Then darkness.
I thought I was dead. I wished I was dead during what came next – floating in and out of consciousness as firefighters cut through the twisted frame of my car. The metallic taste of blood filling my mouth. The paramedics shouting statistics about my failing body as they loaded me into the ambulance. The ceiling of the emergency room blurring above me as they rushed me through hospital corridors.
"Severe trauma to the frontal and temporal lobes..."
"BP dropping..."
"We're losing her..."
Then nothing. For how long, I don't know.
When awareness returned, it wasn't like waking up. There was no gentle transition from sleep to consciousness. It was more like being buried alive. I could hear. I could think. I could feel. But I couldn't move. Not my fingers. Not my toes. Not even my eyelids.
I was screaming inside a corpse.
"The EEG shows minimal brain activity," a woman's voice said. Dr. Chen, I would later learn. Her tone was gentle but clinical. "Mrs. Miller has suffered extensive damage to her brain stem. While she's breathing on her own, which is a positive sign, she shows no response to stimuli. I'm afraid she's in what we call a persistent vegetative state."
"What does that mean?" Ethan's voice cracked with what sounded like genuine grief. "Will she wake up?"
"It's impossible to say for certain," Dr. Chen replied. "Some patients do regain consciousness, but many remain in this state indefinitely. I'm so sorry, Mr. Miller."
I felt Ethan's hand take mine, his thumb brushing over my knuckles. I tried desperately to squeeze back, to give him some sign that I was here, trapped inside. Nothing happened.
"I'll give you some time alone with her," Dr. Chen said. I heard her soft footsteps retreating, the door closing behind her.
Ethan's forehead pressed against my hand. "Sophie, darling, please hang on," he whispered, his voice thick with emotion. "I can't lose you."
The scent of Madison's sickeningly sweet perfume – the one I'd always secretly hated – wafted closer. "Sister," she said softly, "we're all waiting for you to come home."
I felt a surge of gratitude. Despite our differences, despite the fact that she'd always seemed to resent the larger portion of our father's trust I'd received, she was here. They both were. I wasn't alone.
Then the door clicked shut.
And everything changed.
Madison's weight shifted the mattress as she straddled Ethan's lap. Her voice transformed from somber to playful in an instant. "The old man left her seventy-five percent of the trust," she purred. "If she never wakes up, all that money comes to us, baby."
Ethan's lips made a wet sound as they connected with what I assumed was her neck or mouth. "Keep it down," he murmured. "This floor still has surveillance cameras."
Inside my prison of flesh, I burned. Not with fever, but with rage.
My husband. My step-sister. The two people I trusted most in the world.
They weren't waiting for me to recover.
They were waiting for me to die.
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