
Stealing Back My Life
Chapter 2
The hospital room smelled of antiseptic and decay. I sat beside my mother's bed, my hand wrapped around hers as machines beeped their steady rhythm. Her breathing was shallow, labored, but she refused to let go. She was waiting for something—vindication, perhaps, or just the strength to see me stand again.
The television mounted on the wall played softly, a background hum I'd learned to tune out. Until I heard the name.
"Dr. Gabriella Wright has taken the scientific community by storm," the anchor announced, her voice bright with enthusiasm. "At just twenty-eight, she's being hailed as one of the most promising researchers in cellular regeneration."
My head snapped up. There she was, filling the screen in a tailored navy suit that I recognized—I'd helped her pick it out last year for a conference. Her dark hair was pulled back in a sleek bun, her smile modest as she sat across from the interviewer.
"Dr. Wright, your work on stem cell applications is groundbreaking," the interviewer gushed. "Can you tell us what inspired this research?"
Gabriella's expression shifted to something thoughtful, vulnerable. "I've always been passionate about healing," she said, her voice soft. "The human body's capacity for regeneration fascinated me from my earliest studies."
Those were my words. The exact phrasing I'd used in my thesis proposal five years ago.
My mother's grip tightened on my hand. "Turn it off," she whispered, but I couldn't move.
"Your mentor must be very proud," the interviewer continued.
Gabriella's pause was perfectly timed, a flicker of regret crossing her features. "My journey has been complicated," she said carefully. "But I'm grateful for every experience that shaped my understanding of scientific integrity."
The implication was clear. She was the victim. I was the villain.
Over the next three days, Gabriella was everywhere. Scientific journals I'd spent years trying to get published in now featured her face on their covers. "The Future of Medicine," one headline proclaimed. Another: "Young Genius Overcomes Betrayal to Transform Science."
I read every article with masochistic compulsion, watching my life's work attributed to someone else. Colleagues who had once collaborated with me now praised Gabriella's "innovative thinking" and "meticulous methodology." The formulas I'd developed through countless sleepless nights were now her "brilliant breakthroughs."
My phone stayed silent. No one called to ask my side. No one questioned the convenient timing of these accusations.
On the fourth night, my mother's heart finally gave out. It happened quietly, a soft exhale that didn't lead to another inhale. I held her hand as the machines flatlined, their urgent beeping a soundtrack to my complete destruction.
The funeral was small. My mother had outlived most of her friends, and the colleagues who might have attended were conspicuously absent. I stood alone at her graveside, the Seattle drizzle soaking through my black dress as they lowered her into the ground.
I stayed until the workers filled in the grave, until the mound of earth was smooth and the flowers I'd placed wilted in the rain.
When I finally returned to my car, I found an envelope tucked under the windshield wiper. Inside was a formal document—a body donation agreement with my mother's name printed at the top.
And Jericho's signature at the bottom, claiming to be her designated representative.
My hands shook as I read the letter attached. His handwriting, precise and familiar: "Your mother expressed her wish to contribute to medical research. As her son-in-law and a medical professional, I'm ensuring her final desires are honored. Please sign and return within 24 hours."
I crumpled the papers in my fist. My mother would never have agreed to this. She'd been terrified of medical experimentation, had made me promise years ago that when her time came, she'd be laid to rest peacefully.
This was another theft. Another violation.
I drove home in a daze, the unsigned papers burning in my passenger seat. But when I pulled into my driveway, I found I no longer had a home.
The locks had been changed. Through the windows, I could see people inside—caterers setting up tables, florists arranging elaborate bouquets. And there, directing them all with proprietary ease, was Jericho.
He saw me standing there and came to the door, opening it just enough to speak through the gap.
"The party is tomorrow night," he said, his tone businesslike. "Seven o'clock. I expect you here."
"This is my house," I said, my voice hollow.
"Was," he corrected. "Everything is in my name, Cecilia. You know that." He paused, his blue eyes scanning my face with something that might have been pity. "Come tomorrow. We'll discuss the divorce papers. And bring that signed agreement."
The door closed. The lock clicked.
I stood on the porch of the house where I'd lived for three years, staring at the gleaming brass knocker I'd polished a hundred times, and understood that Jericho hadn't just stolen my work.
He'd erased me completely.
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