
Return From Grave: Reclaiming My Betrayed Heart
I returned to Boston after three years, not for forgiveness, but to die.
My family, who blamed me for my mother's death, had cast me out, replacing me with a quiet, grateful orphan named Gabriela. She stole my father's love, my brother's affection, and my childhood sweetheart, Corey.
Now, terminally ill, my only wish was to reclaim my mother's wedding dress, a final piece of her to hold onto. But Gabriela was wearing it to marry Corey.
When I confronted her, she destroyed my mother's locket and cursed me to drop dead. In a blind rage, I slapped her. She shrieked, stabbed her own arm, and framed me for the attack.
As my family and Corey looked on with disgust, calling me a maniac, my body gave out. I collapsed, coughing up blood, my secret illness revealed in the most brutal way possible.
"You always blame me," I gasped, the words bubbling out with blood. "But I was just... dying."
Their faces filled with dawning horror, but it was too late. I was already gone.
Until I opened my eyes again, and my mother, who had been waiting for me all along, took my hand. "We'll be reborn," she promised, her eyes blazing with fury at the family who had destroyed me. "Together. As mother and daughter, again."
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Chapter 5
Blake Poole POV:
The world slowly coalesced around me, a blurry haze of white walls and the sterile scent of antiseptic. I was in a hospital. Again. My body ached with a dull, pervasive pain, a constant reminder of the betrayer within. The rhythmic beep of a heart monitor was my unwelcome lullaby.
I kept my eyes closed, feigning unconsciousness. I could hear voices, low and hushed, just beyond the privacy curtain. Brandt and Ford.
"She has to stay, Dad," Brandt's voice was tight, strained. "The doctors aren't even sure if she'll make it through the night. She needs constant monitoring."
"You heard the doctor, Brandt," Ford's voice, usually so commanding, was brittle, tinged with an unfamiliar despair. "There's nothing more they can do here. It's too advanced. They said... they said a peaceful environment, surrounded by loved ones, if she wants it."
Loved ones. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. My 'loved ones' were the reason I was here, broken and dying.
"I'll take her, Dad," Brandt insisted, his voice cracking. "I'll take her home. I'll make sure she's comfortable. We can... we can take her to the island house. Mom always loved it there. I can show her all the places Mom used to take us. One last trip, like old times." He was grasping at straws, desperate for a chance to rewrite our painful history.
Silence stretched for a moment. Then, a low, guttural sound, filled with a raw, agonizing grief. It was Ford. My father. I had never heard him sound so broken. He was the rock, the unyielding patriarch. But now, it was as if someone had shattered him.
"Alright," Ford finally rasped, his voice thick with unshed tears. "Just... whatever she wants, Brandt. Give her whatever she wants. Please."
A muffled sob. A pain-filled echo that clawed at my heart, even my hardened one. Was that... Corey?
Brandt was beside me in an instant, his hand gently touching my forehead. I kept my eyes closed, my breathing shallow. His touch, once so familiar, now felt alien, almost tentative.
"Blake," he whispered, his voice thick with remorse. "Why didn't you tell us? Why did you hide this?"
I wanted to laugh. Tell them? The people who had systematically ignored my pain, dismissed my pleas, and institutionalized my grief? They wouldn't have believed me. They would have called it another one of my "dramatic episodes," another cry for attention. I had been screaming for help for years, through my rebellious acts, my self-harm, my desperate attempts to be seen. And they had always looked away.
"We can fix this, Blake," Brandt choked out, his voice a frantic buzz. "There are other doctors. Other treatments. We have the best connections. We'll fly you anywhere. We'll find a cure. Just... tell me what you need. Please."
I felt a faint stir of pity for him, a strange, detached observation of his futile hope. He believed he could buy his way out of this, just as he believed money could solve everything. But death was the ultimate equalizer, immune to wealth and influence. He was desperate, clinging to a false hope, trying to bargain with the inevitable.
I slowly opened my eyes, the harsh hospital light a painful assault. My gaze fell on the cardiac monitor, its relentless beeping a constant reminder of my fading life. I slowly raised a trembling hand, pointing a weak finger at the array of tubes and wires attached to my body.
Brandt understood. His eyes welled up, but he nodded, his hand gently removing the IV drip from my arm, the blood pressure cuff from my bicep. His touch was so careful, so tender, a stark contrast to the violent shoves and accusations of before.
I tried to speak, my throat raw, my voice a raspy whisper. "Mom..."
Brandt leaned closer, his ear almost touching my lips. "What, Blake? What about Mom?"
"Home," I managed to croak out, the word feeling oddly heavy on my tongue. "Take me home."
His face crumpled. Tears streamed down his cheeks, silent and heavy. "Yes, Blake. Yes, of course. We'll take you home. Whatever you want. I promise." He gripped my hand, his fingers trembling. "We'll go to the island house. Just like Mom always wanted. We'll be a family again."
I closed my eyes, a faint, bitter smile touching my lips. Home. He didn't understand. My home wasn't the island house, or the mansion, or any physical place. My home was with Mom. In the peace beyond this life. And I was going there soon. Very soon.
I squeezed his hand, a silent message. My home was with her. And my last wish was to be laid to rest beside her, in the quiet earth of Mount Auburn. I saw the dawning comprehension in his eyes, the sudden, terrible realization of what "home" truly meant to me. His face went white. He knew. He finally knew. The enormity of my request, the finality of it, settled around him like a shroud.
"No, Blake," he choked out, his voice raw with anguish. "No, you can't... you can't mean that." But his eyes, filled with a desperate, crushing grief, already understood.
Ford, who had been standing silently by the door, his face a mask of profound sorrow, stepped forward. "Blake," he said, his voice unusually soft, "we can take you anywhere. We can take you to the Swiss Alps, to the coast of Italy. Anywhere you want to see. Just... not there. Not yet." He was trying to offer me escape, a last-ditch attempt to prolong the inevitable, to atone for their neglect.
I shook my head, a weak but resolute gesture. The world's wonders held no allure for me now. My only desire was peace. I also remembered Corey, his face etched with betrayal, his impending marriage to Gabriela. He was about to marry the woman who had systematically destroyed my life, wearing my mother's dress. The thought, once agonizing, now barely registered. My heart was too weary for jealousy, too full of a strange, detached acceptance. Let them have their false happiness. It simply didn't matter anymore.
The news of my terminal illness, once a closely guarded secret, had, predictably, leaked. "Blake Poole: The Tragedy Behind the Scapegoat," "Terminal Illness Unveils Boston's Dark Secret." The headlines now painted a different picture, one of pity and belated understanding.
Brandt, my brother, stood by my side, his hair now streaked with white, his face gaunt with stress. He avoided my gaze, unable to meet my eyes, the weight of his guilt, the years of blame and neglect, evident in his every movement. When it was time for me to be discharged, he quietly slipped away, unable to face the finality of it all.
But Corey. Corey, too, had heard the news. He reappeared, a ghost from my past, his face pale, his eyes haunted. He swore he would clear my name, that he would expose Gabriela, that he would make things right. He spoke of justice, of truth, of retribution.
I looked at him, his earnest face, his desperate pleas for my understanding. It was a cruel irony, this sudden surge of conscience. But the truth was, his apologies, his desperate attempts at redemption, meant nothing to me now. They were like fragile whispers in the wind, unable to reach the depths of my weary soul. My focus was elsewhere, on the quiet reunion that awaited me, on the embrace of the only person who had ever truly understood.
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