A doctor approached. “Mr. Reed?”
I stood.
“Your wife is alive. She appears to have been placed in a medically induced state. Not dead. We found traces of sedatives that would slow respiration and heart rate dramatically.”
Margaret swayed.
Victor’s smile disappeared.
“Is the baby alive?” I asked.
“For now, yes. We’re monitoring both of them.”
For now. Those two words punched through my ribs.
Margaret recovered first. “There must be a mistake. Clara had health complications. She was fragile.”
“She was not fragile,” I said. “She was eight months pregnant and healthy yesterday morning.”
Victor stepped forward. “You don’t get to accuse us. You lived off Clara’s money for years.”
I laughed once. It sounded wrong in the bright hospital corridor.
That was their favorite lie. Poor Daniel, the charity husband. Daniel with the modest job. Daniel who married above his station.
They had never understood why I let them think that.
Clara knew. She was the only one who knew I had spent the last six years working for Meridian Risk, a private financial investigations firm hired by courts, banks, and federal prosecutors. I traced hidden accounts, forged trusts, insurance fraud, shell companies. I knew where money went when people thought it disappeared.
And three months ago, Clara had come to me trembling with bank statements.
“My mother and Victor are moving assets from my inheritance,” she had whispered. “If anything happens to me, promise me you’ll protect our child.”
I had already started building the case.
Now I knew it was bigger than stolen money.
While Clara slept under armed hospital security I personally arranged through an old contact, Margaret and Victor became reckless. They stood near the elevators, whispering, believing grief had made me useless.
“She heard me,” Victor muttered.
“She was supposed to be gone before anyone checked,” Margaret whispered.
“She said something to him.”
“Then make him look insane. Get the doctor. Get a psych hold.”
I stood around the corner, phone recording inside my jacket pocket.
By midnight, I had more than their whispers.
I had the funeral home’s security footage showing Victor arguing with the director to “skip unnecessary delays.” I had the cremation consent with my signature copied from an old document. I had Clara’s life insurance policy, changed two weeks before her collapse, making Margaret the trustee over our unborn child’s inheritance.
Then my contact at Meridian sent the final piece.
A pharmacy purchase. Paid through Victor’s company card. A sedative known to mimic death in high doses.
At 3:12 a.m., Clara woke.
Her eyes found mine.
“My tea,” she whispered. “Mother brought me tea.”
I pressed my forehead to her hand.
“Did she know?” I asked.
Clara cried silently.
“She said I was selfish for leaving everything to the baby. Victor said I didn’t deserve the name.”