
My Sister’s Husband Took Her Baby and Her Legacy
Chapter 3
The rhythmic hiss of the hospital’s HVAC unit felt like a countdown. I left my car in the freezing lot, the dried blood on my skin stiffening as I walked back into the sterile maw of the building. The midnight shift was a graveyard of silence, smelling sharply of iodine and stale coffee.
When I reached Millie’s room, the bed was empty. The sheets were thrown back, the synthetic fabric still holding the faint indentation of her body. A spike of pure panic drove me back into the hallway.
I found her fifty feet down the corridor. She was a ghost tethered to a metal IV pole, her hospital gown hanging loosely over the sudden, violent emptiness of her stomach. She stood frozen outside a cracked door to an unused consultation room. I moved toward her, my rubber soles silent against the linoleum, ready to pull her back to bed.
Then I heard the voice bleeding through the narrow opening.
“You’re sure the trust transfers smoothly? We didn’t endure seven years of this insufferable girl just to stumble at the finish line.” Mrs. Hall’s tone was devoid of the manufactured concern she wore for the public. It was the hiss of a snake uncoiling in the dark.
I stopped right behind Millie. I could see the pulse hammering violently at the base of her pale neck.
“The paperwork is primed, Mother,” Alden replied. His voice—usually so thick with honeyed warmth—was flat, corporate, and utterly unrecognizable. “With the baby coming early and the... medical complications... she’ll sign the proxy by Friday. She’s too fragile to manage the estate now.”
“Fragile.” Mrs. Hall let out a low, scraping laugh. “Just like her father. Though I must admit, tampering with his brakes was a far messier affair than this. You’d think a man of his stature would have driven a safer car.”
“It got the job done. The old man died, she inherited, I married her. The rest is just administration. Keep your voice down.”
I reached for Millie’s shoulder, terrified she would collapse. Instead, my fingers met rigid muscle. Her knuckles, gripping the aluminum IV pole, were entirely bloodless. She didn’t gasp. She didn’t weep. Slowly, she turned her head to look at me.
The soft, accommodating woman who had spent seven years smoothing her sleeves and making excuses for monsters was gone. Her eyes were obsidian, completely hollowed out, dark and bottomless. She raised a single, trembling finger to her lips. *Silence.*
We walked back to her room without making a sound.
Dawn broke over the hospital in harsh, unforgiving angles, slicing through the plastic blinds to illuminate the dust motes dancing in the air. I stood by the door and slid the deadbolt home with a sharp, definitive click.
Millie sat upright in the bed. She hadn’t slept.
“He killed our father,” she said. Her voice wasn’t a question. It was a verdict, delivered with the dry rasp of sandpaper.
“I heard,” I replied, stepping into the light. I didn't offer her pity. Pity was an insult to the woman sitting before me.
“Seven years, Briella. Every touch. Every ‘I love you.’ It was all just... administration.” She looked down at her lap. Her hands rested flat against the thin blanket. For the first time in her life, she wasn’t fidgeting. The stillness was terrifying.
“It gets worse,” I said, pulling my phone from my coat pocket.
I sat on the edge of her mattress and unlocked the screen. I pulled up the photos I’d taken in Alden’s study. “He’s been siphoning the Montgomery Estate Trust. Shell companies. Re-titling parcels under his sole proprietorship. The proxy he wants you to sign on Friday? It legally signs away the last of your equity. He leaves you with nothing.”
Millie’s eyes tracked over the glowing documents. “A parasite,” she murmured, the word lacking heat but heavy with gravity.
“And a predator,” I added. I swiped the screen to the final image. The text from Elise.
I watched my sister’s face as she took in the photograph. Alden, wearing the cashmere sweater she had bought him for their anniversary, leaning across a candlelit table, his eyes crinkling in that practiced, adoring smile. And across from him, looking utterly captivated, was my best friend.
“This was yesterday afternoon,” I said, keeping my voice brutally steady. “While you were scrubbing his floors. While his mother was shoving you against a brick wall. He’s playing the wealthy bachelor. He’s dating Elise.”
The silence in the room stretched, thick and suffocating. A lesser woman would have shattered. But the fire that had taken Millie’s womb and her father had burned away everything soft left inside her.
When she finally looked up from the screen, her gaze was a scalpel.
“Elise,” Millie whispered, the name tasting like rust on her tongue. “Does she know who he is?”
“Not yet.”
“Good.” Millie’s jaw tightened, a sharp, dangerous line. “Because we are going to need her.”
You may also like





