
After My Son Died, I Sent His Father To Prison
Chapter 3
Three days had passed since I lost my job. Three days of avoiding Thomas's smug glances and Jason's contemptuous demands. I moved through the house like a ghost, cooking meals that went untouched, cleaning rooms no one appreciated. The walls seemed to close in with each passing hour, suffocating me with the weight of two decades of lies.
I stood at the kitchen sink, mechanically washing dishes when my phone rang. Thomas's name flashed on the screen. He'd been at the office—or more likely with Amber—since morning.
"We need to talk," I said without preamble when I answered, surprising myself with my directness.
"About what?" His voice carried that familiar patronizing tone, as if speaking to a particularly slow child.
The plate in my hand trembled. "I want a divorce."
Silence stretched between us, followed by a low chuckle that raised goosebumps on my arms.
"A divorce?" Thomas's voice hardened. "After everything I've done for you? Taking you in when no one else would look at that monstrosity on your face?"
"You humiliated me at the hospital. You cost me my job." My voice shook but held firm. "I know about Amber. I heard everything that night at the hospital."
"So what?" The pretense dropped from his voice. "You think anyone would believe you? The pathetic, scarred woman claiming her husband cheated? Everyone already thinks you're the home-wrecker."
I gripped the edge of the sink. "I don't care what people think anymore. I want out."
"Not happening." His tone turned calculating. "What would people say if you abandoned your family right before Jason's college applications? What kind of mother leaves at such a critical time?"
My stomach twisted. He knew exactly which buttons to push.
"I've put up with you for twenty years," he continued. "You can wait a few more months. Unless you want to explain to Jason why his future was ruined because his mother was too selfish to wait."
The call ended, leaving me clutching the phone, my knuckles white. Even now, he controlled me through my love for my son—a son who called me "scar face" and recoiled from my touch.
Two days later, Thomas's demeanor changed completely. He came home early, his expression contrite as he found me folding laundry.
"Melanie," he said softly, "I've been thinking about what you said."
I didn't respond, focusing on smoothing Jason's t-shirt with mechanical precision.
"You're right. This isn't fair to you." He sat on the edge of the bed. "I'll sign the divorce papers."
My hands stilled. "What?"
"But I need one last favor." Thomas leaned forward, his eyes earnest in a way I'd almost forgotten. "My Uncle Joe is in the hospital across town. He's asking for you."
"Your Uncle Joe?" In twenty years of marriage, I'd never heard of an Uncle Joe.
"He always liked you," Thomas continued smoothly. "He's not doing well, and it would mean a lot if you'd visit him. After that, we can part ways amicably. I'll even help you find a new place."
Suspicion warred with desperate hope. Could ending my marriage really be this simple?
"What hospital?" I finally asked.
Thomas smiled, relief evident in his expression. "It's a specialized facility. I'll text you the address. Can you go tomorrow afternoon? I'll have the divorce papers ready when you get back."
That night, I barely slept, torn between hope and nagging doubt. By morning, I'd convinced myself that Thomas was genuinely trying to make amends. Perhaps guilt had finally penetrated his conscience.
The address he sent led me to the outskirts of town, far from the main hospital district. As my car wound through increasingly industrial streets, unease crept up my spine. The navigation system finally announced my arrival at a destination that looked nothing like a medical facility.
Before me stood a dilapidated warehouse, its windows boarded up, surrounded by a chain-link fence with NO TRESPASSING signs hanging at intervals. The neighboring buildings appeared equally abandoned, the entire block eerily silent in the late afternoon light.
I double-checked the address. This was it—the place Thomas had sent me to visit his supposed uncle.
As I sat frozen in my car, a movement caught my eye. Two men emerged from around the side of the warehouse, scanning the street before their gaze settled on my vehicle. Something in their purposeful stance made my blood run cold.
There was no Uncle Joe. There never had been.
Thomas hadn't sent me to a hospital. He'd sent me to my death.
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