My husband used my fingerprint while I was unconscious to buy a luxury house for his mom, never suspecting the trap I’d set at the very last step.
PART 1 :
I woke up to the antiseptic sting of a hospital room—a blend of chlorine, alcohol, and lingering sorrow. The harsh fluorescent lights burned my eyes, but the hollowness in my womb hurt far worse, an emptiness no language could capture. A nurse with a gentle touch held my hand, her eyes filled with pity. “I am so sorry, ma’am… we did everything we could.” The silence in the room confirmed what I didn’t have the strength to ask: my baby was gone.
My husband, Michael, sat in the green plastic chair beside me, head bowed in a performance of perfect devastation. To a stranger, he looked like a grieving father sharing my pain, but his mother, Eleanor, stood by the window with her arms crossed tight. She checked her watch and glared at the door, treating this tragedy like an inconvenient delay in her schedule. “We need to leave soon,” her posture screamed, though she said nothing.
I wanted to drift away, but the painkillers pulled me into a haze between sleep and cruel wakefulness. Through the hum of the air conditioning, whispered voices cut through the semi-darkness of the room. “The doctor said the medication will fog her memory,” Michael whispered, his voice terrifyingly calm. “We just need her finger.” I tried to move, to protest, but my body felt heavy and paralyzed, as if it no longer belonged to me.
I felt my arm being lifted and my hand manipulated with cold precision. The hard glass of a phone screen pressed against my fingertip once, then twice, acting as a signature I couldn’t see. Eleanor let out a sharp, impatient chuckle from the corner. “Hurry up. Transfer everything. Don’t leave a single dollar.”