During my night shift at the hospital, two emergency cases were rushed in—and to my sh0ck, they turned out to be my husband and my sister-in-law. I gave a quiet, cold smile… and did something no one expected.
The ambulance doors burst open at exactly 2:13 a.m. The first thing I noticed was my husband’s blood soaking into another woman’s coat. The second thing was her face—Vanessa, my sister-in-law.
For a few seconds, everything around me seemed to freeze.
Then instinct took over.
“Trauma bay two,” I ordered, my voice sharp and controlled. “Vitals. Oxygen. Call Dr. Patel.”
Marcus lay half-conscious on the stretcher, his expensive watch cracked, his shirt drenched in blood from a deep shoulder wound. Vanessa clung to a paramedic, crying dramatically, her mascara streaked down her cheeks.
“Please,” she sobbed. “He’s my brother. Save him.”
Brother.
That’s what she called him in public.
Six months earlier, I had already uncovered the truth—hotel receipts, late-night “family emergencies,” hidden messages. I had seen the way she smirked at me across the dinner table while Marcus squeezed my hand as if I were too blind to notice.
When I confronted him, he laughed.
“Don’t be dramatic, Elena,” he said. “You’d have nothing without me.”
That lie again.
What he never knew was that the house belonged to me. The investments were mine. Even the malpractice insurance for his private clinic—the one he begged me to help arrange—was under my control.
And when he secretly started moving money, I had already taken steps ahead of him.
Now he lay pale beneath the hospital lights, shaking, vulnerable. Vanessa’s eyes finally met mine.
“Elena…” she whispered.
Marcus turned his head, fear filling his expression.
I stepped forward, snapping on gloves.
“Good evening,” I said calmly. “Rough night?”
Vanessa grabbed my wrist. “You can’t be part of his treatment.”
I stared at her hand until she let go.
“I’m not his doctor,” I said evenly. “I’m the charge nurse. I make sure everything is properly recorded.”
Her face lost color.
Marcus tried to speak. “Elena… listen…”
I leaned closer, checking his pulse.
“No,” I said softly. “Tonight, you listen.”