my father understood everything.
Garrett took one step back.
Because grief had entered that hospital tonight.
But a storm of absolute ruin had just arrived.
My father didn’t break his stride.
He stopped mere inches from Garrett.
The sheer weight of his presence reduced my husband to a trembling child.
“William, I can explain—” Garrett choked out, his eyes darting frantically toward the exit.
My father didn’t answer.
Instead, he reached out.
His gloved fingers wrapped around the empty inhaler in my hand.
He held it beneath the harsh fluorescent lights.
His gaze narrowed as he noticed something I had completely missed in my panic.
A microscopic smudge of dark grease near the nozzle.
A mechanic’s mark.
“This wasn’t an accident,” my father whispered.
His voice was so low…
so terrifying…
that the entire hospital corridor felt like a tomb.
Then he slowly lifted his eyes back to Garrett.
Every trace of humanity had vanished from his expression.
“You didn’t just let him die, Garrett.”
“You sold him out.”
“And I know exactly who paid the price…”