
Husband's Mistress Kills Mom
Chapter 3
The ICU waiting room became my prison for the next six hours. Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead like angry wasps, casting everything in a sickly yellow glow that made the beige walls look jaundiced. I sat in the same plastic chair, my body aching from the rigid position, watching the digital clock above the nurses' station tick away the minutes while my mother fought for every breath.
Dr. Chen emerged from Mom's room every hour with updates that grew progressively grimmer. "Her oxygen saturation is dropping." "We're increasing the supplemental oxygen." "Her blood pressure is becoming unstable." Each report felt like another nail in a coffin I wasn't ready to build.
I called Alexander seventeen times. Seventeen. Each call went straight to voicemail, his cheerful recorded voice a mockery of the crisis unfolding here. Where was he? Where was the man who'd promised to love and support me through better or worse?
Around midnight, desperate for any connection to the outside world, I opened Instagram on my phone. The screen loaded slowly on the hospital's weak WiFi, and when it finally appeared, my world tilted sideways.
There they were.
Alexander and Scarlett at Velvet, the most exclusive nightclub downtown. The timestamp showed the photos were posted just twenty minutes ago. In the first image, Alexander had his arms around Scarlett's waist as she threw her head back in laughter, her white dress now replaced by something black and glittering that caught the club's neon lights. The caption read: "Living our best life! ✨💃 #PositiveVibes #TrustTheUniverse"
I scrolled down with trembling fingers. More photos. Scarlett holding a champagne flute, her lips curved in a triumphant smile. Alexander spinning her on the dance floor, both of them grinning like they didn't have a care in the world. The final photo showed them clinking glasses, Scarlett's caption reading: "Celebrating new beginnings and trusting the flow! 🥂 When you release resistance, magic happens! #Blessed #Manifestation"
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the waiting room floor. A passing nurse glanced over with concern, but I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. While my mother lay dying twenty feet away—dying because of the decision they'd made together—they were dancing. Celebrating. Toasting to "new beginnings" like they'd just accomplished something wonderful.
The cruelty of it hit me like a physical blow. This wasn't just neglect or thoughtlessness. This was deliberate. Scarlett's captions weren't random—they were messages. Declarations of victory. She'd orchestrated my mother's death and was celebrating it like a conquest.
I retrieved my phone and called Alexander again. This time, someone answered.
"Lily?" His voice was thick, slurred with alcohol and loud music. "What's wrong now?"
"What's wrong?" I whispered, my voice hoarse from hours of crying. "Mom is dying, Alexander. Her oxygen levels are critical. Where are you?"
"I told you, we're trusting the universe's plan," he said, and I could hear Scarlett giggling in the background. "You need to stop being so negative. That energy isn't helping anyone."
"Negative?" The word came out as a strangled laugh. "My mother is dying because you removed her life support, and you're at a nightclub!"
"We're maintaining positive vibrations," Scarlett's voice drifted through the phone, clearly speaking loud enough for me to hear. "Grief and fear only create more darkness. We're sending light and love from here."
The line went dead.
I stared at the phone for a long moment, then slowly placed it face-down on the chair beside me. Something cold and final settled in my chest, like ice forming over a deep well. The man I'd married, the man I'd trusted with my heart and my life, was celebrating while my mother died from his choices.
At 3:47 AM, the alarms started screaming.
Nurses rushed into Mom's room, their faces grim with professional urgency. Dr. Chen appeared, her hair disheveled from being called in during the night. I pressed myself against the glass partition, watching them work over my mother's still form.
Dr. Chen emerged twenty minutes later, her eyes red-rimmed with exhaustion and something that looked like anger.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. George," she said quietly. "We did everything we could, but without the ventilator support, her lungs couldn't sustain adequate oxygen levels. She passed peacefully."
I nodded, the words floating past me like distant thunder. Peaceful. As if there was anything peaceful about dying because your son-in-law chose his mistress's comfort over your life.
I sat with Mom's body until dawn, holding her cooling hand and listening to the silence where the ventilator's rhythm used to be. Her face looked younger somehow, the lines of pain smoothed away, but her wedding ring caught the morning light streaming through the window—a reminder of the love and commitment that Alexander had just trampled into dust.
When I finally called him at 6 AM, he answered on the first ring, his voice thick with sleep.
"Alexander, she's gone," I said simply.
A pause. Then: "I'm sorry for your loss, Lily. I know this is hard, but maybe now we can focus on moving forward with positive energy. Scarlett says grief is just love with nowhere to go, and we need to transform it into something beautiful."
I hung up without another word.
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