
Daughter's Death, Husband's Betrayal
Chapter 2
The monitor flatlined with a sound that seemed too ordinary for what it meant. One long, continuous beep that signaled the end of my daughter's life.
"Time of death, 5:47 AM," the doctor said quietly.
I stood there, watching Nicole's chest that no longer rose and fell. Her swollen face looked peaceful now, as if the pain had finally released her. My beautiful dancer, forever still.
"Mrs. Carter?" The doctor—Dr. Evans, his badge read—placed a hand on my shoulder. "I'm so sorry. We did everything we could."
I nodded mechanically. No tears came. They were locked somewhere deep inside me, in a place I couldn't reach.
"Would you like a moment alone with her?" he asked.
Another nod. The medical staff filed out, their faces blurring as they passed.
I sat beside Nicole, taking her cooling hand in mine. The bruises on her arms told the story of how hard she'd fought. My brave girl.
"I found him," I whispered to her. "Your father. He was..." The words caught in my throat. How could I tell her, even now? That while she was dying, fighting for every breath, he was celebrating another woman's son? That the money she'd earned at that horrible place—the twenty dollars still folded neatly in that plastic bag—was going toward designer watches and luxury hotel parties?
Instead, I leaned forward and kissed her forehead. "You can rest now, baby. No more struggling."
The hospital social worker came later with forms and questions. Funeral arrangements. Insurance. Next of kin.
"My husband is... unavailable," I said, the words tasting bitter. Robert still hadn't returned my calls. "I'll handle everything."
The cheapest option was cremation. Our health insurance had lapsed three months ago—another bill Robert had claimed to pay. The social worker found a charity that helped with some costs, but I still emptied what little remained in my personal account.
Two days later, I stood alone at the crematorium. No friends, no family. Just me and the small wooden box containing what remained of my daughter.
"Would you like to bring something personal?" the attendant had asked earlier.
I'd gone home and retrieved Nicole's first pair of ballet slippers, the pink satin worn through at the toes from hours of practice. She'd kept them hanging on her bedroom wall, a reminder of her dream.
Now I placed them gently on top of the simple pine box. "These should go with her," I said.
The attendant nodded and wheeled the box toward the furnace doors. I watched through the small window as flames engulfed everything—my daughter, her dreams, the life I thought we had.
I didn't cry. Not then. Not when I collected the small urn of ashes. Not during the silent ride home to our apartment.
Three days after Nicole died, I heard keys in the front door. Robert walked in, carrying a plastic bag and whistling. Actually whistling.
"Where have you been?" My voice sounded strange, hollow.
He startled, then composed himself. "Business trip. I told you last week. Where's Nicole? I got her something."
He pulled a crumpled ballet costume from the bag—dirty, with a tear in the tulle skirt. The kind you'd find in a secondhand store for a few dollars.
"Her birthday's coming up, right?" He smiled, pleased with himself. "Found this at a thrift shop near the hotel. Thought she'd like it."
I stared at the costume, then at him. This man I'd shared a bed with for twenty years suddenly looked like a stranger.
"Nicole is dead," I said flatly.
The costume slipped from his fingers. "What?"
"She was attacked outside that club. The one she was working at to help with your debts. She died three days ago."
His face drained of color, but not from grief. His eyes darted to the door, calculating. "Did... did the police talk to you?"
Not 'how did she die' or 'my God, my daughter.' His first thought was of himself.
"Yes," I said, watching him carefully. "They had a lot of questions."
He swallowed hard. "What did you tell them?"
I looked at the cheap costume on the floor, then at the urn on our mantel containing all that remained of our daughter. Something cold and hard crystallized inside me.
"Everything," I lied. "I told them everything."
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