
Divorce After Daughter's Death
Chapter 3
The house felt different in the weeks after the funeral—hollower, as if Lily's absence had carved out spaces that could never be filled. I moved through the rooms like a ghost, touching surfaces that no longer held her fingerprints, listening for laughter that would never come again.
Elias threw himself into work with renewed intensity, leaving early and returning late, his phone perpetually glued to his ear. But it wasn't business calls that consumed his attention—it was her. Always her.
"I have to check on them," he'd say, grabbing his keys with that familiar urgency that had once been reserved for our emergencies. "Marilyn's still struggling, and the boy keeps having nightmares about the accident."
The accident that took our daughter while he was busy playing savior to a woman who wasn't even his responsibility.
It was during one of these absences, while he rushed off to comfort Marilyn's latest crisis, that I made a decision that would change everything. I sat at his desk in the study, staring at his laptop, and felt something cold and calculating settle in my chest where warmth used to live.
The monitoring software was surprisingly easy to install—a few clicks, a simple download, and suddenly I had access to everything. His calls, his texts, his location history. All the digital breadcrumbs of his betrayal, laid out for me to follow.
What I discovered made my blood turn to ice.
April 2nd, 2:47 PM: Marilyn had called him seventeen times in the span of two hours. Seventeen desperate attempts to reach him while our daughter was fighting for her life just miles away.
2:47 PM - "Elias, please, something's wrong with my heart. I can't breathe."
2:52 PM - "The pain is getting worse. I think I need to go to the hospital."
3:15 PM - "Where are you? I'm scared. What if something happens to me?"
But it was the next discovery that shattered what remained of my faith in human decency. At 3:23 PM, while I was holding Lily's hand and begging her to stay with me, Marilyn had accessed Elias's phone settings and turned off all notifications from the hospital's number.
She had deliberately silenced the calls that could have brought him to our daughter's bedside.
The evidence was all there in the digital trail—her fingerprints on his notification settings, the timestamp showing exactly when she'd made the changes, even a text she'd sent to herself from his phone: "Tell Sloane I'm dealing with an emergency. Will call later."
She had orchestrated the entire thing. Created a fake medical emergency, monopolized his attention, then systematically blocked any attempt by the hospital to reach him. She had stolen his last moments with Lily, and she had done it deliberately.
My hands shook as I screenshotted everything—every call, every text, every manipulative lie she'd spun to keep him away from us when we needed him most. The woman I'd pitied, the fragile creature I'd tried to be gracious toward despite my growing resentment, had calculated our daughter's death as an acceptable loss in her campaign to reclaim Elias.
The study door creaked, and I quickly closed the laptop, my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Sloane?" Elias appeared in the doorway, his tie askew, exhaustion lining his face. "What are you doing in here?"
"Looking for the insurance papers," I lied smoothly, though inside I was screaming. "For Lily's final bills."
His face crumpled slightly at the mention of our daughter, guilt flickering across his features like shadows. "I should have been there," he whispered, not for the first time since the funeral. "I should have answered the phone."
"Yes," I said quietly, "you should have."
The next morning, after he'd left for another of his mercy missions to Marilyn's apartment, I made a phone call that would set everything in motion.
"Sarah Chen's office, how may I help you?"
"I'd like to schedule a consultation," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. "I need a divorce attorney. A very good one."
Sarah Chen had a reputation that preceded her—a steel-wrapped-in-silk lawyer who specialized in protecting wealthy wives from husbands who thought they could have their cake and eat it too. Her office in downtown occupied the top floor of a gleaming high-rise, all glass and chrome and quiet efficiency.
"Mrs. Griffin," she said, shaking my hand with a grip that spoke of confidence and control. "Please, sit down. Tell me what brings you here."
I told her everything. About Marilyn's return, about Elias's gradual abandonment of his family, about Lily's death and his absence during her final moments. But it was when I showed her the evidence I'd gathered—the digital trail of Marilyn's manipulation—that her eyes sharpened with interest.
"This is quite comprehensive," she murmured, scrolling through the screenshots on my phone. "Your husband's financial situation?"
"Substantial assets. Multiple properties, investment portfolios, business interests." I paused, then added with quiet determination, "I want him to pay for what he's done. Not just emotionally—financially. I want to take everything."
Sarah's smile was sharp as a blade. "Mrs. Griffin, I think we're going to work very well together."
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