
When My Husband Conspired With My Step Sister, I Awoke
When My Husband Conspired With My Step Sister, I Awoke Chapter 1
The last thing I remembered was the steering wheel spinning wildly in my hands, the screech of metal against asphalt, and the sickening crunch of glass. Then darkness.
Now, floating somewhere between consciousness and void, I could hear everything with crystal clarity—the steady beep of machines, the rustle of starched uniforms, hushed voices discussing my fate like I was already dead.
"Mrs. Miller sustained severe traumatic brain injury from the collision," Dr. Evans was saying, his voice carrying that practiced clinical detachment doctors perfected after years of delivering devastating news. "The swelling has stabilized, but she's in what we call a locked-in state. Her cognitive functions appear intact based on our scans, but she has no voluntary muscle control. She cannot speak, move, or even blink on command."
I wanted to scream that I could hear every word, that I was trapped inside this useless shell of a body like a prisoner in solitary confinement. But my vocal cords might as well have been severed, my limbs dead weight anchored to this hospital bed.
"So she's... aware?" That was Ethan's voice, my husband of three years, thick with what sounded like genuine anguish. "She can hear us?"
"We believe so, yes. The auditory cortex shows normal activity. But Mr. Miller, I need you to understand—recovery from this type of injury is extremely rare. Most patients in her condition..."
"Don't." Ethan's voice cracked with raw emotion. "Don't say it. Sophie's the strongest person I know. She'll fight through this."
Warmth bloomed in my chest despite everything. My Ethan, my devoted husband who'd stood by me through my father's death just six months ago, who'd held me through countless nights of grief. If anyone would help me find my way back, it would be him.
"What about her... her quality of life?" Madison's voice was softer, more hesitant. My stepsister had driven down from San Francisco the moment she heard about the accident. "I mean, if she can't move or speak..."
"We'll cross that bridge when we come to it," Dr. Evans replied diplomatically. "For now, we focus on preventing complications and monitoring for any signs of improvement. I'll give you both some time alone with her."
Footsteps retreated, followed by the soft click of the door closing.
Silence stretched for several heartbeats. Then I felt the bed dip slightly as someone sat beside me.
"Sophie, baby." Ethan's voice was barely a whisper, heavy with exhaustion. I felt his forehead press against the back of my hand, his breath warm against my skin. "I'm so sorry. I should have driven you to the gallery opening myself. I should have insisted."
His fingers intertwined with mine, and I wished desperately I could squeeze back, could give him some sign that I was still here, still fighting.
"The doctors say you can hear me," he continued, his voice thick with unshed tears. "So I need you to know—I'm not going anywhere. We're going to get through this together, just like we always do. Remember what you told me on our wedding day? 'For better or worse, in sickness and health.' Well, this is our 'worse,' and I'm still here."
Tears I couldn't shed burned behind my useless eyelids. This was my Ethan, the man who'd swept me off my feet at that charity gala, who'd made me believe in love again after years of loneliness following my mother's death.
"Sophie, sweetie?" Madison's voice joined his, closer now. The scent of her signature perfume—something expensive and cloying—filled my nostrils. "We're both here for you. Everyone's praying for your recovery."
I felt her hand smooth across my forehead, a gesture that should have been comforting but somehow felt... wrong. Too light, too brief, like she was touching something distasteful.
"The whole family's rallying around you," she continued. "Uncle Richard's been calling constantly, asking about your condition. And Arthur—your father's lawyer—he's been checking in too. Everyone who loves you is hoping for a miracle."
Ethan's grip on my hand tightened. "She's going to pull through this. I know she is."
"Of course she will," Madison agreed quickly. "Sophie's always been the fighter in the family. Remember when we were kids and she broke her arm falling off that horse? She was back in the saddle within a month."
But something in her tone felt off, like she was reading from a script. The warmth in Ethan's voice felt genuine, desperate even. Madison's felt... performative.
I tried to focus on the sounds around me—the rhythmic beeping of the heart monitor, the distant chatter of nurses in the hallway, the soft hum of the ventilation system. Anything to anchor myself to reality, to prove I was still here, still Sophie Miller, still alive.
"I should probably head back to the house," Ethan said eventually. "Check on things, make some calls. The insurance company's been hounding me for details about the accident."
"I'll stay with her a bit longer," Madison offered. "Keep her company."
"You don't have to—"
"I want to. She's my sister."
Stepsister, I wanted to correct, but the distinction had never mattered much to me. Madison had been part of my life since I was twelve, when my father married her mother in what turned out to be a brief, turbulent union that ended in an even messier divorce two years later. But Madison had stayed in our lives, and I'd always tried to bridge the gap between us, sensing the loneliness in her that mirrored my own.
I heard Ethan stand, felt him lean down to press a gentle kiss to my forehead. "I love you, Sophie. Don't you dare give up on me."
His footsteps retreated, followed by the sound of the door opening and closing again.
Now it was just Madison and me.
The silence stretched longer this time, and I could hear Madison shifting in her chair, the rustle of fabric as she crossed and uncrossed her legs.
"Well, well," she said finally, her voice completely different now—colder, sharper, stripped of the syrupy concern she'd displayed moments before. "Look at the golden girl now."
My blood turned to ice.
"You know, Sophie, I've been waiting for this moment my entire life. Not the accident, of course—that was just a happy coincidence. But seeing you finally... helpless."
I tried to scream, to move, to do anything, but my body remained a useless prison.
"All those years watching Daddy dote on his precious firstborn while I got the scraps. All those years of 'Madison, why can't you be more like Sophie?' Well, look at you now. Not so perfect anymore, are you?"
The heart monitor's beeping quickened slightly, the only outward sign of my inner turmoil.
"Oh, don't worry," Madison continued, her voice taking on a mock-soothing tone. "I'll take very good care of everything while you're... indisposed. Your husband, your inheritance, your entire life. I'll make sure it's all in good hands."
The door opened again, and Madison's voice instantly shifted back to its earlier gentle cadence.
"How is she?" Ethan asked.
"Same as before. But I was just telling her about all the flowers people have been sending. The whole house smells like a garden."
Liar. The word screamed through my mind as I lay trapped, helpless, finally understanding that my nightmare was just beginning.
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