
Dead Wife's Unseen Revenge
Chapter 2
The world exploded in a symphony of screeching metal and shattering glass. One moment I was driving home with the signed contracts pressed against the passenger seat, my mind already rehearsing how I'd tell Robert about the deal that would save us all. The next, my car was spinning through the air, time stretching like taffy as I watched the guardrail rush toward me.
Then—nothing.
I opened my eyes to silence. Not the peaceful quiet of a hospital room, but the absolute absence of sound that comes before you realize something is terribly wrong. I stood on the asphalt, my heels clicking against the pavement as I turned toward the wreckage behind me.
My breath caught in my throat. There, twisted in the mangled remains of my sedan, was my body. My face was turned at an impossible angle, dark hair matted with blood, my business suit torn and stained crimson. The signed contracts lay scattered like confetti around the wreckage, some pages fluttering in the night breeze.
"No," I whispered, but no sound emerged from my lips. I reached toward my broken form, desperate to touch my own face, to somehow wake myself from this nightmare. My hand passed through the twisted metal like smoke through air.
Panic clawed at my chest. I tried to scream, opening my mouth wide, but silence stretched around me like a vacuum. The harder I fought to make noise, to move something, to prove I was still here, the more the reality settled over me like ice water.
I was dead.
In my peripheral vision, a soft golden light began to glow, warm and inviting. It pulsed gently, and I felt an inexplicable pull toward it, a promise of peace and rest. But when I tried to step forward, something invisible held me back—chains I couldn't see, anchors I couldn't break. The light flickered, as if waiting, then gradually faded.
Sirens pierced the night air, growing louder as red and blue lights painted the crash site in violent colors. I watched, detached and horrified, as paramedics rushed to my car. They worked with practiced efficiency, checking for vital signs that no longer existed, speaking in medical jargon that confirmed what I already knew.
"Time of death, 11:47 PM."
The words hit me like physical blows. I followed the ambulance as it pulled away, my spirit somehow tethered to the vehicle carrying my corpse. Inside, the paramedics worked with respectful solemnity, covering my face with a white sheet that seemed to glow under the harsh fluorescent lights.
Then, without understanding how or why, I found myself drifting through the familiar streets toward home. The pull was magnetic, irresistible—as if invisible threads connected me to the house where my daughter slept, where my husband should be waiting for news of my triumph.
I phased through the front door like a ghost in the movies I used to watch with Oaklynn. The living room was dark, but light spilled from under the master bedroom door upstairs. My feet—did I still have feet?—carried me up the stairs and through the closed door.
The scene that greeted me shattered what remained of my heart.
Robert lay tangled in our sheets with Aspyn, her blonde hair spread across my pillow like spilled sunlight. They were both naked, her head resting on his chest as his fingers traced lazy patterns on her bare shoulder. The sight of them in our bed, in the room where I'd given birth to his daughter's first words, where I'd comforted him through his father's death—it was obscene.
Robert's phone buzzed on the nightstand. He reached for it lazily, squinting at the screen in the dim light.
"Police department," he murmured, sitting up slightly. Aspyn stirred against him as he answered. "Robert Griffin speaking."
I watched his face as the officer delivered the news. My husband's expression shifted from mild annoyance to surprise, but never—not once—to grief. When he hung up, Aspyn was already sitting up, her eyes bright with curiosity.
"What was that about, darling?"
"Lena's been in an accident," Robert said, his tone flat and businesslike. "Her car went off the road. She's... she's dead."
Aspyn's hand flew to her mouth in a performance of shock that would have won awards. "Oh my God, Robert. How terrible. Are you alright?"
He shrugged, already reaching for her again. "I suppose this simplifies things."
Simplifies things. My death—simplified things.
I tried to scream again, to rage, to somehow make them see me standing there. But I remained invisible, voiceless, trapped between worlds as the two people who had destroyed my life settled back into each other's arms, my corpse not yet cold in the morgue.
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