After three brutal weeks in the hospital, I thought the worst was behind me. Then I walked through the front door of my house and found my husband and his mother had made other plans. They’d packed my things and were ready to replace me with someone else.
That was their first mistake.
They say home is where the heart is, but what happens when you come back to find your heart has been ripped out and boxed up? I’m Elizabeth and I had just survived my longest hospital stay yet. Three grueling weeks of fertility treatments, needles, and hope.
Twenty-one days of fighting for the dream Bill and I supposedly shared.
My body ached from the fifth round of procedures and every muscle screamed with exhaustion. But my heart still carried that fragile hope that maybe, just maybe, this time would be different.
Bill promised he’d pick me up. “I’ll be there, Liz.
Don’t worry,” he’d said earlier.
Instead, I got a text from him that evening: “Important meeting. Get home on your own.”
My hands shook as I read it. After everything I’d been through, he couldn’t even manage a 20-minute drive?
The taxi dropped me off at our front door.
I found it slightly ajar, which struck me as odd. My legs were still wobbly from weeks of bed rest as I pushed the door open. The moment I stepped inside, a wave of expensive perfume hit me like a slap.
This wasn’t my perfume.
I shuffled toward the living room, my hospital bag dragging behind me.
What I saw made my blood freeze. Boxes were stacked everywhere, making our couch barely visible under the cardboard towers.
Sitting right in the middle of this chaos were three people: Bill, his mother Regina, and a woman I’d never seen before. The stranger wore a tight red dress that screamed money.
Her heels probably cost more than my hospital bills. She sat next to my husband like she belonged there.
Bill looked up with cold eyes. “Finally!
We’ve been waiting forever.”
“What’s going on?” My voice came out as a whisper. “What are all these boxes doing here?”
Regina leaned forward with that smug smile I’d grown to hate. “Oh, honey.
We’ve been busy while you were gone.”
“Busy doing what?”
Bill stood up, brushing the dust off his pants. “Mom helped me pack your stuff. You’re moving out.”
The words knocked the breath right out of me.
“I’m what?”
“Moving out,” he repeated, like he was talking to a child. “And before you start crying about the money, I transferred the treatment funds from our joint account to my personal one. Since you probably failed again.”
My legs gave out as I grabbed the doorframe to steady myself.
“The treatment money? Bill, that was my savings. I worked overtime for months…”
“For nothing,” Regina interrupted.
“Absolutely nothing. Five treatments, Elizabeth. Five failures.”
The woman in red finally spoke.
Her voice was honey-sweet and poison-sharp. “I’m Jill, by the way. Bill’s told me so much about you.”
“Who the hell are you?”
Regina’s laugh was like nails on glass.
“She’s the solution to our problem. Since you clearly can’t give my son a child, we found someone who can.”
Jill reached over and squeezed Bill’s hand, and he didn’t pull away.
“This has to be a joke.” My voice cracked. “Bill, tell me this is some sick joke.”
He met my eyes with zero warmth.
“The only joke here is that I wasted five years waiting for you to do the one thing wives are supposed to do.”
“We tried everything. The doctors said I still have a good chance if we keep trying. They said my levels are improving and…”
“The doctors said a lot of things,” Regina cut me off.
“But here you are. Still empty and broken.”
Each word was a knife. I’d heard these in