
Coma Wife Exposes Betrayal
Chapter 1
Beeping machines pulled me from darkness. My eyelids felt weighted with lead as I forced them open, wincing at the harsh fluorescent lights above. White ceiling. Antiseptic smell. The rhythmic hiss of something mechanical nearby.
Where was I?
I tried to move my hand but could barely lift a finger. My throat burned as if I'd swallowed glass. How long had I been here? The last thing I remembered was reaching for William's hand, the ground crumbling beneath my feet, then... nothing.
A gentle touch on my arm startled me. A nurse in blue scrubs adjusted my blanket, her expression softening when she noticed my open eyes.
"Mrs. Shaw," she said, her voice careful, measured. "You're awake. How are you feeling?"
I tried to speak but produced only a rasp. She quickly brought a cup with a straw to my lips. The cool water was bliss against my raw throat.
"William," I managed finally. "My husband..."
Something flickered across her face—discomfort, perhaps pity—before she smoothed it away with professional efficiency. But I'd caught it, that momentary flinch at my husband's name.
"I'll let the doctor know you're awake," she said, avoiding my question. "He'll want to examine you right away."
The days that followed were a blur of doctors, tests, and the slow, agonizing process of learning to move again. Three years. I'd lost three years of my life to darkness. Our baby was gone. I'd fallen trying to save William from slipping off that cliff edge during our anniversary hike. The bitter irony wasn't lost on me—I'd sacrificed everything for him, and where was he now?
I scanned my hospital room, noting the absence of personal touches. No photos. No cards from William propped on the nightstand. Only a lavish bouquet of lilies on the windowsill, their scent cloying and overwhelming. The card nestled among the blooms read simply: "Thinking of you. Victoria."
Victoria. The name meant nothing to me, yet the handwriting was elegant, feminine. I stared at those flowers until my vision blurred, a strange unease settling in my stomach.
On the fifth day after waking, I heard voices outside my door—William's familiar baritone mingled with a woman's soft laughter. I closed my eyes, feigning sleep as they entered.
"She's still out," William whispered. "We shouldn't stay long."
"You worry too much," the woman replied, her voice honey-sweet. "The doctor said she's still heavily sedated. She won't remember anything."
I kept my breathing even, fighting to maintain the facade of unconsciousness as they continued their hushed conversation. William's cologne—the one I'd given him for our last anniversary—mingled with an unfamiliar floral perfume. The woman—Victoria?—moved around my room with the confidence of someone who belonged there.
After they left, I waited until the night nurse finished her rounds before reaching for William's phone, which he'd carelessly left charging by my bedside. Three years ago, I'd known his password—our anniversary date. I tried it now, holding my breath. The screen unlocked.
My fingers trembled as I navigated through his photos and videos, each swipe revealing more of the life I'd missed. Then I found them—dozens of videos, intimate and explicit, of William with a stunning blonde woman. My stomach lurched as I recognized our bedroom, our sheets. But it was the final video that shattered my world completely.
The camera angle was strange, unsteady. As if someone barely conscious was holding it. In the reflection of our bedroom mirror, I caught a glimpse of the truth—my own limp hand, guided by William's, filming his passionate encounter with Victoria while I lay unconscious beside them.
They had used my body, my hand, to document their betrayal.
I stared at the screen until it went dark, something cold and hard crystallizing inside me. The Anna who had sacrificed everything for William Shaw died in that moment. In her place rose someone new—someone who would make them pay for every second of the three years they had stolen from me.
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