my husband’s regret after i was killed by his first love Novel Ch 2
“But remember that night two months ago? When you got completely drunk at the bar…”
Mark cut him off. “Emma stayed with me that night. She told me Alice never showed up.”
My soul ached hearing those words.
The person who had stayed by your side that night was me.
I had held your hand while you were sick.
I had wiped your face with a cool towel.
I had watched over you until dawn broke.
But Emma had twisted everything, convincing you I’d abandoned you that night.
“She hasn’t been home for days. Who knows what trouble she’s getting into. I should never have married her.” Mark continued.
Hearing Mark’s accusations and complaints about me, my heart turned to ice.
Mark, it’s not that I didn’t want to come home.
I just… can’t come home anymore.
Your defiant wife died the day you chose to accompany Emma to her treatment.
My body lies right before your eyes, carrying the child you refuse to believe existed.
N
After the briefing at the police station, the officers’ faces grew grave as they listened to the autopsy report.
“The victim suffered extensive torture before death,” the medical examiner explained, clicking through graphic photos on the screen. “Multiple broken bones, systematic abuse.”
Due to the horrific state of my body, facial recognition was impossible.
The abandoned building wasn’t the primary crime scene, which significantly complicated the investigation.
Mark stood at the front of the room, his jaw clenched tight.
“Canvas the entire area,” he ordered his team. “Check every security camera within a five-mile radius. Someone must have seen something.”
“Please perform another detailed autopsy,” Mark told his colleague. “Check for any new findings, and rush the DNA analysis to the lab. I want to know who she is.”
With those instructions, he hurried out with his team.
My husband showed more concern for this anonymous corpse than he ever had for me.
I remembered last month, when I had given him my father’s necklace – the only thing I had left of my family.
“It protected my father for thirty years,” I had told Mark, clasping it around his neck. “Now it will protect you too.”
He had actually smiled then, one of his rare genuine smiles. For a moment, I thought I had finally reached his heart.
But then Emma visited the next day.
“Oh, that old thing?” she had sneered, fingering the pendant. “It looks so cheap, Mark. You deserve better.”
Before I could stop her, she had unclasped it and tossed it in the kitchen trash can.
I slapped her. Hard. The crack of palm against cheek was loud in our kitchen.
Mark’s reaction was instant and violent. He grabbed my arm, twisting it behind my back.
“You dare touch Emma?” he had snarled, his face contorted with rage. “You should be grateful she even speaks to you, you
worthless bitch!”
He dragged me to the basement, threw me down the stairs, and locked the door.
For two days, I sat in the dark. No food. No water. Just the sound of Emma’s laughter floating down from above.
Now, as he examined my body with gentle hands, he noted softly, “Such a tragic death. Her husband must be heartbroken.”
I couldn’t help but smile bitterly. My husband would probably celebrate my death, or perhaps only pretend to mourn for
appearances.
Mark’s gloved hands traced the long scar on my back. Twenty-three inches of raised tissue, running from shoulder to hip.
That scar – I got it saving his life in a car accident two years ago.
We were driving home from a dinner party when a truck ran a red light. I had seen it coming before he did.
I didn’t think. I just acted. Unbuckled my seatbelt, pushed him out of the driver’s side door, took the impact myself.
But after I recovered, he could barely look at me during sex, saying the scar disgusted him. “Can’t you wear a shirt?” he would snap. “I don’t want to see that thing.”
1/2
Could he recognize me now, through this scar that he despised so much?
I held my breath, watching his face intently.
But he simply muttered, “Old injury. Not related to the murder.”
His voice was clinical, detached. Just another detail in his case file.
Suddenly, his assistant called out, “Detective, there’s paper in the victim’s stomach!”
Mark’s eyes widened as he took it. “Too degraded by stomach acid. Send it to forensics for analysis.”
Just then, a phone rang – Emma’s special ringtone.
Mark stripped off his gloves and rushed to the hallway, his voice instantly softening.
“Emma? What’s wrong, sweetheart? I’m at work.”
“Tomorrow’s treatment? Of course I’ll be there.”
Emma’s sweet voice carried through the phone: “I know you’re busy with this case. It’s okay if you can’t make it. And please don’t force Alice about the kidney donation. I understand if she doesn’t want to help.”
“I’d never choose a case over you,” Mark answered tenderly. “And don’t worry about Alice. I’ll tie her down and drag her to the hospital myself if I have to. She doesn’t get to choose whether to save your life.”
“You’re too kind,” Emma’s voice dripped with false concern. “I heard she’s claiming to be pregnant? Poor thing must be desperate for attention.”
“Alice isn’t pregnant,” Mark spat. “She’s just trying to avoid helping you. But I won’t let her get away with it.”
Emma sighed softly. “Still, be careful, okay? The killer’s still out there. I worry about everyone’s safety.”
“Just worry about yourself, sweetheart. I don’t care what happens to Alice as long as she doesn’t die before giving you that kidney.”
His casual cruelty twisted my ghostly heart.
They discussed my fate so callously, never knowing my corpse lay just feet away. Never realizing that the kidney Emma needed so desperately was now too destroyed to save her.
My death was orchestrated by Emma, but my husband’s blindness made it possible.
If only he knew the truth – that his precious Emma had arranged my murder, and he was examining his own wife’s body.
But even if he knew, would he care? Or would he just be angry that Emma could no longer get my kidney?