
Daughter's Death, Husband's Betrayal
Daughter's Death, Husband's Betrayal Chapter 1
The shrill ring of my phone cut through the darkness, jolting me from a fitful sleep. The clock on my nightstand glowed 2:17 AM. My heart lurched—nothing good ever came from calls at this hour.
"Hello?" My voice was thick with sleep, but the fear was already spreading through my chest.
"Mrs. Carter?" The voice was clinical, detached. "This is Mercy General Hospital. Your daughter Nicole has been brought in. She's been... severely injured. You need to come immediately."
The world tilted beneath me. "What happened? Is she okay?"
"Ma'am, I can't discuss details over the phone, but she's in critical condition. She was found outside The Velvet Room."
The Velvet Room. The gentleman's club where Nicole had started working three weeks ago. The job she'd taken to help with Robert's debts. The job I'd begged her not to take.
"I'm coming," I whispered, already fumbling for clothes in the dark.
My fingers trembled as I dialed Robert's number while racing down the stairs to my car. Straight to voicemail. Again. And again.
"Robert, it's Nicole." My voice cracked. "She's hurt. Badly. They've taken her to Mercy General. Please, call me back."
The traffic lights blurred through my tears as I sped through empty Chicago streets. Where was he? Another "business dinner" that kept him out until dawn? Another night I pretended to believe him?
I tried his phone again. Nothing.
The emergency room was a harsh fluorescent nightmare. "My daughter," I gasped to the nurse at the desk. "Nicole Carter. They called me."
Her eyes softened with that look—the one that told me everything before her words could. "The doctor will speak with you. She's in Trauma Room 3."
They led me down a corridor that seemed to stretch forever. Through the glass, I saw her—my beautiful Nicole, her face swollen beyond recognition, tubes snaking from her broken body, machines beeping in a desperate rhythm.
"Mrs. Carter." A doctor approached, his scrubs spotted with blood—Nicole's blood. "Your daughter was assaulted outside her workplace. Multiple blunt force traumas to the head and torso. Internal bleeding. We're doing everything we can, but..."
I couldn't hear the rest. I pushed past him into the room, to her side.
"Nicole, baby." I stroked the small patch of unblemished skin on her hand. "Mom's here. You're going to be okay."
Her eyelids fluttered, but didn't open.
A nurse handed me a clear plastic bag. "These are her personal effects."
Inside was her phone with a cracked screen, her house keys with the tiny ballet slipper keychain I'd given her for her sixteenth birthday, and a twenty-dollar bill, folded into a neat square—the way she always folded money she was saving. Twenty dollars. For Robert's debts. For our family.
There was also a crumpled receipt from The Velvet Room, time-stamped just hours ago.
I tried Robert again. Voicemail.
Where was he? I needed him here. Nicole needed him here.
With shaking hands, I opened our banking app. There—a credit card charge from last night. Not at some cheap diner where he claimed to take clients. A charge at The Grand Plaza Hotel in Manhattan. Manhattan? He was supposed to be in Chicago.
"Nicole, I have to find your father," I whispered, kissing her forehead. "I'll be right back. Fight, baby. Please fight."
I spoke briefly to the doctor, giving him permission for whatever procedures might save her. Then I ran to my car.
The drive to the airport, the desperate booking of the first flight to New York, the endless waiting—it all passed in a blur of panic and prayers. My phone stayed clutched in my hand, waiting for updates from the hospital, waiting for Robert to call back. Neither happened.
The credit card showed another charge—a boutique near the hotel. I took a taxi straight there from JFK.
The Grand Plaza loomed before me, its golden doors gleaming in the afternoon sun. I followed the sound of music and laughter to a ballroom on the mezzanine level. A sign outside read "Happy 18th Birthday, Leo!"
I slipped inside, unnoticed among the crowd of well-dressed guests. And then I saw him.
Robert—my husband of twenty years, the man whose "business debts" had driven our family to the edge—stood beaming at the center of the room. Beside him was a stunning blonde woman, her arm possessively linked with his. And before them stood a teenage boy, unwrapping a box that revealed an expensive watch.
"Only the best for my son!" Robert's voice carried across the room as he clapped the boy on the shoulder.
My son.
The room spun around me as Robert laughed and pulled the woman—this stranger—close for a kiss. While our daughter lay dying, he was here, celebrating another woman's child with money that should have been ours.
Daughter's Death, Husband's Betrayal of Contents
New Release Novels














![[Dubbed Version]Path to Vindication](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/3ead1ffd5145403705099231644/eiaeTqyDZfYA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)


