
My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father
My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father Chapter 1
The Tiffany box in my hand felt heavy, a dense weight of expectation for a fifth anniversary that was supposed to fix everything. The penthouse was silent, the kind of expensive silence that only money can buy in Manhattan—thick, pressurized, and smelling faintly of sandalwood and cold air. I set my keys on the marble console, the click echoing too loudly in the foyer.
"Graham?" My voice wavered. I cleared my throat, smoothing the silk of my dress. I needed to be perfect. Perfection was the only currency Graham accepted lately.
A strange sound drifted from the study down the hall. Not the low hum of a business call, nor the clink of a scotch glass. It was a whimper. A raw, guttural sound of distress that made the hair on my arms stand up.
I moved toward the double mahogany doors, my heels sinking into the plush runner. The door was ajar, a sliver of golden light slicing across the dark hallway. I pushed it open, expecting a medical emergency. What I found was a tableau that made my stomach turn over.
Graham, my husband, the titan of Lynch Enterprises, was on his knees. His head was buried in the lap of Nicole Diaz, his stepmother. Her fingers were tangled in his hair, stroking him with a rhythm that was too slow, too intimate. He was weeping—great, heaving sobs that shook his broad shoulders—while she murmured to him in a low, crooning voice, like a mother soothing a feverish child, or a lover claiming a prize.
"Shh, my sweet boy. She doesn't understand you like I do. She never could."
I gasped. The sound was involuntary, a sharp intake of breath that shattered their private world.
Graham’s head snapped up. His eyes were red-rimmed, wild. For a second, I saw shame. Then, like a shutter slamming down, the shame vanished, replaced by a terrifying, cold rage. He scrambled to his feet, smoothing his suit jacket with trembling hands.
Nicole didn’t move. She just smiled, a small, serpentine curving of her red lips. "Happy anniversary, Maeve."
"What is this?" I whispered, the Tiffany box slipping from my numb fingers to thud against the carpet. "Graham?"
He crossed the room in two strides, grabbing my upper arm. His grip was a vice. "You were supposed to be at the gala until ten."
"I came home to surprise you," I choked out, trying to pull away. "Let go of me."
"Spying," he hissed, his breath hot against my ear. "Always watching, always judging. You think you’re better than us?"
"Graham, you're hurting me!"
"You can't be trusted," he muttered, more to himself than me. He dragged me toward the bookshelf on the far wall. He pulled a false book, and the heavy paneling groaned open to reveal the panic room—a steel-reinforced box designed to keep threats out. Tonight, it would keep the threat in.
"No! Graham, stop!"
He shoved me inside. I stumbled, catching myself against the cold metal wall. "Think about what you saw, Maeve. Think about loyalty."
The heavy door slammed shut. The mechanical *thud-click* of the lock sealing was the loudest sound I had ever heard.
***
Three days. Or maybe four. Time became a fluid, shapeless thing in the windowless gray box. I had water from the emergency supply, but no food. Just the hum of the ventilation system and the gnawing acid in my empty stomach.
When the door finally hissed open, the light blinded me. Graham stood in the frame, immaculate in a charcoal suit, holding a tablet. He looked rested. I felt like a ghost.
"Nicole had to leave the country," he said calmly, as if discussing the weather. "Because of you."
I blinked, my throat dry as sandpaper. "Me? I've been in here."
"You conspired to expose us. To ruin the family name." He walked in, the scent of his cologne overwhelming in the small space. "She's gone. And now, you need a lesson in consequences."
He turned the tablet toward me. It was a live feed. My parents' small living room in Queens. My father was in his armchair, reading the paper. My mother was knitting. The mundanity of it made my heart hammer against my ribs.
"Leave them alone," I rasped.
"I think your father needs to know his daughter is a traitor." Graham tapped the screen. He was dialing. On the video feed, my father’s phone rang. He picked up, smiling.
"Hello?"
"Mr. Gardner," Graham said, his voice silky smooth on speakerphone. "I'm afraid I have bad news. Maeve is leaving me. She's been stealing from the company. She says she learned it from you. From your greed."
"What?" My father stood up, his hand going to his chest. "That’s a lie! Maeve would never—"
"She hates you, Frank. She told me she's ashamed of where she comes from. She called you leeches."
"Dad, no!" I screamed at the tablet, though I knew he couldn't hear me. "It's a lie! Dad!"
On the screen, my father’s face went gray. He clutched his chest, his mouth opening in a silent gasp. He crumpled. He hit the floor hard.
"Frank!" My mother dropped her knitting, rushing to him. "Frank!"
"Stop it!" I lunged at Graham, clawing at his jacket. "Call 911! Help him!"
Graham caught my wrists effortlessly, his face impassive. "He did this to himself. Weak heart. Weak blood."
"Please," I begged, falling to my knees. "Please, Graham. I'll do anything. Let me go to him."
He studied me for a long moment, savoring my desperation. "Get up. We'll take the car."
***
The ride was a blur of motion and terror. I stared out the window, my nails digging into my palms. Graham drove with leisurely precision, refusing to speed.
"Why are we stopping?" I demanded as the car slowed near the hospital entrance.
A line of black SUVs blocked the main access road. Men in Lynch security uniforms stood by pylons, directing traffic away.
"Security drill," Graham said, checking his watch. "We have to be sure the perimeter is secure for Nicole's return."
"My father is dying!" I screamed, reaching for the door handle. It was locked. "Move the damn cars!"
Then I saw it. The ambulance. It was stuck three cars back, lights flashing, siren wailing uselessly against the wall of Graham’s private security blockade. Through the windshield of the ambulance, I saw the frantic movement of paramedics.
"Let them through!" I pounded on the glass. "Graham, tell them to move!"
He didn't even look at me. He just watched the chaos with dead, shark-like eyes.
Up ahead, the traffic jam forced a delivery truck to swerve. The driver overcorrected. The truck skidded, the trailer swinging wide like a scythe. It slammed into the back of the stationary ambulance with a sickening crunch of metal and glass. The ambulance crumpled like a tin can.
I stopped screaming. The silence inside the car was absolute.
Graham turned to me, his expression mild, almost bored. "Now," he said softly, watching the smoke rise from the wreckage where my entire world had just burned. "Now you have no one but me."
My Husband Blocked the Ambulance That Could Save My Father of Contents
New Release Novels














![[Dubbed Version]The Accidental Bride](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/f6e24ef75145403706111668422/DX2OtNAjMrgA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)


