
Healing After His Betrayal
Chapter 3
"You're not thinking clearly, Emerald." Matthew's voice cut through our kitchen like a scalpel. "This obsession with your mother's testimony is concerning."
I gripped the counter edge, trying to steady myself. "It's not an obsession. She saw Genesis commit murder."
Matthew slammed his palm against the marble countertop. "For God's sake! Your mother is an elderly woman with failing eyesight who thinks she saw something in dim lighting."
"And you're sleeping with the defendant," I shot back, my voice trembling with rage.
His eyes narrowed dangerously. "Be very careful with your next words, Emerald."
I felt a chill run down my spine despite the warmth of the kitchen. Something in his tone made me step back instinctively.
"Did you think I wouldn't find out?" He reached into his briefcase and pulled out a manila folder. "Your condition is progressing faster than you've been telling me."
He slid the folder across the counter toward me. Inside were medical records—my medical records—with highlights marking my latest test results.
"Where did you get these?" I whispered.
"I'm your husband and your legal guardian," Matthew said coldly. "I have every right to access your medical information."
"Legal guardian?" The words felt like acid on my tongue.
Matthew straightened his tie, his expression calculating. "If you continue to interfere with my defense of Genesis, I'll have no choice but to have you declared mentally incompetent."
The room seemed to tilt beneath my feet. "You wouldn't."
"Wouldn't I?" His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Think about what's best for everyone, Emerald. Including your mother."
---
The rain came down in sheets that evening, pounding against the windows of my mother's apartment building. I'd come to check on her after our argument, worried about the threats she'd been receiving.
"Mom?" I called, knocking on her door. No answer.
I tried calling her phone, but it went straight to voicemail. A knot of anxiety formed in my stomach.
As I turned to leave, a flash of lightning illuminated the street below. A dark figure hurried across the road—my mother, clutching her umbrella against the wind.
I watched as she stepped into the crosswalk, her silver hair visible even from this distance. Then came the sound of screeching brakes and a sickening thud.
"Mom!" I screamed, racing down the stairs and out into the rain.
By the time I reached her, a small crowd had gathered. A garbage truck was stopped awkwardly in the middle of the road, its driver nowhere to be seen.
"Someone call an ambulance!" I shouted, dropping to my knees beside her still form.
Blood mixed with rainwater pooled beneath her head. Her eyes were closed, her skin already growing pale.
"Mom, please," I begged, taking her hand. "Hold on."
But she was already gone.
---
The cemetery was silent except for the patter of rain on umbrellas. I stood alone at my mother's graveside, the polished granite headstone gleaming with water droplets.
A few former colleagues had come, standing at a respectful distance. No one approached me—not since my diagnosis had become public knowledge.
"She was a good woman," Detective Chen said quietly, appearing at my side. "I'm sorry we couldn't do more."
"The cameras just happened to malfunction?" I asked, my voice hollow.
Chen's expression darkened. "Every angle covering that intersection went down simultaneously. And the truck's GPS tracker was disabled."
"It wasn't an accident."
"I can't prove that," she replied carefully. "Not yet."
A commotion at the cemetery entrance drew our attention. Matthew was hurrying toward us, his suit immaculate despite the rain.
"I'm so sorry," he said loudly enough for the others to hear. "I got held up in court."
I said nothing, turning back to stare at my mother's casket as it was lowered into the ground.
Matthew placed a hand on my shoulder, his touch making my skin crawl. "I know this is difficult, but—"
His phone rang, cutting him off. He glanced at the screen and his expression changed subtly.
"I need to take this," he murmured, stepping away.
I caught a glimpse of the caller ID before he turned away: GENESIS.
Whispers rippled through the small gathering. "Did you see that?" "Isn't that the woman..." "Poor Emerald..."
I stood motionless as dirt began to fall on my mother's casket, each clod of earth sealing away not just her body, but the last remnants of my old life.
In that moment, standing alone in the rain with Matthew's betrayal laid bare before what remained of my social circle, I realized I had lost more than just my mother today.
I had lost everything.
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