
After My Son Died, I Sent His Father To Prison
Chapter 1
The hospital corridors were eerily quiet on Christmas Eve. Most patients had been discharged to spend the holiday with their families, leaving only those too ill to leave. My footsteps echoed against the polished floor as I pushed my medication cart from room to room, the soft squeak of its wheels the only companion to my thoughts.
I tucked my hair forward, letting it fall across the left side of my face—a habit formed over twenty years. The scar that ran from my temple to my jaw felt particularly tight tonight, as if reminding me of its permanent presence. I'd long ago stopped hoping it would fade.
"Just three more rooms," I whispered to myself, glancing at my watch. It was nearly ten, and my extra shift was almost complete. The overtime pay would help with Jason's college applications next month. My son deserved the best chance possible, even if it meant spending Christmas Eve alone in these sterile hallways while Thomas attended his office party.
I blinked back unexpected tears. This wasn't the time for self-pity. I had a purpose, a reason to keep going. Jason needed me—or at least, he needed what I could provide.
Room 412 was next. I knocked softly before entering, expecting Mr. Donovan to be asleep. The room was dimly lit, the privacy curtain drawn around the bed. As I approached with his evening medication, I heard a woman's giggle.
"Mr. Donovan?" I called softly, assuming his daughter might be visiting late. No response came, but the giggling continued, followed by a man's low murmur.
I hesitated, then carefully peered around the edge of the curtain to ensure I wasn't interrupting something private.
My heart stopped.
Thomas stood with his back to me, his arms wrapped around a woman in a tight red dress that revealed more than it covered. Her blonde hair cascaded down her bare shoulders as she pressed herself against my husband, her red-painted nails digging into his back.
I should have gasped. I should have screamed. Instead, I froze, my body refusing to move as twenty years of marriage crumbled before my eyes.
"When can we stop sneaking around?" the woman purred, running her finger along Thomas's jaw. "I'm tired of being your dirty little secret, Tommy."
Tommy. No one called him that. No one but her, apparently.
"Soon, baby," Thomas replied, his voice tender in a way I hadn't heard in years—perhaps had never heard. "Once Jason's college applications are in, I'll tell her it's over."
"Promise?" She pouted playfully. "I don't know how much longer I can stand knowing you go home to her every night."
Thomas laughed—a cruel, dismissive sound that cut through me like a knife. "Trust me, Amber, it's no picnic living with that hideous freak. Twenty years of waking up to that face..." He shuddered dramatically. "I deserve a medal for my sacrifice."
Amber—that was her name—giggled again. "Well, your suffering is almost over. Then it's just you and me."
I backed away silently, my hands trembling so violently that I nearly knocked over the medication tray. Somehow, I managed to slip out unnoticed, abandoning my cart in the hallway as I fled to the staff bathroom.
Inside, I gripped the sink, finally allowing the tears to fall. My reflection stared back at me—the long brown hair strategically arranged to cover the left side of my face, the scar still visible through the strands like a grotesque signature.
Hideous freak. The words echoed in my mind, confirming what I'd always suspected Thomas thought of me. Twenty years of marriage built on pity and revulsion, not love.
I don't know how long I stood there before completing my shift in a numb haze. The drive home passed in a blur of Christmas lights and silent tears.
When I arrived, the house was dark except for a dim light from Jason's room. I climbed the stairs, my body heavy with exhaustion and heartbreak.
"Jason?" I called softly, pushing his door open.
My son lay tangled in his sheets, his forehead glistening with sweat. I rushed to his side, maternal instinct momentarily overriding my personal anguish.
"You're burning up," I whispered, pressing my palm to his forehead. His skin radiated heat.
Jason stirred at my touch, his eyes fluttering open but unfocused. As my hand moved to stroke his hair, he suddenly recoiled, turning his face away.
"Don't..." he mumbled, his voice thick with fever.
"It's just me, sweetheart," I soothed, reaching for him again.
"No..." Jason's face contorted. "Your face... it's disgusting. Makes me sick..."
My hand froze in midair. The words, slurred with fever but unmistakable, pierced the final intact chamber of my heart.
Even my son—my beautiful boy whom I'd loved unconditionally since the moment he was placed in my arms—couldn't bear the sight of me. The one person I thought loved me despite my scar had been pretending all along.
I stood up slowly, backing away from his bed as the truth settled over me like a suffocating shroud. I was truly alone. The two people I'd built my life around both found me repulsive.
As Jason drifted back to fevered sleep, unaware of the devastating wound he'd inflicted, I retreated to the hallway, sliding down against the wall until I hit the floor.
For the first time in twenty years, I allowed myself to wonder what might have happened if I hadn't been in that hospital corridor two decades ago—if my face had remained unmarked, if my life had taken a different path.
But as the Christmas lights from the neighbors' house cast shifting shadows across the wall, a new question formed in my mind: What would happen if I stopped accepting this life as the only one possible?
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