
Chapter 1 of The Truth Behind Her Slap
A cold wind whipped across the parking lot of Denver General Hospital, biting through my thin cardigan.
I pulled it tighter around my shoulders, wishing I'd worn something warmer. The gray October sky hung low and heavy, mirroring the weight in my chest.
I spotted Margaret before she saw me—my mother-in-law's rigid posture unmistakable even from a distance. She stood by the hospital entrance, her normally perfect hair slightly disheveled, her face drawn with illness and anger. James and his sister Rebecca flanked her like sentinels.
My steps faltered. I'd hoped to slip inside unnoticed, to continue what I'd been doing for weeks now—quietly preparing for the bone marrow donation that might save Margaret's life.
The irony wasn't lost on me: here I was, literally giving part of myself to a woman who had never shown me anything but contempt.
"There you are," Margaret's voice cut through the parking lot. Several people turned to look. "Where have you been?"
I approached slowly, conscious of the growing audience. "Margaret, I—"
"Don't 'Margaret' me." Her eyes flashed with a fury that seemed to momentarily restore her strength. "My son has been here every day. Rebecca has been here every day. Where have you been while I've been fighting for my life?"
James shifted uncomfortably beside her. "Mom, maybe we should go inside—"
"No, James." Margaret held up a hand, silencing him without even a glance. "I want to know where your wife has been spending her time instead of supporting this family."
I swallowed hard. The truth was so simple yet so complicated. I'd been meeting with Dr. Chen, undergoing tests, preparing my body to give Margaret the marrow that matched hers against all odds. But I'd promised the doctor confidentiality until everything was certain.
"I've been handling some personal matters," I said quietly, feeling the inadequacy of my words even as they left my mouth.
Margaret's laugh was bitter. "Personal matters. Of course. Always thinking of yourself first, aren't you, Lila?"
A small crowd had gathered now—patients waiting for rides, hospital staff on breaks, visitors coming and going. Their curious eyes made my skin prickle with embarrassment.
"That's not fair," I whispered, though I knew fairness had never been part of our relationship.
Something in Margaret seemed to snap then. Perhaps it was the illness eating away at her defenses, or maybe it was simply years of resentment finding an outlet. Whatever it was, I never saw the slap coming.
Her palm connected with my cheek with surprising force. The crack echoed across the parking lot, followed by a collective gasp from onlookers. My skin burned, but I remained standing, too shocked to move.
"You are selfish, ungrateful, and a disgrace to this family!" Margaret's voice rose to a shout, her finger jabbing the air inches from my face. "After everything we've done for you!"
I stood motionless, feeling the heat spread across my cheek. Years of being the family outsider had taught me that defense was pointless. Besides, what could I say? That I was secretly preparing to save her life? That despite everything, I couldn't bear the thought of James losing his mother?
James stood frozen between us, his face a mask of anguish. His inability to choose—to defend either his wife or his mother—was a familiar pain, one I'd grown accustomed to over the years.
Rebecca's eyes gleamed with something like satisfaction. She'd never hidden her agreement with her mother's assessment of me.
From the corner of my eye, I noticed a security guard—his name tag read 'Marcus Thompson'—moving purposefully toward our group. His face was professionally neutral, but his pace suggested urgency.
I remained still, my cheek throbbing in time with my heartbeat, wondering how something as simple as love could lead to such a complicated moment—standing humiliated in a hospital parking lot, silently protecting the secret that might save the woman who hated me most.
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