
Husband Stole Mom's Surgery Fund
Chapter 1
The candles flickered in the dimming light of our Upper West Side apartment, casting dancing shadows across the mahogany dining table I'd spent all afternoon setting. Ten years. A decade of marriage deserved more than just any dinner—it deserved perfection. I adjusted the porcelain centerpiece one last time, running my fingers over the delicate surface. Porcelain. Traditional, but fitting. Beautiful and fragile, just like I'd been foolish enough to believe our marriage was.
The Château Margaux—Preston's favorite—sat breathing in its crystal decanter. I'd made his preferred meal: herb-crusted lamb with rosemary potatoes, the recipe Marisol had taught me during our first year together. My mother-in-law. The thought of her made me smile, genuine warmth spreading through my chest despite my husband's now forty-minute delay. At least I had her. At least someone in this family appreciated the effort I put into making a home.
I smoothed my navy dress—the one Preston had once said made my eyes look like sapphires—and checked my phone. No messages. No missed calls. The silence pressed against my ears, broken only by the soft jazz playing from the speakers.
Then my phone rang.
The number wasn't saved, but the 212 area code made my stomach tighten. "Hello?"
"Is this Francesca Harvey?" A man's voice, professional but urgent. "I'm calling from the ambulance en route to Mount Sinai Hospital. Your mother-in-law, Marisol Harvey, has suffered a massive heart attack. We're transporting her now—"
The crystal wine glass slipped from my hand, shattering against the hardwood floor. Red wine spread like blood across the wood, seeping into the carefully placed napkins.
"What? When? Is she—" My voice cracked, hands shaking as I grabbed my purse, my keys, already moving toward the door.
"She's critical, ma'am. We need you at Mount Sinai as soon as possible."
I don't remember the cab ride. Don't remember paying the driver or running through the emergency room doors. The fluorescent lights assaulted my senses, the smell of antiseptic and fear coating my throat. A nurse directed me to a small waiting area where a woman in surgical scrubs approached, her expression grave.
"Mrs. Harvey? I'm Dr. Elena Martinez." She gestured to a private corner, away from the other waiting families. My legs felt like water beneath me.
"How is she? Can I see her?" The questions tumbled out desperate and scattered.
Dr. Martinez's dark eyes held a sympathy that made my chest constrict. "Your mother-in-law suffered a severe myocardial infarction—a major heart attack. We've stabilized her temporarily, but she needs immediate surgery. Without intervention in the next hour, I'm afraid..." She pressed her lips together, the unspoken words hanging between us like a death sentence.
"Then do it. Do the surgery. Whatever she needs—" I was already pulling out my phone to call Preston, to tell him to get here now, that his mother was dying.
"Mrs. Harvey, the surgery is extensive. The cost will exceed two hundred thousand dollars." Dr. Martinez's voice remained steady, clinical, but not unkind. "Do you have insurance authorization or—"
"We have an emergency fund." Relief flooded through me, so intense I nearly laughed. Thank God. Thank God we'd been prepared for exactly this kind of crisis. "It's specifically for medical emergencies. Marisol set it up years ago, and we've been contributing to it. There should be more than enough. Just pull from that account—I can give you the information."
Dr. Martinez nodded, making a note. "I'll have our administrator verify the funds and we'll prep Mrs. Harvey for surgery immediately."
I paced the waiting room, leaving increasingly frantic messages for Preston. Where was he? Why wasn't he answering? This was his mother. Our son Joey's grandmother. The woman who'd welcomed me into this family with open arms when I'd felt so alone.
Twenty minutes crawled by like twenty hours.
When the hospital administrator appeared—a thin man in wire-rimmed glasses—I jumped to my feet. But something in his expression made the relief curdle in my stomach.
"Mrs. Harvey, I'm afraid there's a problem." He clutched a tablet against his chest like a shield. "The emergency fund account you referenced... it was completely emptied this afternoon."
The world tilted sideways. "What?"
"At 3:47 PM today, the entire balance—$247,000—was transferred out. The authorization came from Preston Harvey's credentials." He turned the tablet toward me, showing transaction records that blurred before my eyes.
My husband had stolen his dying mother's surgery money.
And somewhere in this city, he still wasn't answering my calls.
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