
Betrayal Cost My Mother's Life
Chapter 2
The machines fell silent at 3:47 AM.
I felt the exact moment Mom's hand went limp in mine, her fingers growing cold against my palm. The steady beep that had been my anchor for the past six hours stretched into one long, devastating tone that seemed to pierce straight through my chest.
"Time of death, 3:47 AM," Dr. Harrison's voice was gentle but clinical as she reached over to turn off the monitors.
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't process that the woman who had sung me lullabies and bandaged my scraped knees was gone. Just... gone.
"I'm so sorry for your loss," Dr. Harrison continued, her hand briefly touching my shoulder. "Take all the time you need."
But time was exactly what I didn't have. Even in death, Mom was whispering her final truth to me—the medical bills that would follow, the funeral expenses I couldn't afford, the crushing weight of thirty thousand dollars I'd never see again.
I stayed with her until sunrise, memorizing the peaceful expression on her face, so different from the pain that had twisted her features when the paramedics first brought her in. In those final conscious moments before the surgery they couldn't perform, she'd gripped my hand with surprising strength.
"Don't trust him, Charley," she'd whispered, her voice barely audible above the machines. "I saw what he did. I saw who he really is."
Those were her last words to me.
Three days later, I stood in the rain outside Greenwood Cemetery, watching a handful of mourners huddle around Mom's simple casket. Her coworkers from the library. Mrs. Chen from next door. My college roommate Sarah, who'd driven up from Portland. Maybe fifteen people total for a woman who had touched so many lives with her kindness.
I'd chosen the cheapest funeral package I could find, paid for with my emergency credit card. Even then, the debt felt like a stone in my stomach. Everything was wrong—the plain wooden casket instead of the mahogany one she'd admired in the funeral home, the small bouquet of grocery store flowers instead of the elaborate arrangements she deserved.
The pastor was reading from Psalms when I saw them.
Spencer and Reyna, standing at the edge of the cemetery like they were attending a casual outdoor event. She wore a designer black dress that probably cost more than my rent, her arm linked possessively through his. He looked uncomfortable, shifting his weight from foot to foot, but he'd still come.
Rage blazed through me so suddenly I nearly stumbled. How dare he? How dare he show up here after what he'd done?
The moment the service ended, I marched toward them, my heels sinking into the wet grass. Spencer saw me coming and straightened, his expression guarded.
"Charley, I wanted to pay my respects—"
"Respects?" The word came out as a snarl. "You killed her."
Reyna's perfectly manicured eyebrows rose. "Excuse me?"
"You used my money—my mother's money—to charter that jet. To buy that ring." I pointed at the massive diamond glittering on her finger. "She saw you propose to another woman with the savings she helped me give you. The shock gave her a heart attack."
Spencer's jaw tightened. "That's not fair, Charley. Your mother's health problems weren't my fault."
"When I called you—when I begged you to help save her life—you pretended not to know me."
"I was in a difficult position—"
"She died because you wouldn't give me back my own money!" My voice cracked, drawing stares from the other mourners. "Thirty thousand dollars that could have saved her life, and you spent it on a proposal to your ex-girlfriend!"
Reyna stepped closer to Spencer, her voice sharp with irritation. "Spencer, who is this person? Why is she harassing us?"
The dismissal in her tone—like I was some crazy stranger—sent fresh fury coursing through my veins.
Spencer's face flushed, but his voice remained cold. "Charley, I understand you're grieving, but this jealousy over my engagement isn't healthy. Reyna and I are building a life together. You need to move on with dignity."
Move on with dignity. As if dignity could pay for my mother's funeral. As if dignity could bring her back to life.
"Dignity?" I laughed, the sound harsh and broken. "You want to talk about dignity? You stole from me, Spencer. You took everything I had and used it to betray me in the most public way possible. My mother died because of your selfishness."
"I never stole anything," he said, his voice rising. "You gave me that money freely. What I did with it afterward was my choice."
The casual cruelty of his words hit me like a physical blow. This was the man I'd loved for two years. The man I'd trusted with my future, my dreams, my heart.
Reyna tugged on Spencer's arm. "Come on, Spencer. We don't need to listen to this."
As they walked away, Spencer called over his shoulder, "I'm sorry for your loss, Charley. But it's time to let go."
I stood there in the rain, watching them disappear into their luxury car, and felt something fundamental break inside me. Not just my heart—that had shattered days ago. This was deeper. This was the death of every naive belief I'd held about love, trust, and the goodness of people.
When I finally made it home to our—my—apartment, there was a voicemail waiting from my boss at the marketing firm.
"Charley, this is David. I need you to call me immediately. There's been a serious allegation made against you, and we need to discuss your employment status. This is urgent."
My hands shook as I dialed the number, already knowing, somehow, that my nightmare was far from over.
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