My daughter-in-law di:ed while giving birth, but when eight men tried to lift her coffin, they couldn’t move it even an inch. So I dropped to my knees in the Rocamadour cemetery and screamed for them to open it. Because I had just heard a knock.

Now, he looked like a corpse.

His skin was a translucent, waxy grey. His eyes were closed, taped shut by the nurses to prevent the corneas from drying out. A labyrinth of tubes snaked from his throat and arms into a tower of humming machinery. According to the medical charts clutched in Dr. Aris’s trembling hands, Elias had suffered a catastrophic, irreversible brain aneurysm during a private family dinner three weeks ago. Brain death, they called it. Zero cortical activity.

Everything had been executed with terrifying precision.

There was no secondary medical opinion allowed.

No outside specialists granted access.

No police inquiry into the sudden illness of a perfectly healthy thirty-four-year-old billionaire.

There was only a signed declaration of incompetence, a hastily executed power of attorney that conveniently cut me out of all medical decisions, and the relentless pressure from the Vance family to terminate life support before the upcoming quarterly shareholder meeting.

Julian finally slipped his phone into his pocket and stepped closer to me. I could smell the sharp, peppery scent of his cologne. It smelled like arrogance.

“You gave it your best shot, Kaelen,” Julian murmured, leaning in so only I could hear. “But you don’t belong in this family. You never did. We are just restoring the natural order of things. You get a nice, quiet severance package, and we get our company back.”

I was the outsider. The commoner they had tolerated only because Elias had threatened to liquidate his shares if they didn’t attend the wedding. I was the silent wife they assumed would crumble under the weight of their generational power.

At least, that was the narrative they had written.

I looked at the digital clock on the wall.
11:57 PM.

“It’s time,” Eleanor announced, finally standing up and brushing invisible dust from her black skirt. She looked at Dr. Aris. “Doctor, proceed with the extubation. Let my son rest.”

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