
My Husband Planned My Death with My Sister
Chapter 2
The neon sign of the diner flickered, casting a sickly red glow across the rain-slicked table. I kept my hood pulled low, the damp fabric clinging to my hollowed cheeks. Across from me sat Marcus Chen. He didn't look like a man who trafficked in ghosts; he looked like an exhausted college student in a faded gray hoodie. But the encrypted dark-web forums swore he was the best underground fixer on the eastern seaboard.
I slid the thick manila envelope across the sticky Formica. It contained every hidden asset I possessed: the emergency cash I’d squirreled away before the crash, my grandmother’s vintage Cartier watch, and, finally, the diamond wedding band I had slipped off my finger an hour ago. The metal was still warm from my skin.
Marcus peeked inside, his jaw tightening as the diner’s harsh fluorescent lights caught the diamond's edge. "This is a one-way ticket, Mrs. Ortiz. I scrub your digital footprint, wipe the medical records, and forge the European passports. Once I hit execute, Eliana Ortiz ceases to exist. You become a phantom."
"That’s the point," I rasped, my voice still rough from the breathing tubes. "They’ve already buried me, Marcus. I just need you to pave over the grave."
He studied my face, his dark eyes searching for a crack in my resolve, a hint of hysterical hesitation. Finding none, he pocketed the heavy envelope. "Give me seventy-two hours. Have your bags packed."
I stepped back out into the freezing New York rain, the chill seeping into my atrophied bones. I only needed to survive one last medical hurdle before I could vanish into the ether.
Two days later, the harsh, sterile lights of the operating room blinded me. It was supposed to be a routine procedure—a final nerve graft to repair the lingering damage in my left leg from the crash. But as the anesthesia flooded my veins, tasting of bitter copper, a violent pressure seized my chest.
The rhythmic beep of the heart monitor suddenly spiked into a frantic, chaotic trill.
"She’s crashing! BP is plummeting!" a voice shouted through the fog.
Darkness didn't pull me under gently; it dragged me down by the throat. For exactly two minutes and fourteen seconds, I was dead. I felt the void. It was colder, yet infinitely more peaceful than the house I shared with Sebastian.
When I finally clawed my way back to the land of the living, my chest burned like a struck match from the defibrillator paddles. I blinked against the muted lights of the ICU, the agonizing throb in my ribs grounding me in reality.
I turned my head, the scratchy hospital pillow chafing my cheek. I looked toward the visitor’s corner.
There were two vinyl chairs. Both were perfectly smooth, unwrinkled, and empty.
No Sebastian pacing the floor. No Maria wringing her hands in maternal panic. No Daxton.
A nurse with tired eyes stepped up to my bedside, adjusting my IV. "You gave us quite a scare, honey," she murmured, offering a pitying smile that made my stomach turn.
"My family," I whispered, the words scraping against my raw throat. "Did anyone call them?"
The nurse’s gaze dropped to the linoleum floor. "We called your husband when you flatlined. He said he had an urgent family matter and would try to stop by tomorrow."
*An urgent family matter.* I stared at the empty chairs, the phantom pain in my chest eclipsing the physical burns. I hadn't just died on that table; I had been entirely forgotten.
By the end of the week, I was forcing myself through physical therapy, my hands gripping the foam handles of an aluminum walker until my knuckles turned translucent. Every step sent a shockwave of agony up my spine, but I needed to walk. I couldn't board a one-way flight to Paris in a wheelchair.
The PT wing bordered the maternity ward. As I dragged my weak left foot forward, the squeak of my rubber sole echoed down the corridor.
Then, I heard it. A deep, rumbling laugh.
I froze. The sound bypassed my ears and struck directly at the marrow of my bones. It was the laugh Sebastian used to reserve for lazy Sunday mornings in our bed.
I shuffled toward the intersection of the hallway, peering around the corner into the OB/GYN waiting area.
There they stood. Sebastian and Nyomi.
Nyomi was practically glowing, her designer coat unbuttoned. In her manicured hand, she held a glossy, black-and-white ultrasound strip. Sebastian stood behind her, his arms wrapped tightly around her waist, his chin resting on her shoulder. He pressed a tender, lingering kiss to her temple.
"A baby," Sebastian murmured, his voice thick with a reverence he hadn't shown me in years. "Our baby, Nyomi. You’re giving me everything I ever wanted."
Nyomi leaned back against his chest, a triumphant, sickeningly sweet smile playing on her lips. "Daxton is going to be the best big brother."
My lungs forgot how to expand. The aluminum walker rattled violently under my trembling hands. A baby. They were building a monument on the ashes of my life.
I didn't scream. I didn't step out into the hallway and demand the truth. The agonizing tug-of-war in my heart finally snapped, leaving behind nothing but a diamond-hard, icy void. I slowly turned my walker around, the rubber wheels silent against the floor. Let them have their stolen joy. Let them have the illusion of peace.
Eliana Ortiz was dead. And whoever I was about to become in Paris would never look back.
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