Her Husband Attacked Her Hospital Bed. Then the Door Opened-nhu9999 - Chainityai

Her Husband Attacked Her Hospital Bed. Then the Door Opened-nhu9999

The hospital room smelled like antiseptic, stale coffee, and the plastic wrap from a new roll of bandages.

Rebecca Walker noticed that smell before she noticed the pain.

Pain had become a kind of weather in her body by then, always there, shifting from dull rain to lightning without warning.

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The monitor beside her bed kept beeping in a steady rhythm.

It was so calm it almost felt insulting.

Above her, the fluorescent light buzzed softly, and every few minutes the air vent breathed out a thin stream of cold air that made the blanket tremble against her ribs.

Both of Rebecca’s legs were locked in plaster casts from her thighs down.

The casts made her feel pinned to the bed, not resting in it.

They were heavy, awkward, and humiliating in the quiet way helplessness can be humiliating when you are used to being the person who handles everything.

Three weeks earlier, she had been driving home after picking up a prescription and a bag of groceries.

It had been a normal afternoon.

The kind nobody remembers until it becomes the day everything changes.

She remembered sunlight on the windshield.

She remembered the paper grocery bag tipping over in the passenger seat.

She remembered the screech, the impact, and then the strange glitter of broken glass across the dashboard.

After that came ambulance lights, a paramedic asking her name, and the hospital intake form stamped 6:42 PM.

By the time the doctors were finished counting injuries, Rebecca had two broken legs, cracked ribs, stitches under her hairline, and a body that no longer obeyed her.

For twenty-one days, she waited for her husband to walk into that room like a husband.

Caleb Walker did visit, but never the way she needed him to.

He came in with tight shoulders and a phone in his hand.

He asked what the doctors said, but he listened only for cost.

He asked when she could come home, but he meant when the bills would stop growing.

He stood at the foot of her bed like the hospital had personally insulted him.

Rebecca had known Caleb for thirteen years and had been married to him for eleven.

There had been a time when she mistook his confidence for strength.

He was decisive.

He was polished.

He always knew which route to take, which credit card to use, which waiter to correct, which neighbor to impress.

In the beginning, that had felt safe.

When their daughter Emma was born, Caleb told Rebecca it made sense for her to leave her accounting job.

“Just for a few years,” he said at the kitchen table, one hand over hers, his voice soft enough to sound generous.

Emma needed one steady parent at home.

The daycare costs were ridiculous.

Rebecca was better at the house anyway.

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