The first thing I noticed was the sound.
A steady electronic rhythm somewhere nearby.
Slow.
Consistent.
Almost hypnotic.
It echoed through the darkness surrounding me, pulling me upward little by little, as though I were surfacing from the bottom of an endless ocean.
I wanted to open my eyes.
I wanted to move.
But my body refused.
Every muscle felt impossibly heavy.
My arms wouldn’t respond.
My lips felt numb.
Even breathing seemed like work.
For several terrifying moments, I wondered if I was trapped inside my own body.
Then I realized something important.
I wasn’t dreaming.
I was awake.
A warm sensation suddenly wrapped around my hand.
Small fingers.
Fragile fingers.
Shaking fingers.
“Mom… if you can hear me, please don’t open your eyes.”
The voice was barely above a whisper.
Yet I recognized it instantly.
Bruce.
My son.
My heart raced.
Every instinct screamed at me to react. I wanted to squeeze his hand, call his name, do anything to let him know I was still there.
But there was something in his voice that stopped me.
Fear.
Real fear.
The kind no child should ever have to carry.
He leaned closer.
I could hear his breathing trembling.
“Just keep pretending you’re asleep,” he whispered.
“Please.”
Confusion flooded my mind.
Why would Bruce say something like that?
What could possibly be happening?
Then his next words sent a chill through my entire body.
“You need to hear what Dad is planning.”
My blood ran cold.
Before I could process what he meant, the door opened.
Footsteps entered the room.
Two people.
I knew who they were before either spoke.
Arthur.
My husband.
And Chloe.
My sister.
“Still unconscious?” Arthur asked.
His voice immediately felt wrong.
There was no concern.
No sadness.
No relief.
Only impatience.
As though my condition were an inconvenience rather than a tragedy.
“The doctors don’t expect her to wake up,” Chloe replied casually.
The ease in her voice disturbed me even more.
Then I heard something that made my stomach twist.
A soft laugh.
Followed by the unmistakable sound of a kiss.
For a moment, I thought I had misunderstood.
But deep inside, I already knew the truth.
“Everything is finally working out,” Arthur said.
The words hit harder than any physical pain.
Working out?
What exactly was working out?
I felt Bruce’s hand tighten around mine.
His small fingers trembled violently.
And suddenly, for the first time since waking, I wasn’t afraid of what had happened to me.
I was afraid of what might happen next.