
My Husband Poisoned Our Child
Chapter 2
The doctor's face told me everything before his words could. His eyes—tired, sympathetic, devastated—met mine across Jake's hospital bed. My son lay motionless, connected to more machines than I could count, each one beeping a desperate rhythm that seemed to be slowing by the minute.
"Mrs. Thompson," Dr. Levine began, his voice gentle but clinical, "The antibiotic your husband gave Jake wasn't just inappropriate for children—it was specifically formulated for canine metabolism. It's causing acute kidney failure."
The room tilted around me. "But you can fix it, right? You can—you can do dialysis or something?"
His pause lasted an eternity. "We're doing everything possible, but the damage is extensive. The next few hours will be critical."
I fumbled for my phone with trembling hands. Marcus needed to be here. Jake needed his father. The phone rang five times before going to voicemail.
"Marcus, please," I whispered, my voice breaking. "Jake is... he's... the doctors say it's kidney failure from that medicine. Please come."
Ten minutes later, my phone buzzed. Not a call—a text.
*Can't come. Backing Victoria at a kennel club event. Keep me posted.*
I stared at the screen until the words blurred through my tears. Backing Victoria. While our son was dying.
The night stretched endlessly as I sat vigil beside Jake's bed. The nurses brought me coffee I couldn't drink and blankets that couldn't warm the chill that had settled in my bones. I held Jake's small hand between mine, memorizing every tiny fingernail, every little knuckle.
"Remember when you caught that frog at the lake last summer?" I whispered to him, stroking his hair away from his forehead. "You were so proud. You named him Mr. Jumpy and cried when we had to let him go."
Jake's monitors beeped steadily, his chest rising and falling in shallow breaths.
"And your dinosaur phase—you corrected your preschool teacher when she called a Parasaurolophus a Brachiosaurus." I smiled through my tears. "You were always so smart, baby. So, so smart."
Outside the window, darkness gradually gave way to the first pale light of dawn. I must have dozed off for a moment, my head resting against Jake's mattress, his small hand still clasped in mine.
A sudden, harsh alarm jerked me awake.
Jake's monitor displayed a flat line.
"No," I breathed, then louder, "No! Jake! Someone help!"
The room filled instantly with medical staff, moving with practiced urgency. A nurse gently but firmly pulled me back.
"Jake!" I screamed as they began CPR. "Jake, baby, stay with Mommy!"
I fumbled for my phone, dialing Marcus with shaking fingers. Straight to voicemail.
"Marcus, they're doing CPR on Jake! He's—he's—" I couldn't say the words. "Please, please come now!"
Time fractured. Minutes stretched into hours, compressed into seconds. I watched them press on my baby's chest, inject medications, shock his heart. I watched them try to bring him back to me.
And then I watched them stop.
"Time of death, 6:42 a.m.," someone said quietly.
My legs gave out. A nurse caught me before I hit the floor.
Three days later, I sat in a sterile office at Portland Memorial Funeral Home, cradling a small, cool urn in my lap. Jake's ashes. All that remained of my beautiful, curious, dinosaur-loving five-year-old boy.
"Mrs. Thompson, we just need your signature on these final documents," the funeral director said softly.
As I leaned forward to sign, I caught my reflection in the polished surface of his desk. A woman I barely recognized stared back at me—hollow-eyed, pale, with a faint purple-green bruise blooming across her right cheekbone. Marcus's handprint, from when I'd tried to stop him from giving Jake that medicine.
I touched the bruise gently, feeling a strange detachment. In that moment, holding my son's ashes against my heart, something crystallized within me. The grief remained—a vast, bottomless ocean—but alongside it grew something else: a cold, clear purpose.
Marcos and Victoria hadn't just broken my heart. They had killed my child.
And they would pay.
You may also like





