
Husband's Lie and My Demise
Chapter 2
The funeral was a blur of black clothes and hollow condolences. I watched them lower Eleanor into the ground, my hands gripping the edges of the burial program so tightly the paper cut into my palms. Augustus stood beside me, dry-eyed and distant, accepting sympathies with the mechanical grace of someone performing a social obligation rather than burying his mother.
Zara stood on his other side.
She'd worn white—claimed it was what Eleanor would have wanted, something about celebrating life rather than mourning death. But I saw the calculation in it, the way it made her look ethereal and pure against the sea of mourning black, the way Augustus's eyes kept drifting to her like she was some kind of angel.
When we returned home that evening, I couldn't hold it in any longer. The silence in our house felt suffocating, thick with Eleanor's absence and the weight of what Augustus had done. I found him in his study, already back in his reading chair with a medical journal, as if his mother hadn't just been buried hours ago.
"We need to talk," I said.
He didn't look up. "Not tonight, Valeria. I'm exhausted."
"You were wrong." The words came out sharper than I intended. "About who saved you. About everything."
That got his attention. He set down the journal slowly, his expression shifting to that patronizing look I'd come to hate. "Don't start this again."
"I'm not starting anything. I'm ending it." I pulled out the folder I'd been carrying—medical records I'd requested from the hospital, dated three years ago. "These are my records from the day of the mudslide. Look at them."
He took the papers with obvious reluctance, his eyes scanning the pages. I watched his face, searching for recognition, for understanding, for anything that looked like belief.
"Severe lacerations on both palms," I said, my voice steady despite my racing heart. "Broken ribs. Contusions consistent with debris impact. All documented within two hours of the mudslide. I pulled you out, Augustus. I risked my life to drag you from that collapsed building. Not Zara. Me."
"These could be from anything." He tossed the papers onto his desk like they were garbage. "You could have gotten injured trying to help after the fact, or—"
"Look at the timestamps. Look at the doctor's notes. I was admitted before Zara even arrived at the hospital."
"Convenient." His voice dripped with disdain. "You've had three years to fabricate this, Valeria. To forge documents, to—"
"Fabricate?" I felt something crack inside me. "You think I'm lying?"
"I think you're jealous." He stood, towering over me with the full force of his arrogance. "I think you can't stand that someone else holds a place in my heart, that I owe Zara a debt you can never—"
The doorbell rang, cutting through his words like a blade.
Augustus brushed past me to answer it, and I heard Zara's voice, sweet and concerned, floating in from the foyer. "I hope we're not intruding. I just wanted to check on you both after today..."
When I emerged from the study, Zara was already inside, with Margaret leaning on her arm. The older woman looked healthier than I'd ever seen her, color in her cheeks, breathing easy. Eleanor's heart, beating in her chest.
The sight of it made me want to scream.
"Valeria." Zara's smile was poison wrapped in silk. "I'm so sorry for your loss. Eleanor was such a wonderful woman."
"Get out of my house," I said.
Zara's eyes widened with practiced innocence. "I don't understand. I just wanted to—"
"She's been making accusations," Augustus interrupted, his tone apologetic as he addressed Zara. "Claiming she was the one who saved me. That you've been lying all this time."
Zara's hand flew to her mouth, the perfect picture of wounded disbelief. "What? Valeria, why would you say something like that?"
"Because it's true." I held my ground even as they both stared at me like I was delusional. "I have medical records. Evidence. Proof that I—"
"I have proof too." Zara pulled out her phone, swiping through photos with the confidence of someone who'd rehearsed this moment a thousand times. "Pictures from that day. Witness statements. Look—here's me pulling Augustus from the debris. Here's my injury from the rebar that nearly killed me."
I looked at the images she thrust toward me. They were good—I had to give her that. Somehow she'd managed to create an entire false narrative, complete with photos that could have been from any disaster scene, statements from people I'd never heard of.
"Those are fake," I said, but my voice sounded weak even to my own ears.
Zara's eyes filled with tears. "I risked everything for him. I still have nightmares about that day, about almost losing him. And now you want to take that away from me? To steal credit for the most important thing I've ever done?"
Margaret spoke for the first time, her voice trembling with emotion. "My daughter is a hero. She saved your husband's life, and this is how you repay her? With lies and jealousy?"
"Augustus." I turned to him, desperate for him to see reason, to remember the man he used to be. "Please. You know me. You know I wouldn't lie about something like this."
But the man looking back at me was a stranger. "I know you've been acting erratic since Mom's death. I know you've been unstable, making wild claims—"
"Unstable?" The word hit like a slap.
"Maybe you should talk to someone," he continued, his voice taking on that clinical tone that made my skin crawl. "A therapist. Someone who can help you process your grief in healthier ways."
Zara touched his arm, a gesture of support that made me want to rip her hand away. "I'm worried about her too. Maybe we should call some of her friends, let them know she's going through a difficult time."
"That's a good idea," Augustus said, already pulling out his phone. "I'll reach out to her colleagues too. They should know she needs support right now."
I watched them, these two people who were systematically dismantling my credibility, my truth, my entire reality. And I understood with crystalline clarity that this was just the beginning.
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