Not loving.
Not protective.
Controlling.
Cold.
Obsessed with owning my life.
“You poisoned Emma,” I whispered.
My mother’s face changed.
Only slightly.
But enough.
Enough to confirm everything.
“Be careful what accusations you make,” she said quietly.
That quietness terrified me more than screaming.
“You killed my children.”
“Nathan—”
“You destroyed my wife.”
“She destroyed herself!” my mother shouted.
The words echoed through the house.
Then came silence.
Heavy.
Ugly.
Unforgivable.
I looked at her one final time and realized I no longer recognized the woman standing in front of me.
“You’re dead to me,” I whispered.
Then I walked out.
Behind me, my mother called my name again and again.
I never turned around.
When I returned to the hospital, Emma was awake.
The moment she saw my face, she understood.
“You confronted her.”
I nodded.
Emma looked frightened. “What happened?”
I sat beside her for several seconds before answering.
“She never denied it.”
Emma closed her eyes.
A tear slipped down her cheek.
Not triumph.
Not relief.
Just heartbreak.
Because no matter what my mother had done, part of Emma had once loved her too.
I took Emma’s hand carefully.
“I’m going to expose everything,” I whispered.
But Emma tightened her weak grip.
“Don’t.”
I frowned. “She’ll hurt you again.”
“I don’t care.”
“I do.”
Her voice cracked.
“Nathan… I don’t want the rest of your life destroyed by hatred.”
I stared at her in disbelief.
How could she still think about protecting me?
“You almost died because of her.”