
Dead Wife's Unseen Revenge
Chapter 3
The fluorescent lights in the hospital corridor buzzed with mechanical indifference as I drifted through the walls of St. Mary's Medical Center. My father's room was on the third floor, and I found myself drawn there by invisible threads of love and guilt that death couldn't sever.
Through the doorway, I saw him propped up in his hospital bed, his once-strong frame diminished by months of treatment. The IV drip attached to his arm delivered the expensive medications I'd been secretly funding, the bills I'd hidden from Robert while letting my father believe his son-in-law was the generous benefactor.
"Has my daughter called yet?" Dad asked the nurse adjusting his IV, his voice carrying that hopeful note I'd heard every day for the past two weeks. "Lena usually calls by now. She's probably just busy with that big business deal."
The young nurse—Sarah, according to her name tag—exchanged a glance with her colleague. They'd been fielding this same question for days, their discomfort growing more obvious each time. "I'm sure she'll call soon, Mr. Matthews. You know how demanding those corporate negotiations can be."
I stood beside his bed, my spirit screaming silently as I watched him nod with complete faith. His weathered hands smoothed the hospital blanket, and I could see the photo on his bedside table—the one of me holding infant Oaklynn, both of us laughing at something Robert had said during happier times.
"That son-in-law of mine has been so good to us," Dad continued, his eyes bright with gratitude that felt like daggers in my chest. "Covering all these medical expenses without complaint. Lena married a good man, even if she works too hard sometimes."
If only he knew. If only I could tell him that every dollar of his treatment came from my sleepless nights, my skipped meals, my body slowly breaking down as I worked myself to the bone. Robert hadn't contributed a cent—he'd barely acknowledged Dad's illness existed.
Dr. Peterson entered the room with a clipboard, his expression professionally neutral. "Good morning, James. How are we feeling today?"
"Much better, thanks to my family's support." Dad's smile was radiant with misplaced pride. "My daughter's finalizing a billion-dollar deal that'll save both our companies. And Robert—my son-in-law—he's been taking care of everything here. I'm a lucky man."
I wanted to shake him, to somehow make him see the truth. But I could only watch as he reached for his phone, checking it for the hundredth time that day. "She usually calls during her lunch break. Probably running late because of meetings."
The call would never come. I was lying in a morgue drawer while he waited with unwavering faith, protected by the careful lies I'd constructed to spare him from my failing marriage.
Two weeks passed like a blur of sterile corridors and unanswered questions. I found myself pulled between the hospital and the house where my real family lived—or what remained of it. It was during one of these transitions that I witnessed Aspyn's next performance.
She stood in our kitchen, one hand pressed dramatically against her chest as Robert poured his morning coffee. "It's getting worse," she whispered, her voice breathy with manufactured distress. "The pains are so sharp, darling. I can barely breathe."
Robert was at her side instantly, his face creased with concern I'd never seen him show for my suffering. "We're seeing Dr. Harrison today. He'll figure out what's wrong."
I followed them to the appointment, watching as Aspyn's symptoms manifested with theatrical precision. Every time Robert looked at her, she'd wince or clutch her chest. When he stepped out to take a call, she sat normally, checking her manicure with bored indifference.
Dr. Harrison—a thin man with expensive shoes and nervous eyes—performed his examination with peculiar focus. "The tests show some irregularities," he announced, his tone carefully measured. "Given your symptoms, I'm recommending immediate cardiac evaluation."
Later, I watched through the window of a coffee shop as Aspyn slid an envelope across the table to this same doctor. Their conversation was brief, businesslike. She spoke in low, urgent tones while he nodded, counting the bills inside the envelope before tucking it into his jacket.
Within days, the diagnosis came: critical heart failure requiring immediate transplantation.
That evening, as Oaklynn slept peacefully upstairs, I stood in our living room watching the conversation that would seal my daughter's fate. Aspyn collapsed artfully into Robert's arms, tears streaming down her face.
"Finding a compatible donor is so difficult," she sobbed against his chest. "The waiting lists are years long, and I don't have years, Robert. I don't have months."
Robert held her tighter, his jaw set with determination. "I'll do whatever it takes. Whatever it takes."
Aspyn pulled back slightly, her eyes glistening with calculated tears. "Sometimes fate provides solutions in unexpected ways." Her gaze drifted meaningfully toward the ceiling, toward the room where my innocent daughter dreamed of her missing mother.
"What are you saying?" Robert's voice was barely a whisper.
"Oaklynn is young, healthy. A perfect match." The words fell like poison from her lips. "Wouldn't Lena want her daughter to save someone's life? And after all, she abandoned you both anyway. You need to think about our future together."
I screamed until my spirit felt raw, but no sound emerged. I watched Robert's face cycle through shock, resistance, and then—God help him—calculation.
Fifteen minutes. That's all it took for him to nod slowly and say, "I'll make the arrangements."
My daughter's death sentence, delivered with a lover's kiss.
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