My Husband Let His Mistress Kill His Own Mother
My mother-in-law got into a serious car accident on her way to buy fishfish she wanted to make soup for her son.
A steel rebar had pierced straight through her chest. She was rushed to the ICU for emergency surgery.
This kind of operation required a specialist. Dominic Harding was one of the few surgeons in the city who could pull it off.
He was also my husband.
I called him, barely able to keep my voice steady. "Mom was in a car accident. She's in the ICUonly you can save her. You need to get back to the hospital. Now."
His tone was infuriatingly calm. "The hospital has protocols. Surgeries are scheduled based on urgency."
"And since she's my family," he continued, "I need to recuse myself. I can't abuse my position to jump the queue."
Then I heard ita woman's voice cooing through the phone. Victoria Summers, the new surgical intern.
"Dominic, hurry! The puppy's in so much pain!"
I felt my stomach drop. "Are you serious right now? Your mother's life matters less than a dog?"
His voice turned to ice. "Enough. Your mother's life is a lifeand so is a dog's."
That's when it clicked.
He thought it was my mother who was dying. That's why he was spouting all this "recusal" nonsense.
Dr. Chavez's voice cut through the chaos in the hallway. "The patient is critical. The rebar punctured near the heartit could rupture any second. If we don't remove it immediately, we're looking at massive hemorrhaging and cardiac tamponade. After that, nothing can save her."
My knees buckled. I pressed both palms against the wall just to stay upright.
I called Dominic again. And again. And again.
After the thirty-third time he hung up, a text came through.
"Stop harassing me. I won't make an exception for your mother's surgery. I have to recuse myself. If you insist I operate, you can wait your turn in line."
I typed back frantically, trying to explain.
A red exclamation mark. Message failed.
He'd blocked me.
Shaking, I grabbed the nearest nurse. "PleaseI'm Dr. Harding's wife. The patient is his mother. Can you contact him? Tell him to come back"
Her expression shifted. She made the call immediately.
I waited, tears streaming down my face.
Dominic, please. Just come back. Save her.
The nurse put the phone on speaker. My husband's voice filled the hallway.
"Sara, are you done?"
"I told youyou can't use my connections to cut the line. This is a waste of medical resources. It's unfair to other patients."
"Dominic." My voice cracked. "That's your mother in there. I'm begging you. If you don't come, she's going to die."
He scoffed. "Still lying to me? I just called my dad. Mom's at the farmer's market buying fish. She's making me soup tonight."
"You'd actually curse my mother just to get your mom bumped up the list."
"She got hit on her way to buy that fish!" I screamed. "For you!"
"Even if it is my mother," he said coldly, "I still need to recuse myself. I won't abuse my authority. Give it up."
The line went dead.
Dr. Chavez rushed over. "Did you reach Dr. Harding? The patient's condition is deteriorating. We need to operate now."
The nurse's face had gone white. "Dr. Harding is at the pet hospital next door. Operating on a dog."
She swallowed. "He said not to proceed with this patient. She's familyhe has to recuse himself. No special treatment."
Dr. Chavez stared at her. "The intern's golden retriever? This is absurd."
His jaw tightened. "He's abandoned his post."
He reassured me:
"Ma'am, go pay the fees now. We'll keep her stable and contact Dr. Harding to return for the surgery as soon as possible."
"Okay! Thank you!"
I bowed gratefully to Dr. Chavez, then stumbled toward the payment counter.
The POS machine beeped coldly.
Insufficient balance.
I froze. Must've entered the wrong PIN in my panic.
Three tries. Same result.
I opened my banking app.
$0.
My knees buckled. I caught myself on the counter.
"Impossible there was $500,000 in there!"
I pulled up the transaction history.
One minute ago. $500,000 transferred out.
Recipient: Victoria Summers.
My mind went blank. My whole body shook.
I called Dominic again. This time he picked up fast.
I forced my voice steady: "Dominic. The money in our joint account. Did you transfer it?"
He didn't even hesitate: "Yes."
"I knew you'd try to bribe someone to get my mom bumped up the queue. So I moved it to Victoria for safekeepingso you wouldn't drag my name through the mud."
I exploded: "Dominic! That's YOUR mother! She's in the ICU waiting for surgery!"
"This is life and death!"
"Transfer the money back NOW, or she will die!"
Victoria's syrupy voice cut in: "Sara, I'm not trying to be rude, but even though your mother-in-law is technically family, you can't just spend your husband's money without boundaries, right? If your mom can't afford treatment, maybe don't hog medical resources."
Blood rushed to my head. "Victoria Summers, you're letting someone die for money!"
Victoria whimpered: "Dominic, she's being so mean to me but I'm just telling the truth! She doesn't think about you at allfirst pressuring you to break hospital rules, now stealing your money You're so pitiful having a wife like this"
Dominic's voice turned harsh: "Sara Hughes! Victoria is trying to help. How can you be so vicious? Apologize to her. Now."
My mother-in-law was dying. I didn't have time for this. I swallowed my pride, ready to beg him to transfer the money back
The nurse kept urging me to pay.
From the phone: "What an act you're putting on."
Click.
I called back. Blocked.
I messaged him on every platform I could think of.
Please, transfer the money back. Your mom needs it for surgery
Please, come back. That's your own mother
Read. No reply. Or deleted and blocked.
I slid down the cold wall to the floor, sobbing.
Doctors and nurses rushed past me, shouting that the patient's blood pressure was crashing, that she was in critical danger
Then I rememberedHarold Harding. Dominic's father. He had to have money.
I called him frantically.
"Dad! Mom was in a car accident. She's in the ICU. Only Dominic can save her, but he won't come back. He won't do the surgery. He even transferred away her life-saving money. Pleasejust wire me 0-000,000 first to keep her alive"
Silence on the other end. Then:
"Sara. Dominic already told me. You wanted to pull strings and have him bump someone for surgery."
"But the hospital has rules. As deputy chief, he has to lead by examplehe can't cut the line."
"You're familyyou should be thinking of him. You need to avoid any appearance of impropriety"
I was so anxious my words came out jumbled.
"Fine, fine, fine! Dad! I'll wait in line! But we still need money for the surgery!"
"PleaseI'm begging youtransfer me 0-000,000 so I can pay the fee. Otherwise Mom will die!"
The only response was a cold, indifferent voice:
"Sara, our family is not a piggy bank for your parents to drain."
I shouted, "It's not my mom! It's my mother-in-lawDominic's real mom, your wife!"
"If you don't believe me, come to the hospital and see for yourself! Please!"
Mr. Harding Sr. snorted coldly. "At this hour, Paige is definitely out doing her square dancing."
"Don't think you can scam my money to subsidize your family!"
My heart plunged into an ice pit.
I sank onto the freezing floor, hugging my knees, crying helplessly.
At that moment, a nurse approached the doctor, her expression grim.
"Deputy Chief Harding called. He said if this patient can't pay, move her to a hallway bed."
"Or have them transfer to another hospital."
"She absolutely cannot receive special treatment just because she's familycan't take up medical resources"
Dr. Chavez's face went livid. "How is this special treatment? The patient is criticalshe doesn't meet the conditions for transfer."
"If she's moved to a hallway bed, she will die!"
Hearing that, I nearly broke down.
I scrambled up, stumbling forward, grabbed Dr. Chavez's arm, and begged desperately
"Please, give me a little more time. I will pay the money and wait in line for Dominic to come back and do the surgery!"
Collapsed on the floor, my mind went blank.
The thought that my mother-in-law's life hung by a threadthat her own son, just to avoid any appearance of impropriety, would rather operate on a dog than save her
made my heart feel like it was being carved with a knife.
No. He wasn't avoiding impropriety.
He just thought it was my mom.
In their eyes, my mom wasn't worthy.
But that was a human life! I had to find a way to save her!
I called my mom to borrow money.
My dad died young. My mom raised me alone, ruining her health from the strain. Now she survived on a meager pension, occasionally doing odd jobs to help with expenses.
The moment she heard my mother-in-law needed money, she didn't hesitatejust transferred everything immediately.
Seeing the amount$31,800, down to the last dollarmy chest ached.
That money was probably everything she'd saved over years.
Then, swallowing my pride, I borrowed from coworkers, classmates, friendsanyone I couldbarely scraping together 0-000,000.
After paying the first installment, I rushed the receipt to the doctor.
"Dr. Chavez, I've paid. Please arrange the surgery as soon as possible."
"No need to cut the linejust follow the process and queue up!"
Dr. Chavez quickly called a nurse to verify the queue and prepare the OR.
She came back with a grim expression.
"Dr. Harding still refuses to come back. He said even for family, he has to strictly follow rules and regulations, avoid any appearance of improprietyeverything goes through proper channels."
Dr. Chavez's voice dropped. "Then how many surgeries are still ahead in line?"
The nurse hesitated, glancing at me.
"Dr. Harding doesn't have any surgeries scheduled today."
Dr. Chavez's jaw tightened. "Didn't you tell him he has no surgeries arranged?"
The nurse's eyes reddened with frustration. "I did, but Dr. Harding said this patient's family bribed us and deliberately lied to him"
I almost laughed until I cried.
He kept saying "avoid suspicion, avoid suspicion," told me to follow the processbut I was following the process. He still didn't believe me.
Because of that stupid principle, he was going to deny a patient legitimate medical care.
After five agonizing hours and three emergency resuscitations, Dominic and Victoria finally returned.
He was carrying a dog. She had her arm looped through his like they were on a date.
"Dominic, thank goodness you bandaged my puppy and took her out to play! If she'd been emotionally traumatized, I would've been devastated!"
He tapped her nose indulgently. "You little fool. You're just too kind."
The nurse exhaled in relief and immediately rushed him to prep for surgery.
Victoria pouted. "Dominic, I've never scrubbed in before. I want to learn!"
He smiled, hopelessly indulgent. "Fine, fine. You can assist."
Everything in the OR was ready. Anesthesia had already been administered.
Only then did Dominic stroll toward the operating room, Victoria in tow.
When he saw me, his face hardened.
"Sara. Disgusting."
"You bribed the hospital to cut the line and tricked me into coming back. That's a serious policy violation."
I froze, shaking my head frantically. "I didn't! I waited in line like everyone else!"
The nurse rushed to back me up. "Dr. Harding, this patient really did wait her turn. She didn't cut the line."
His expression darkened further. He rounded on the nurse.
"How much did she pay you to cover for her? This hospital has rules. Everyone who pulls strings thinks they have a special reason. What about the patients who follow the rules? Are their lives worthless?"
I was trembling with fury. "Dominic! I'll say it one more timeI didn't cut in line! I didn't bribe anyone!"
"And the person on that table waiting for you to save her? That's your mother."
His face remained stone cold. "Even if it's my mother, she waits in line. I won't let someone like you corrupt the system."
"Cancel the surgery. Immediately."
The nurse looked ready to cry. "Dr. Harding, the patient is already under anesthesia. If we don't operate now, it'll be too late!"
Only then, in a grand display of mercy, did he agree to proceed.
But to avoid any appearance of favoritismto prove just how fair and selfless he washe refused to operate himself.
Instead, he assigned Victoria as the primary surgeon. An intern who had never held a scalpel in an OR. The other doctors would assist.
"Dr. Harding, this... doesn't follow protocol."
His voice went ice cold. "What protocol? This patient used improper means to jump the line and harm other patients. If I operate myself, that would violate protocol."
No one dared to argue.
During the surgery, Victoria kept asking what each instrument was for. She accidentally severed a blood vessel, causing massive hemorrhage. The patient nearly went into cardiac arrest.
Then she nicked the wrong organ, slicing a gash into the lung.
"Oops! I'm so clumsy! I'm so nervous!"
"Oops! Wrong spot again!"
The rest of the team scrambled desperately to clean up her mistakes and keep the patient alive.
If they hadn't been mid-surgery, every single one of them would have dragged her out of that room.
But Dominic encouraged her with endless patience, reassuring her every step of the way.
Thankfully, he'd handled the most critical part himselfotherwise the surgery would've been a disaster.
When it came time to suture, he cleared the room again. Just him and Victoria, so she could practice her stitches.
I waited outside for hours, anxiety clawing at my chest. Finally, the surgical light went dark. The doors swung open.
Victoria and Dominic stood shoulder to shoulder, pumping their fists in unison.
"Oh yeah! I did it!"
"I'm amazing!"
I rushed forward.
"Dominic, how is she? Did Mom's surgery go okay?"
He glanced at me, eyes cold.
"You should be thanking Victoria. She performed the operation. She saved your mother's life."
I froze.
Victoria performed the operation?
She was an intern. Fresh out of school.
Before I could process it, a nurse burst out of the OR, face white as a sheet.
"Dr. Harding, something's wrong! The patient's abdomen is distended, blood pressure's crashingshe's critical!"
My heart, which had just started to settle, shot back into my throat.
The nurse was shaking.
"During instrument count, we found a veterinary scalpel."
"The missing bladeit's still inside her."
My legs buckled. I hit the floor.
Victoria stuck out her tongue like a child caught sneaking candy.
"Oops! I was wondering where my scalpel went. Must've gotten mixed in during surgery!"
Dominic's jaw tightened. He knew exactly what this meanta catastrophic malpractice incident.
"Prep the OR. I'll do it myself."
No more excuses about conflict of interest.
Mom crashed twice on the table.
Two more hours. Finally, it was over.
But when he walked out, his instructions to the nurse were ice-cold.
"Patient's stable. Transfer her out of the ICU immediately."
The nurse hesitated.
"But... she just had two major surgeries. Multiple resuscitations..."
"Protocol."
His tone left no room for argument.
"She already jumped the queue once. Now she goes to the hallway."
I stood frozen, unable to believe what I was hearing.
"Dominic, that's your mother!"
"She just came back from the brink of death, and you're putting her in the hallway!"
He scoffed.
"If every doctor gave special treatment to family, what about regular patients?"
"If you hadn't insisted on cutting the line, Victoria wouldn't be exhausted from assisting two back-to-back surgeries!"
"Your mother staying in the hallway is her punishment for queue-jumping."
"You'll kill her!"
I screamed, completely unraveling.
He had her moved anyway.
It was past midnight. The hallway had no monitors. No nurses standing by.
I knelt beside her bed, gripping her hand.
"Mom, hold on. I'm going to find another doctor. I'll get you a room."
I ran through the hospital like a madwoman, begging anyone who would listen.
When I came back, a crowd had gathered around her bed. CPR in progress.
It was too late.
Mom didn't die on the operating table.
She died by her own son's hand.
Dominic stood there in his surgical mask, barely registering who the body belonged to.
Expressionless, he took the organ donation form Victoria handed him and signed his name.
Victoria's eyes were red, tears streaming.
"I can't believe my first surgery failed. Will this go on my record?"
I almost laughed from the sheer rage.
Someone was dead. And all she cared about was her spotless rsum.
Dominic held Victoria, his voice soft:
"It's not your fault. If someone hadn't broken the rules and cut in line, the patient wouldn't have died."
He turned to me, his gaze cold.
"Sara, you killed your mom. Since she's dead, let her die with some value. Let them harvest her heart and liverconsider it atonement for your selfishness."
I laughed.
I reached over and pulled off Mother-in-law's oxygen mask, exposing her face.
"Dominic, open your damn eyes and look. Your mom is the one who's dead."
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