PART 1
I lay in that hospital bed, fully conscious, while my own father decided my life wasn’t worth the cost of surgery. The machines breathed for me, cold and steady, while my stepmother sighed nearby as if my condition had ruined her day.
“Let her go,” my father said. “We’re not paying for the operation.”
“Mr. Vale,” the doctor replied carefully, “your daughter has a strong chance of recovery if we operate tonight.”
“My daughter?” my father let out a dry laugh. “She hasn’t been useful to me since her mother died.”
Then I heard it—the scratch of a pen. A signature. A DNR. I screamed inside my own body, but nothing moved. The last thing I remembered was rain, headlights, and my father’s SUV crashing into mine. Now he stood beside me, deciding if I lived or died.
“If she dies,” he whispered, “the trust releases early. We get everything.”
“And if she wakes?” Celia asked quietly.
“She won’t.”
But I did. Three days later, I opened my eyes to harsh white light, my body broken but my mind clear. And in that moment, something inside me changed. I was no longer his daughter. I was the one who would end him.
“My poor Elena,” he said later, pressing cold lips to my forehead. “We thought we lost you.”
I stared at him in silence. He thought I was weak. He thought I knew nothing. He had no idea I had heard every word.
“You’ve always been dramatic,” he muttered when the doctor left.
I said nothing. Silence had always been his mistake. He thought it meant surrender. He didn’t understand—it was the beginning of the end.
PART 2
By the time I left the hospital, my father had already taken over my mother’s house, walking through it like it had always belonged to him, drinking her whiskey beneath her portrait.
“You should be grateful,” he told me as I stepped inside on crutches. “I kept everything running while you were lying in bed.”
Celia laughed softly.
“Careful, Martin. She might sue you with those fragile hands.”
My half-brother didn’t even look up from his phone.
“So what’s broken—your body or your brain?”
I didn’t answer. I simply looked at him until he looked away first.
“I need access to my office,” I said.
“Your office is being renovated,” my father replied dismissively.
“Repurposed,” Celia added with a smile. “For Adrian. He’s joining the board.”
The board. My mother’s company. They spoke as if I was already gone.
That night, while they celebrated downstairs, I sat in the dark upstairs, listening through the vent like I used to as a child.
“Once she signs the incapacity papers, we can take control,” Celia said.
“She already looks half-dead,” Adrian chuckled.
“One medical report and one board vote,” my father added. “By Friday, her shares are frozen.”
“And the accident?” Celia asked.
“The mechanic was paid. The footage is gone.”
My hand tightened around my phone. Because the footage wasn’t gone. It had been stored exactly where my mother designed it to go. He had never known.
At 2:13 a.m., I made a call.
“I want everything,” I said quietly.
“Police?” the voice asked.