Her Husband Locked Her in the Garage. The Camera Kept Recording.-mdue - Chainityai

Her Husband Locked Her in the Garage. The Camera Kept Recording.-mdue

Only 11 minutes after I came home with a shattered femur, my mother-in-law kicked my crutches out from under me.

“Sign tonight, or your medicine stays with me,” Margaret said.

I said nothing when Daniel locked me in the freezing dark garage.

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Not because I was weak.

Not because I had given up.

Because the hidden camera above the safe was still recording.

The house still smelled like hospital plastic when Daniel guided me through the front door.

It was the clean, sharp smell that clung to discharge papers, prescription bags, and the inside of a coat after too many hours under fluorescent lights.

Cold air followed us in from the porch and slid under my collar.

The brace on my leg scraped my skin every time I shifted my weight, and the rubber tips of my crutches tapped against the hardwood in a thin, frightened rhythm.

I kept telling myself I was home.

I kept telling myself home meant the couch, a blanket, a glass of water, and the orange bottle the nurse had placed in my discharge bag less than an hour earlier.

I only had to make it across the entryway.

Then Margaret smiled.

My mother-in-law stood beside the entry table as if she had been waiting for a guest she did not like but still wanted to impress.

Pearl earrings.

Cream sweater.

Soft perfume.

The kind she wore to church and family dinners whenever she wanted cruelty to pass for concern.

“Finally,” she said. “Now we can finish what you made so difficult at the hospital.”

Daniel closed the front door behind us.

He did not look at me first.

He looked at his watch.

That should have told me everything.

Three hours earlier, while I was still half-floating from anesthesia and the nurse was explaining my discharge packet, Daniel had slid papers onto the hospital tray table beside my bed.

He did it carefully.

Too carefully.

A property transfer.

A temporary financial authorization.

A medical power form that would let him speak over me while everyone else called it care.

Each page had a colored tab where my signature belonged.

Each page had already been printed, stacked, and arranged like someone had spent the afternoon preparing for my pain.

I remember the nurse stepping out to check the pharmacy order.

I remember the hallway monitor beeping behind the curtain.

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