part2
ON MY WEDDING NIGHT OUR CAR WAS HIT BY A TRUCK. MY HUSBAND D:IED INSTANTLY. I SURVIVED… BARELY. A WEEK LATER, THE TRUCK DRIVER CAUGHT. BUT WHEN HE FINALLY SPOKE MY BLO:OD RAN COLD. HE WASN’T JUST A DRIVER…
The last thing my husband said was, “Don’t be scared, Mara. I’ve got you.”
Then the headlights swallowed us whole.
The truck came out of the rain like a monster with no brakes. One second, Daniel was laughing, his wedding ring flashing on the steering wheel. The next, glass exploded across my face, metal screamed, and the world flipped upside down.
When I woke, I was in a hospital bed, stitched together like something unfinished.
Daniel was gone.
His mother, Evelyn Voss, stood beside my bed in a black dress that cost more than our wedding. She didn’t cry. She looked at me the way people look at a stain on white silk.
“You survived,” she said softly. “How unfortunate.”
My throat was raw. “What?”
She leaned closer. Her perfume made me nauseous. “Daniel should never have married you. A charity case with pretty eyes.”
Behind her stood Daniel’s older brother, Victor, hands in his pockets, expression bored. “Mother, don’t upset the widow. She might fall apart.”
Widow.
The word cut deeper than the broken ribs.
I tried to sit up, but pain ripped through me. Evelyn smiled.
“You’ll sign the estate papers when you’re stronger,” she said. “Daniel’s trust, his shares, the house. We’ll handle everything.”
“Daniel left everything to me,” I whispered.
Victor laughed. “You were married for six hours.”
“Long enough.”
His smile vanished.
A week later, the police caught the truck driver.
His name was Owen Rusk. He had a record, gambling debts, no insurance, no reason to be on that road. They brought me to the station in a wheelchair because I insisted on hearing him speak.
He sat behind the glass with bruised knuckles and dead eyes. A detective asked him why he ran the red light.
Owen looked at me.
Not near me. Not past me.
At me.
Then he said, “I was told only the husband had to die.”
The room went silent.
My blood turned to ice.
The detective snapped, “Told by who?”
Owen’s mouth twisted.
Before he could answer, his lawyer put a hand on his shoulder and ended the interview.
But I had heard enough.
Victor found me in the hallway afterward. “Grief makes people imagine things.”
I stared at him.
He crouched beside my wheelchair, voice low. “Take the settlement, Mara. Leave town. People like you don’t survive wars with people like us.”
I wiped blood from the corner of my lip where I’d bitten down too hard.
Then I smiled.
“Victor,” I whispered, “you have no idea what kind of woman your brother married.”
Because Daniel had known his family was dan:gerous.
And three days before our wedding, he had given me a locked black drive, kissed my forehead, and said, “If anything ever happens to me, open this.”
That night, alone in my hospital room, I asked my old law-school mentor to bring me a laptop.
My hands shook.
But not from fear.
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