
After My Husband Planned My Murder, I Fought Back
Chapter 3
Weeks blurred together in my prison of flesh. I'd stopped counting days and started counting heartbeats, breaths, the rhythmic beep of monitors that reminded me I was still technically alive.
But I wasn't just lying there anymore. I was fighting.
It started small—so small I wasn't even sure it was real at first. A twitch deep in my left eyelid, barely perceptible even to me. I'd been concentrating for hours, days maybe, trying to command just one muscle to obey. Move, I'd scream silently at my body. Just move.
Then one morning, during Dr. Chen's routine examination, I felt it. The tiniest flutter of my left eyelash.
Dr. Chen was checking my pupil response with her penlight, her brow furrowed in concentration. "Mrs. Miller, I'm going to shine this light in your eyes. You won't feel any discomfort."
I gathered every ounce of will, every particle of rage and determination, and focused it on that single eyelash. Move. Move. MOVE.
It trembled. Just once. Barely enough to disturb the air.
Dr. Chen's hand stilled. She leaned closer, her breath warm on my face. "Did you..." She straightened, glancing at the nurse beside her. "Make a note. Possible involuntary muscle response, left eye, 9:47 AM."
Involuntary. If only she knew how voluntary it had been.
From his position by the window, Ethan moved forward. "What does that mean, Doctor?"
"It could mean nothing," Dr. Chen said carefully, but I caught the slight change in her tone—cautious hope. "Sometimes vegetative patients exhibit random muscle movements. But it could also indicate emerging consciousness. I'll schedule additional tests."
I couldn't see Ethan's face, but I heard the intake of breath, felt the shift in the room's energy. For just a fraction of a second, the concerned husband facade cracked. Then his hand found mine, squeezing gently.
"That's good news, isn't it?" His voice was perfectly calibrated—hopeful but guarded. "My Sophie's still fighting."
After Dr. Chen left, Ethan released my hand like it had burned him.
I kept practicing. Every hour, every day. The flutter became more reliable, more controlled. My left eyelash was my only weapon, my only voice, and I honed it like a blade.
---
Day 47 arrived with rain pattering against the window, gray light filtering through the blinds.
Dr. Chen came for her morning rounds earlier than usual, a medical student trailing behind her. She was explaining my case in clinical terms—traumatic brain injury, persistent vegetative state, minimal prognosis for recovery—when I made my move.
As she leaned over to check my vitals, I summoned everything I had. My eyelashes trembled, a visible quiver that lasted three full seconds.
Dr. Chen froze. "Get Dr. Morrison," she told the student, her voice sharp with excitement. "Now."
She gripped the bed rail, her face inches from mine. "Sophie? Can you hear me? If you can hear me, try to move your eyes again."
I did. This time both eyelashes fluttered, a deliberate response that sent the heart monitor spiking.
"Oh my God," Dr. Chen breathed. Then louder, more professional: "Page her husband. She's emerging from the coma."
The next minutes were chaos. Nurses rushed in. Machines beeped. Someone adjusted my bed to a more upright position. And then Ethan burst through the door, Madison close behind him.
"Sophie!" Ethan rushed to my bedside, his face a mask of joy and relief. He grabbed my hand, brought it to his lips. "Baby, I'm here. I never lost faith. I knew you'd come back to me."
Dr. Chen was shining lights in my eyes, asking me to follow commands I couldn't yet obey. But I could do one thing.
I gathered every molecule of strength and forced my vocal cords to cooperate. The sound that emerged was barely audible, rough as gravel, but unmistakable.
"Hus...band..."
Ethan's eyes widened, genuine shock flickering across his features before that devoted expression snapped back into place. "Yes, yes, I'm here, darling. Your husband is here."
Madison's hand flew to her mouth, but not before I caught the flash of something dark in her eyes. Fear, maybe. Or calculation.
Dr. Chen was smiling, scribbling notes. "This is remarkable. Mrs. Miller, you're going to need extensive rehabilitation, but this is an excellent sign. An excellent sign indeed."
As they fussed over me, adjusting equipment and discussing care plans, I kept my face slack, my eyes unfocused. Let them think I was emerging slowly, confused and helpless.
Let them think I remembered nothing.
The game had begun, and I had just played my opening move.
Ethan squeezed my hand again, and through my barely-open eyes, I saw him exchange a glance with Madison over my bed. It lasted less than a second, but I caught it.
They were worried.
Good.
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