
Husband Abandoned Me in Desert
Chapter 3
The beeping came first. Steady, rhythmic, mechanical. Then the cold—antiseptic air against my skin, so different from the suffocating heat that had tried to kill me. I forced my eyes open, wincing at the fluorescent lights overhead.
ICU. I was in an ICU.
"Emmeline." Blake's voice, rough with exhaustion. Their hand wrapped around mine, careful of the IV line. "Thank god."
I tried to speak, but my throat felt like sandpaper. Blake reached for a cup, helped me take small sips of water through a straw. The simple act of swallowing hurt.
"How long?" I finally managed.
"Eighteen hours since we pulled you out." Blake's jaw tightened. "The doctors said another twenty minutes in that car and you wouldn't have made it. Your organs were starting to fail, Emmeline."
The words settled over me like stones. Twenty minutes. That's how close Deacon had come to being a widower. That's how little my life had mattered when weighed against Carly's tears.
A woman in a white coat appeared at the foot of my bed, her expression professionally grave. "Mrs. Shaw, I'm Dr. Sarah Chen. You've been through quite an ordeal. Severe heatstroke, dangerously elevated core temperature, early signs of kidney stress. We've stabilized you, but you'll need to remain under observation for at least another forty-eight hours."
I nodded, the movement making my head throb. "My husband—does he know I'm here?"
Blake's expression darkened. "He hasn't called. Not once. I checked your phone—nothing. As far as I can tell, he's still out there playing desert tour guide with Carly, completely unaware his wife nearly died."
The clarity from the car returned, sharp and cutting. This wasn't shock or confusion speaking anymore. This was truth, documented by medical equipment and witnessed by professionals. Deacon had locked me in a car knowing I needed help, and he hadn't even bothered to check if I'd survived.
"Blake," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "I need you to help me with something before Deacon gets back and tries to spin this into another situation where I'm overreacting."
Blake leaned forward, eyes alert. "Anything."
"The car has an onboard computer system. It logs everything—when doors lock, internal temperature, GPS coordinates. I need that data. And there were security cameras in the hotel lobby this morning. Carly went through my bag while I was in the restroom. I saw her, but I didn't think anything of it at the time." My fingers curled around the blanket. "I need that footage."
Understanding flickered across Blake's face. "You're building a case."
"I'm protecting myself." The words came out harder than I intended. "Because when Deacon realizes I'm gone, he's going to come back with a story about how this was all a misunderstanding, how Carly didn't mean any harm, how I'm being dramatic about a simple mistake. And I'm done being the reasonable one."
Blake pulled out their phone, fingers already moving across the screen. "The car's manufacturer has a data access portal for owners. I can request the logs remotely—temperature curves, lock engagement timestamps, everything. And I'll call the hotel now about preserving their security footage."
While Blake made the calls, I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting them to keep my thoughts from fracturing. Somewhere out in that desert, Deacon was probably just now noticing the shattered car window, the missing wife. Would he be worried? Or would his first instinct be irritation that I'd disrupted his time with Carly?
The door burst open, and my father filled the doorway. Thomas Parker rarely showed emotion in public, but the mask cracked when he saw me—tubes, monitors, the bruises already forming on my arms from the IVs.
"Emmeline." He crossed to my bedside in three strides, his hand hovering over mine as if afraid to hurt me. "My god. What happened?"
I told him. All of it. The medication Carly fed to the fox, Deacon's dismissal of my emergency, the locked doors, the climbing temperature. My father's face went from shock to something cold and terrible.
"That boy," he said, and his voice carried the weight of boardrooms where fortunes were made and destroyed. "That arrogant, ungrateful—"
"Dad." I interrupted, and something in my tone made him stop. "I need to tell you something I should have told you three years ago. I know you gave Deacon his position. I know you made the calls, opened the doors, built his entire career. He thinks he earned it all himself."
My father's eyes widened slightly—the only sign of surprise he ever showed. "You knew?"
"I've known for two years." I swallowed, the admission bitter. "I never told him because I was trying to protect his ego, his pride. I thought if he knew the truth, it would destroy him. But he nearly destroyed me instead."
"Emmeline—"
"Pull the plugs, Dad." The words came out calm, final. "Every connection you made for him, every door you opened, every business relationship you facilitated—I want them gone. Strip it all away. Show him exactly what he built on his own, which is nothing."
My father studied my face for a long moment. Then something shifted in his expression, the worried father receding as the ruthless businessman emerged. "Consider it done."
Blake looked up from their phone, screen glowing with data. "The car logs are in. Temperature peaked at 131 degrees. Doors were locked at 2:47 PM via key fob remote. And the hotel just confirmed they have Carly on camera going through a designer handbag matching the description of yours—timestamp 9:23 AM, shortly after you entered the restroom."
I closed my eyes, not from exhaustion but from the grim satisfaction of knowing the truth was now documented, preserved, undeniable. When Deacon finally showed up with his explanations and excuses, I would have something he'd never expected me to possess.
Evidence. Power. And absolutely no intention of being reasonable anymore.
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