
Chapter 1 of My Last Breath, His Last Drive to Her
The morning I planned to die, I found the phone.
It was tucked in James's favorite suit—the one he wore to our anniversary dinners. A second phone, hidden for years. The screen lit up with a name that shattered me: Darling.
Messages spilled out, each one a knife to the heart.
"Can't wait to see you tonight."
"Wear the blue lace. You know how much I love it."
Sent minutes before his car crashed.
He wasn't going to work. He was driving to her.
And I—stupid, trusting me—was ready to follow him into the grave.
Now, the question burns: Who was she?
The answer will destroy everything I thought I knew.
...
Dawn crept into our bedroom, gentle and pale, brushing the linen curtains with a soft golden promise. I lay tangled with James, legs entwined, his hand sprawled warm and heavy across my waist. My cheek rested on his chest, listening to the steady thump of his heart—a sound I’d come to trust more than my own. The world beyond our window was blurred and silent, as if it, too, wanted to linger in the hush between us just a little longer.
James shifted, his lips grazing the hollow of my neck. He kissed a slow path upward, the stubble on his jaw rough against my skin. I arched into him, needing his touch, needing to feel that I was his just as he’d always promised. His fingers traced the curve of my breast, teasing, coaxing a gasp from my lips. When he murmured my name, it vibrated through my bones—tender, possessive, a secret just for us.
Suddenly, his phone shrilled from the nightstand. The noise felt obscene in the cocoon of our morning. James stilled, his breath warm against my collarbone. For a moment, he closed his eyes, as if savoring the last peace before reality intruded. Then, with a reluctant sigh, he untangled himself and reached for the phone.
He glanced at the screen, a faint crease appearing between his brows. His blue eyes flicked to mine, apology and something unreadable passing through them. "It’s work," he said, voice tight. "I’ll take it in the bathroom."
He pressed a brief, almost desperate kiss to my lips, then disappeared behind the frosted glass door. I listened to his muffled voice—low, hurried—echoing off the tiles. The intimacy of a moment ago faded, replaced by a cold draft that seeped beneath the covers. My fingers brushed the empty space beside me. I already missed him.
James emerged minutes later, dressed and brisk, the crisp lines of his suit making him seem more distant. He grabbed his briefcase from the chair, pausing at the door. "I’m sorry, Em. It’s urgent. I’ll call you later, okay?" He offered a quick smile, but it didn’t reach his eyes. Then he was gone, the echo of his footsteps fading down the hallway. The front door clicked shut, leaving behind a silence too heavy for morning.
I lingered in bed, trying to hold onto the warmth he’d left behind. The sun was higher now, flooding the room with harsh light. I told myself it was just another busy day. I told myself he’d be back tonight, arms open, laughter in his voice. I told myself we were happy.
But two hours later, my phone rang, and the world I knew vanished.
A woman’s voice—strange, official, trembling—spoke my name. "Mrs. Collins? This is St. Mary’s Hospital. There’s been an accident. Your husband… he was involved in a car crash on the outer ring road. I’m so sorry, ma’am. He—he didn’t make it."
The phone slipped from my hands. I couldn’t breathe. The room spun, the walls closing in, the ceiling folding down. I heard a scream—raw, animal, endless—and realized it was my own.
I don’t remember driving to the hospital. The world was smeared and colorless, a tunnel lined with blank faces and fluorescent lights. In the emergency room, a nurse guided me with gentle hands. "This way, Mrs. Collins. He’s… he’s here."
Behind a thin curtain, I saw him. Or what remained of him. His body was covered by a white sheet, only his hand exposed—pale, motionless. I reached out, my fingers trembling, needing to touch, needing to wake him. But he was cold. Gone. The doctor stood nearby, his voice a blur: "There was nothing we could do. The crash was… severe. I’m so sorry."
I collapsed in the hallway, my sobs echoing off sterile tiles. I dug my nails into my palms until they bled, searching for pain sharp enough to drown out the agony inside. Sarah arrived—my best friend, my sister by choice—her arms strong and sure as she gathered me up, holding me while my world cracked apart.
Time lost all meaning. The next thing I knew, I was at the funeral parlor, surrounded by faces I barely recognized. The air smelled of lilies and old wood, heavy and suffocating. I stood beside James’s casket, knees threatening to buckle, my hand gripping Sarah’s so tightly I left crescent marks in her skin. She whispered in my ear, voice steady, "I’m here. I won’t let you fall."
People filed past, murmuring condolences that felt hollow, irrelevant. I watched the lid close over emptiness, not his body—he’d wanted to be cremated, another detail I clung to because it was all I had left. My vision blurred, tears stinging hot and relentless. It felt like the end of everything I’d ever believed in.
That night, the house felt haunted. I wandered from room to room, searching for some trace of him—his scent, his laughter, his touch. I sat at his desk, scrolling through news reports of the crash, replaying the nightmare over and over. My eyes snagged on a detail: the police couldn’t find his phone or his leather satchel. They’d vanished at the scene, as if swallowed by the night. My heart twisted, an uneasy pulse beneath the grief. But I pushed it aside—too numb, too shattered to chase shadows.
I crawled into our bed alone, clutching his pillow to my chest. The ache was endless, a hollow that swallowed everything but the memory of his last kiss. But somewhere, at the edge of exhaustion, that missing phone flickered in my mind—a silent question, waiting in the dark for an answer.
Read the Full Novel on

















