Her Son Whispered Not to Wake Up. Then the Lawyer Walked In-felicia

“Mom… Dad is waiting for you to die. Please don’t wake up.”

Emily heard her son before she understood where she was.

The words came through darkness so thick it felt physical, as if someone had packed wet soil over her face and left only a narrow tunnel for sound.

Image

There was no morning in that place.

No ceiling.

No window.

No body she could command.

Only the steady beep of a machine somewhere to her right, the chemical bite of antiseptic in her nose, and the warm pressure of a small hand wrapped around her fingers.

At first, she thought Ethan’s voice belonged to a dream.

But dreams did not smell like plastic tubing and old flowers.

Dreams did not ache.

Dreams did not make the inside of her skull burn every time she tried to breathe.

“Mom, if you can hear me, squeeze my hand,” Ethan whispered.

Emily tried.

Nothing moved.

Her mind screamed the command down her arm, through nerves that felt severed from her will, into fingers that might as well have belonged to someone else.

Move.

Please.

Move.

The hand around hers trembled.

Ethan was ten, though grief had already made him sound older than any child should.

He had been a small, serious baby who watched faces before he trusted them.

He had become a little boy who crawled into Emily’s lap during thunderstorms and Fourth of July fireworks, pressing his ear to her chest while asking if the sky was mad.

She used to tell him, “No, baby. The sky is just loud.”

Now he was the one whispering into the dark, trying to keep her safe from a man who wore a wedding ring.

“Please don’t leave me with him,” Ethan said.

Him.

Ryan.

Even trapped inside her own body, Emily felt the name move through her like ice water.

There had been a time when Ryan could make a room soften around him.

He kissed her forehead in grocery-store lines.

He carried Ethan on his shoulders through pumpkin patches.

He called Emily brilliant in front of strangers and possessive in private, though at first she mistook the second thing for love.

That was how Ryan worked.

He never grabbed the cage all at once.

Read More