
Divorce After Daughter's Death
Chapter 1
The rain hammered against the hospital windows like accusations, each drop a reminder of how quickly everything could shatter. I pressed my palms against the cold glass of the waiting room, watching the parking lot blur through my tears as I waited for news about Lily.
"Mrs. Griffin?" The nurse's voice cut through my haze. "We've been trying to reach your husband for over an hour. Is there another number we can try?"
My phone buzzed in my trembling hands—another missed call from Elias's assistant. I'd already called him six times since the school contacted me about the accident. Each ring went straight to voicemail, that familiar recorded message mocking me with its professional politeness.
"He's... he's dealing with an emergency," I managed, the lie tasting bitter on my tongue. I knew exactly where he was—at Marilyn's apartment, probably holding her hand while she complained of chest pains that would mysteriously vanish once she had his undivided attention.
The fluorescent lights overhead buzzed like angry insects as I paced the sterile hallway. Other families clustered in small groups, whispering prayers and sharing worried glances, but I stood alone. Always alone now, ever since she came back into our lives with her sad eyes and convenient emergencies.
"Mrs. Griffin?" Dr. Martinez approached, his expression grave. "Your daughter is asking for her father. The surgery went as well as we could hope, but her injuries are extensive. She's conscious, and she keeps asking why Daddy isn't here."
The words hit me like physical blows. I followed him through the maze of corridors, my heels clicking against the linoleum in a rhythm that sounded like a countdown. Outside Lily's room, I paused, steeling myself for what I might find.
She looked so small in that hospital bed, dwarfed by machines and tubes that beeped and hummed with artificial life. Her favorite stuffed rabbit, Mr. Whiskers, sat on the bedside table where a nurse had placed it—a splash of worn brown fur against the clinical white.
"Mommy?" Her voice was barely a whisper, but it shattered something inside me. "Where's Daddy? I keep asking the nice lady, but she doesn't know."
I took her hand, so fragile in mine, and forced my voice to remain steady. "Daddy's coming, sweetheart. He'll be here soon."
But even as I spoke the words, I felt them crumbling. The clock on the wall ticked mercilessly—7:30, 8:15, 8:47. Each minute stretched like an eternity while Lily's eyes darted to the door, hope flickering and dimming with each passing moment.
"Does he know I got hurt?" she asked, her voice growing weaker. "I was being good, Mommy. I practiced piano just like he told me to. Maybe if I tell him about the song I learned..."
"He knows, baby." The lie scraped my throat raw. "He knows, and he loves you so much."
The machines began beeping faster, more urgent. Nurses rushed in, their faces tight with professional concern. I was pushed back, watching helplessly as they worked over my daughter, their movements precise but increasingly desperate.
"Mommy, I can't... I can't see very well," Lily whispered when they finally stepped back. "Is Daddy coming? I want to tell him about the recital. Mrs. Peterson said I played the best I ever have."
I climbed carefully onto the narrow bed, gathering her into my arms as gently as I could manage around the tubes and wires. "Tell me about it, sweetheart. Tell me everything."
She spoke in fragments, her voice fading in and out like a radio losing signal. Stories about school, about her friends, about the song she'd learned just for him—all the tiny, precious details of a seven-year-old's world that he was missing while he comforted another woman's tears.
"Will you sing to me?" she asked, her breathing becoming more labored. "The lullaby Daddy used to sing?"
I sang through my tears, my voice cracking on every note of the silly song Elias had made up when she was a baby. Her eyes fluttered closed, a small smile playing on her lips as if she could hear his voice instead of mine.
The final beep was different—longer, flatter, more final than all the others. In the sudden silence that followed, I held my daughter's still form and whispered all the words Elias would never get to say.
When he finally arrived three hours later, I was sitting in the hallway, clutching Mr. Whiskers against my chest. His hair was disheveled, his shirt wrinkled, and he smelled faintly of Marilyn's perfume.
"Sloane, I'm so sorry, I—" He stopped when he saw my face, saw the emptiness there.
"She died calling for her daddy," I said quietly, my voice eerily calm. "She asked a nurse why you weren't coming to help her."
I watched his world collapse in real time, watched understanding dawn in his eyes like a terrible sunrise. But it was too late—too late for apologies, too late for explanations, too late for everything that mattered.
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