I heard the doctor whisper, “Three days.” My husband, Mark, squeezed my hand and smiled like he’d just closed a deal.
“Finally,” he murmured. “Three days… and your house, your money—everything—becomes mine.”
Dr. Patel kept his voice gentle. “Emily, we’ll keep you comfortable. If anything changes—”
Mark cut in, almost cheerful. “Nothing’s going to change.”
When they left, the room went silent except for the monitor’s steady beep. Pain rolled through my abdomen, but Mark’s words hurt worse. In the last few months he’d started hovering over my mail, “helping” with passwords, insisting I drink his nightly “vitamin tea,” and switching my pharmacy without asking. He even asked—twice—whether my life insurance was “still active,” like it was a casual question.
Rosa stared, trying to decide if I was delirious. I shoved my phone into her hand. “Go to my purse at home. There’s a red folder labeled TRUST. Bring it here. And record everything Mark says from now on—don’t let him see.”
A nurse passed by. Rosa tucked the phone away like contraband. “What if he catches me?”
“Then we’re both in trouble,” I whispered.
The door swung open. Mark strode back in with a clipboard and a pen, his grin sharp as glass.
“Good news, Em,” he said. “Just sign this. It gives me full control while you rest.”
The nurse hovered beside him, expectant. Mark placed the pen against my fingers and guided my hand toward the line.
“Come on,” he coaxed softly, “be a good girl.”
The pen trembled in my hand. The title on the page was clear enough: DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY—IMMEDIATE EFFECT. Under it, “authority over medical decisions and financial accounts.” Mark’s thumb pressed into my knuckles like a vice.