
Discarded Wife's Vengeance
Discarded Wife's Vengeance Chapter 1
The antiseptic smell of the veterinary clinic burned my nostrils as I hunched forward in the hard plastic chair, cradling Charlie's emaciated body against my chest. His breathing came in shallow, ragged gasps that seemed to echo in the crowded waiting room. Five other pet owners sat around me, their faces a blur as I focused on the weak thump of Charlie's heart against my palm.
"Mrs. Mitchell?"
I flinched at the name—a reminder of everything I'd lost. Five years of marriage erased with the stroke of a pen, leaving me with nothing but the clothes on my back and this dying dog. Ryan's parting gift, his final cruelty.
"It's just Ms. now," I corrected softly, rising to my feet. Charlie whimpered as I shifted him in my arms, his golden fur dull and patchy against the faded blue of my sweater.
Dr. Evans' expression was gentle but clinical as she examined Charlie, her fingers probing his protruding ribs, checking his cloudy eyes. I stood frozen, watching her methodical movements, knowing what was coming before she even spoke.
"I'm sorry, but his condition is severe," she said, meeting my eyes with practiced compassion. "Advanced malnutrition, suspected kidney failure, parasitic infection. At this stage..." She paused, her voice softening. "The kindest option would be euthanasia."
The word hung in the air between us, heavy and final. My throat constricted.
"How much would it cost to treat him?" My voice sounded distant, as though someone else was speaking.
Dr. Evans sighed. "Minimum of two thousand for initial treatment, with no guarantee of success. Given his condition—"
"And the... other option?" I couldn't bring myself to say it.
"One hundred and fifty dollars."
I nodded numbly, my hand instinctively reaching for my purse—the same purse where I kept my last $280, all that remained after Ryan had systematically stripped away everything else. The money that needed to last until I found a job, a real place to stay beyond the weekly-rate studio I'd managed to secure.
Charlie's eyes found mine, rheumy and pained but somehow still trusting. In that moment, I saw myself reflected in them—discarded, deemed worthless, waiting for the final blow.
"No," I whispered, then louder: "No. I'm not putting him down."
Dr. Evans' eyebrows rose slightly. "Ms. Mitchell, I understand this is difficult, but—"
"He's not dying today." Something hardened inside me, a small kernel of defiance where there had only been despair. "What can you give me for two hundred and eighty dollars?"
Twenty minutes later, I walked out of the clinic with Charlie wrapped in my jacket, a bag of specialized food, antibiotics, and vitamin supplements clutched in my free hand. The remaining $30 in my wallet felt like a ticking clock.
Back in my studio—a glorified room with a hotplate and a bathroom smaller than Ryan's walk-in closet—I created a makeshift bed for Charlie from my only spare blanket. As I measured out the medication into a syringe, my hands trembled.
"We're in this together now," I told him, gently parting his fur to administer the injection. "Just you and me against the world."
Three days passed in a blur of medication schedules, hand-feeding, and sleepless nights. By the fourth day, Charlie managed to keep down a full meal. By the seventh, he was standing on his own, his eyes clearer.
On the tenth day, I clipped a frayed leash to his collar for our first real walk. The Seattle drizzle coated everything in a fine mist as we made our way slowly down the block. Charlie's legs were still wobbly, but there was new energy in his step, a determination that mirrored my own desperate resolve.
We had reached the corner store when Charlie suddenly froze, his nose twitching. Before I could react, he lunged forward with surprising strength, dragging me toward the curb.
"Charlie, stop!" I gasped, struggling to keep my balance on the wet sidewalk.
He ignored me, pawing frantically at something in the gutter. A soggy lottery scratch ticket, half-buried in wet leaves. I tugged at his leash, but he whined insistently, his eyes fixed on the discarded ticket.
With a sigh, I bent down and picked it up. "Happy now?"
Charlie's tail wagged for the first time since I'd had him.
Behind the store, sheltered from the rain, I absently scratched off the silver coating with my thumbnail. Three matching symbols appeared. I blinked, certain I was seeing things.
$1,000.
My hands began to shake. I looked down at Charlie, who was staring up at me with an intensity I'd never seen before. Through the store window behind us, a television flickered with CNBC's stock ticker. Charlie's ears perked up, his gaze shifting to the screen, then back to me, his entire body quivering with excitement.
Something passed between us in that moment—an understanding, a possibility. The first faint glimmer of hope in a world that had taken everything from me.
Discarded Wife's Vengeance of Contents
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