
Mother's Death, His Choice
Chapter 2
The machines fell silent at 3:47 AM.
I watched the green line on the monitor flatten into an endless, accusatory horizon as Dr. Peterson emerged from behind the surgical curtain, his scrubs stained with my mother's blood. His eyes met mine through the observation window, and I knew before he even shook his head.
"I'm sorry, Miss Montgomery. We did everything we could, but the complications were too severe. The delay in getting the specialized procedure she needed..."
His words faded into white noise. My legs gave out, and I found myself on the cold hospital floor, staring at the tiles that suddenly seemed to stretch endlessly in every direction. The world had just ended, but somehow the fluorescent lights kept humming overhead.
They let me sit with her afterward. Mom looked peaceful finally, the lines of pain erased from her face. Her hand was still warm in mine, and for a moment I could pretend she was just sleeping. That any second she'd squeeze my fingers and ask me to make her tea with too much honey, the way she always liked it.
"I'm so sorry, Mom," I whispered, brushing a strand of gray hair from her forehead. "I tried to get him here. I tried so hard."
My phone felt like lead in my trembling hands as I dialed Graham's number one last time. Maybe now he'd answer. Maybe now he'd understand that this wasn't some dramatic ploy for attention.
The phone rang once, twice—then a voice answered that made my blood freeze.
"Graham's phone." Daisy's voice was sickeningly sweet, with an undertone of satisfaction that made my stomach lurch. "He's busy with more important matters right now."
I stared at Mom's still face, my throat closing. "Daisy, I need to speak to Graham. My mother—"
"Is probably fine, just like always." Her laugh was like broken glass. "You really should find a new way to get attention, Harper. This whole sick mother routine is getting old."
The line went dead.
I sat there holding my mother's cooling hand, Daisy's words echoing in the sterile silence. More important matters. The woman I loved was dead, and Graham was somewhere playing doctor to his colleague's manufactured crisis.
Hours crawled by before I finally reached him directly. The sun was rising outside the hospital windows, painting everything in shades of gold that felt obscene in the face of such darkness.
"Harper, what the hell?" Graham's voice was sharp with irritation when he finally answered. "I've got fifteen missed calls from you. Do you have any idea what time it is?"
"She's gone, Graham." The words felt like swallowing glass. "Mom died during surgery. She's gone."
Silence stretched between us, and for a heartbeat I thought maybe he understood. Maybe he'd realize what his absence had cost.
"Stop it, Harper." His voice was cold, clinical. "This manipulation has gone far enough. Your mother is fine—you always pull this dramatic bullshit when you want attention."
I gripped the phone tighter, my knuckles white. "Graham, I'm at the hospital. She died at 3:47 this morning. Dr. Peterson did the surgery, but—"
"Enough!" His shout made me flinch. "I'm not playing this game anymore. You're a liar, Harper. You've always been a liar, just like my mother said. This is exactly the kind of manipulative crap she warned me about."
In the background, I could hear Daisy's voice, soft and poisonous: "Don't let her guilt-trip you, Graham. You know how she gets when she doesn't have your full attention."
"You're right," Graham said, and I realized he wasn't talking to me anymore. "Harper, lose my number. I'm done with your games."
The dial tone rang in my ears like a funeral bell.
Two days later, I walked into St. Catherine's Church with shaking hands and a memorial candle that cost more than I could afford. The sanctuary was empty except for an elderly woman praying in the front pew, her whispered words mixing with the echo of my footsteps.
I lit the candle for Mom in the small alcove dedicated to remembrance, watching the flame dance against the darkness. "I'll keep it burning for you," I promised the silence. "Every day until... until I figure out how to live without you."
The flame was small but steady, a tiny beacon in the overwhelming darkness that had swallowed my world. I stayed there for an hour, finding the first moment of peace I'd felt since that terrible morning.
When I returned the next day, the alcove was dark.
My candle was gone, extinguished, the wax scraped away as if it had never existed. I stared at the empty space where Mom's light should have been, my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Excuse me," I called to Father Martinez as he arranged flowers near the altar. "The memorial candle I lit yesterday—what happened to it?"
His face grew uncomfortable. "Ah, Miss Montgomery. I'm sorry, but Dr. Riley came by with his... companion. The young lady found the candle distressing. She said it made her uncomfortable, so Dr. Riley asked us to remove it."
The church walls seemed to close in around me. Graham had been here. With Daisy. And he'd snuffed out the only light I'd managed to kindle for my mother's memory because it made his precious colleague uncomfortable.
I sank into the nearest pew, the weight of betrayal crushing down on me like a physical thing. Even in death, Mom couldn't have this one small dignity. Even her memory was too inconvenient for Graham's new priorities.
The empty alcove stared back at me, dark and final as a grave.
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