I listened to my own heartbeat on the monitor, steady and loud in the silence, as if the machine was counting down the seconds I had left. My mother’s grip tightened on my arm. My skin crawled where her fingers pressed—familiar hands doing something unforgivable.
Ethan leaned closer. I could smell his cologne, the same one he wore on date nights. It made me nauseated.
“Just a little more,” he murmured.
I felt a tug on the IV line—subtle at first, like someone testing it. Then a sharper pull, and the burn of fluid shifting too fast.
My chest tightened. My breath turned shallow. Panic threatened to break through my stillness.
I had to act, but not like a dramatic movie scene. In a real ICU, if I suddenly thrashed, they’d call it delirium. If I screamed, they could sedate me. If I accused them, it would be my word against three calm adults.
I needed witnesses.
I forced my eyelids to flutter—just slightly—like a reflex. Not fully awake. Not enough to show recognition. Just enough to look like a patient drifting.
Ethan froze. “Did she move?” he whispered.
My mother hissed, “She’s reflexing. Keep going.”
I let my fingers twitch once, weakly, like nerve activity. Then I went still again.
Ethan exhaled in irritation. “Fine,” he said. “We’ll do it slower.”
Slower. More careful. Like they were adjusting a recipe.
My father spoke again, voice strained. “Linda, this is—this is insane.”I woke up in the ICU after a car accident.
My husband and my parents were standing next to me, talking.
“Everything is going according to plan,” my husband said.
My mother laughed, “She’s too clueless to notice.”
I kept my eyes closed and pretended to be dead.
What happened next shocked me to my core.The first thing I felt was pain—thick and deep, like my whole body had been filled with wet cement. The second thing was sound: a steady beep, distant voices, the soft hiss of oxygen. I couldn’t open my eyes, but I knew where I was from the smell alone—bleach, plastic, and that faint metallic tang hospitals always have.