“Mom… Dad is waiting for you to di:e. Please don’t wake up.”
That was the first thing I heard after twelve days trapped in a suffocating darkness—like being buried alive.
I couldn’t move.
I couldn’t speak.
Even breathing felt like shards of glass splitting my head apart.
But I recognized that voice instantly.
“Ethan…”
My nine-year-old son stood beside my hospital bed, crying quietly, holding my hand the same way he used to when he was afraid of fireworks.
“Mom… if you can hear me, squeeze my hand. Please.”
I tried.
I truly tried.
But my body wouldn’t respond.
A nurse entered, talking about IV fluids, blood pressure, and how it was a miracle I was still alive. She mentioned my SUV had gone off the road near a mountain curve.
Everyone kept repeating the same thing:
“Poor Emily… she lost control.”
But I didn’t remember losing control.
The last thing I remembered was Ryan—my husband—sitting at the kitchen table, sliding papers toward me.
“Just sign, Em. It’s to protect our assets.”
I refused.
That same night, my brakes failed.
The door opened again.
Ethan quickly let go of my hand.
“You again?” Ryan snapped. “I told you she can’t hear you.”
“I just wanted to see her.”
“Go sit with your Aunt Claire.”
Claire.
My sister.
The one who braided my hair when we were little. The one who cried in the hospital, saying she’d give her life for me.
Her heels clicked into the room.
“Let him say goodbye,” she said. “The notary will be here soon.”
“The doctor’s already said it,” Ryan replied coldly. “I’m not paying to keep an empty body alive.”
An empty body.
Rage surged through me.
“My mom is coming back!” Ethan cried.
Ryan laughed softly. “No, she’s not.”
Claire leaned close to me, adjusting my hair.
“Even unconscious, she loves playing the victim,” she whispered.
Then her voice dropped even lower.
“When she dies, we take the boy out of the country. Everything’s already arranged.”
Ethan stepped back.
“You’re taking me?”
“Somewhere you won’t ask questions,” Ryan said.
“I want my mom!”
“She doesn’t decide anything anymore.”
“Yes, she does! She told me if anything happened, I should call Ms. Parker!”
Silence.
Ms. Parker.
My lawyer.
The only person who knew I had changed my will two weeks ago.
Ryan locked the door.
“What lawyer?”
Claire stiffened. “That kid knows too much.”
And then—
it happened.
One finger.
It moved.
Ethan saw it—but said nothing.
He leaned close and whispered,
“Mom, don’t move. I already called for help.”
“What did you say?” Ryan snapped.
“I said I love her.”
Claire reached into her purse.
“The notary is downstairs.”
Ryan grabbed my hand tightly.
“You’re signing those papers, Emily. One way or another.”
But I wasn’t dying anymore.
I was waiting.
Five minutes later, there was a knock.
“That must be the notary,” Claire said.
The door opened.
But the voice that followed wasn’t a notary’s.

“Good evening, Ryan. Before you touch her again, explain why her brakes were cut.”
Everything stopped.
And I realized—
this was only the beginning.
The silence pressed down so heavily even the heart monitor sounded louder.
Ryan slowly released my hand—not out of fear, but calculation.
“Who let you in?” he asked.
“The same staff who already spoke to the police,” Ms. Parker replied calmly.
My only ally.
My only protection.
And still, I was trapped inside my own body—unable to warn her.
Because the real danger wasn’t Ryan.
It was Claire.
She didn’t sound scared.
She sounded irritated.
“This is nonsense,” she said. “Emily had an accident.”
“Interesting accident,” Ms. Parker replied. “The brakes weren’t faulty. They were cut.”
Claire leaned close to my ear.
“That proves nothing,” she whispered.
But her hand trembled.
For the first time—
she was afraid.
