
After My Husband’s Niece Murdered Our Daughter, He Protected Her
Chapter 4
I woke to the smell of industrial cleaner and the weight of restraints cutting into my wrists.
The ceiling was acoustic tile, but different from the hospital—older, water-stained. Fluorescent lights hummed overhead, the kind that made everything look corpse-gray. I tried to sit up and couldn't. Leather straps crossed my chest, my waist, my thighs.
Panic hit like a fist to the sternum.
"Mrs. McDonald." A woman's voice, smooth as silk over steel. "I'm Dr. Sarah Chen. You're at Serenity Hills Wellness Center. Your husband brought you here for treatment."
She moved into my field of vision—fifties, elegant in the way of women who've weaponized their credentials. Her smile didn't reach her eyes.
"Treatment for what?" My voice came out hoarse, drugged. How long had I been unconscious?
"Postpartum psychosis with violent ideation." She consulted a tablet, her manicured nail tapping the screen. "You've been experiencing delusions, paranoia, and homicidal thoughts toward your husband's niece. The audio recording was quite disturbing."
"That was edited. She—"
"This is a safe space, Violet. But recovery requires acceptance." Dr. Chen produced a paper cup with two pills. "These will help."
I clamped my mouth shut.
Her smile thinned. She nodded to someone behind me. Hands—large, male, impersonal—forced my jaw open. The pills went down my throat. Water followed, choking me.
"We'll try again tomorrow," Dr. Chen said. "Hopefully with better cooperation."
The days bled together. They kept me sedated enough that time became elastic—stretching and compressing without pattern. I'd surface from chemical fog to find myself in different rooms: a bare therapy office, a tiled shower, a chair facing a blank wall.
The sessions with Dr. Chen followed a script. She'd ask about Daisy, and when I tried to explain what really happened, orderlies would appear. They'd drag me to the "hydrotherapy room"—a clinical name for a tiled chamber with a steel tub.
The first time, I fought. The second time, I begged. By the third, I'd learned to hold my breath.
They'd push my head under until my lungs screamed, until the world went spotty, until I was certain this was how I'd die—drowned in a psychiatric facility while my daughter's murderer walked free.
Then they'd pull me up, gasping, and Dr. Chen would ask again: "Tell me about your delusions regarding your daughter's death."
I learned to lie. "It was SIDS. I was confused. I'm sorry."
"Good. Progress."
They gave me a notebook. Every morning, I had to write: *I am a danger to myself and others. I am grateful for this treatment. I am getting better.*
My hand would cramp after the first hundred repetitions. They made me write five hundred.
But I was learning their patterns. The orderlies changed shifts at six. Dr. Chen left by seven. The medication cart came at eight, and the night nurse—a tired woman named Gloria who looked like she hated this place as much as I did—would sometimes forget to watch me swallow.
I started palming the pills. Hiding them under my tongue until I could spit them into the toilet. The fog began to lift, and with clarity came rage.
And a plan.
I began hoarding. A paperclip from Dr. Chen's desk when she turned to adjust the blinds. A plastic key card that fell from an orderly's pocket during a transfer. A shard of glass from a light bulb I deliberately broke, then hid in my pillowcase while they cleaned up the rest.
I watched the delivery schedules. Every Tuesday and Friday, a truck came to the loading dock behind the kitchen. Laundry out, supplies in. The dock door stayed open for exactly twelve minutes.
I needed a distraction. Something big enough to pull staff away from the exits but not so catastrophic they'd lock down the building.
The laundry room was on my floor. I'd been assigned folding duty—part of my "therapeutic routine." I started collecting dryer lint, stuffing it into my pockets during each shift. I stole a lighter from Gloria's purse when she left it on the med cart.
On a Friday, three months after Hugo had me committed, I set the lint pile on fire in a trash can behind the industrial dryers.
The smoke detectors screamed. Staff rushed toward the alarm, shouting into radios. I slipped out the side door, my heart a drum against my ribs, and ran for the loading dock.
The truck was there. The dock door was open. A laundry cart sat waiting, half-full of soiled linens.
I climbed inside, pulling sheets over my head, and prayed to a God I'd stopped believing in the day Daisy died.
The cart jerked forward. Voices shouted, but no one checked the load. The truck's engine rumbled to life.
And then I was moving—away from Serenity Hills, away from Dr. Chen and her drowning room, away from the place where Hugo had tried to erase me.
I didn't cry. I didn't have tears left.
I just held onto that shard of glass in my pocket and waited for the truck to stop.
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