
My Husband Covered Up His Mistress Killing My Mother
Chapter 2
The rhythmic thud of wet earth hitting my mother’s mahogany casket sounded like a dying heartbeat. I stood rigid, the damp chill of the Seattle graveyard seeping through my wool coat, settling deep into my bones. Jared stood beside me, playing the role of the grieving son-in-law to perfection. His hand rested on the small of my back, a gesture that looked entirely supportive to the surrounding mourners. But his fingers were splayed tight, pressing hard against my spine. It wasn't a comfort; it was a physical restraint.
My lungs seized as a pair of figures emerged from the sea of black umbrellas. Emely Peterson wore a tailored black Dior coat, her blonde hair perfectly coiffed to withstand the drizzle. Beside her loomed the towering, broad-shouldered figure of her father, Senator William Peterson.
I stepped forward, the heat of sudden, violent rage flushing my cheeks, but Jared’s fingers clamped around my elbow like a vice.
"Don't make a scene, Grace," he muttered through a clenched, sorrowful smile designed for the audience. "Accept their condolences. The Senator's presence here is a courtesy."
Over Emely’s shoulder, parked illegally on the cemetery's access road, sat the silver convertible. My breath hitched. The front bumper was immaculate. The hood, pristine. A custom metallic paint job required weeks of curing. To have it back on the road meant the Senator had bypassed insurance, bypassed police impound, and paid a private shop an exorbitant sum to erase my mother’s blood from the grille in less than four days.
Emely stepped into my personal space, embracing me before I could pull away. Her perfume—heavy, cloying jasmine—overpowered the scent of wet soil and lilies.
"I'm so sorry for your loss, Grace," she said, her voice projecting just enough for the nearest guests to hear. Then, she leaned closer, her lips brushing my ear. The syrupy tone vanished, replaced by a silken, venomous hiss. "Let her rest. Digging up the past only gets you dirty."
She pulled back, offering a tragic, practiced smile, and walked away. Jared released his grip on my arm, seamlessly adjusting his luxury watch.
By midnight, the suffocating constraints of the funeral had morphed into a desperate, frantic energy. The flickering neon of a 24-hour diner cast bruised, purple shadows across the wet asphalt of the parking lot. I slid into the passenger seat of Jude Bradley’s sedan, bringing the smell of rain and stale coffee with me.
Jude’s hands were glued to the steering wheel, his knuckles bone-white. He didn't look at me.
"Chen locked down the server, Grace," he said, his voice tight. "The official file is sealed. The case is closed."
"I don't care about the official file," I said, my tone razor-thin. "I need the raw crime scene photos. The unedited tox screen. Before Jared’s people purge the mainframe entirely."
Jude swallowed hard, his Adam's apple bobbing. "If I use my admin bypass, it leaves a digital footprint. I lose my medical license. I could face federal charges for tampering."
"Jude." I reached out, resting my hand over his rigid fingers, forcing him to turn his head. "I taught you how to speak for the dead. My mother has no voice right now. They are erasing her."
He stared into my eyes. I saw the battle raging behind his glasses—the terrifying weight of self-preservation warring against the uncompromising integrity I had spent years instilling in him. Slowly, the tension in his jaw softened. He exhaled a shaky breath and gave a single, sharp nod.
The next evening, the house was tomb-silent. Jared was allegedly at a late deposition—a convenient lie we both knew was a hotel room with Emely. I sat in the dimness of my basement, the sterile blue glow of my laptop illuminating the concrete walls.
Jude slipped through the side door, his raincoat dripping onto the linoleum. He handed me a small, encrypted black drive. His fingers were ice-cold, lingering against mine for a fraction of a second—a silent anchor—before he vanished back into the night.
I plugged the drive in. Forensic photos flooded the screen. No blurred edges. No redacted angles. Just the violent reality of blunt force trauma.
I grabbed a notepad, my pen tearing aggressively across the paper as I calculated the coefficient of friction against the yaw marks on the wet pavement. I examined the bumper-fracture height on my mother's tibia. My pulse hammered a frantic rhythm in my ears. The striations on the asphalt were too dark, too concentrated near the point of rest.
The math was irrefutable. Emely hadn't braked when she saw my mother. She had plowed straight through her, slamming on the brakes only *after* the impact.
My hand trembled as I opened the final folder. *Draft_Tox_Peterson_E.pdf*. My eyes scanned the columns, bypassing the standard baseline metrics until I hit the chemical assays.
There it was. A glaring, undeniable spike omitted entirely from the official record.
*Oxycodone.*
Active metabolites in her bloodstream at the time of the crash. She was high. I stared at the screen, a cold, violent clarity crystallizing in my chest. Jared hadn't just signed off on a sloppy autopsy to protect a mistress. He had orchestrated the cover-up of a vehicular manslaughter, using the very science I loved to bury the woman who gave me life.
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