“You won’t,” I said, holding her tighter. “I swear to you. You will never be alone again.”
The investigation began quickly after the hospital reported the findings.
Police collected the remaining herbal powders from Vivian’s house. Lab results confirmed dangerous levels of arsenic compounds mixed into several of the ingredients. The doctors believed the repeated exposure had severely weakened Emma’s immune system and may have accelerated her leukemia.
Vivian was taken into custody.
Before they transferred her, she asked for one thing.
To see her son.
I refused.
Because every time I thought of her now, I saw Emma collapsing. I saw blood. I saw two unborn children who never had a chance to live.
Weeks passed.
I stayed at the hospital every day.
I learned how to help Emma walk after chemotherapy.
I fed her when nausea made her too weak to hold a spoon.
I read aloud when insomnia kept her awake.
Slowly, something fragile began to return between us.
Not our old marriage.
Something deeper.
Honest.
Painful.
Real.
One evening, Emma looked at me quietly and asked, “Why are you doing this?”
I smiled sadly.
“Because divorcing you was the biggest mistake of my life.”
Her eyes trembled.
“But after everything…”
“I still love you.”
The words rested between us.
And for the first time in months, Emma smiled with real warmth.
Winter arrived early in Chicago.
Outside the hospital windows, snow drifted over the streets. Inside Room 407, Emma slept while machines beeped steadily beside her bed. I had fallen asleep in the chair, my hand resting protectively over hers.
At 3:17 a.m., the monitor screamed.
I woke instantly.
“Emma?”
Her body jerked violently.
Doctors rushed inside.
“Cardiac arrest!”
Everything became chaos.
Nurses pushed me backward while doctors began CPR.
“Emma!” I shouted.