Love, Lies, and a Fatal Dog
attacked by a dog. I rushed to the emergency room, only to find h
d meeting. "What's all the fuss? I was in the middle of a meeting." He then shockingly defended the dog, Caesar
concern while smirking triumphantly at me. Cohen wrapped an arm around her, declaring it "not your fault, Hillary. It was an accident." He
ranging her funeral, picking out her burial clothes, and writing
in hand, with the caption: "Living the good life in the Maldives! Spontaneous trips are the best! #blessed #zuri
eling at my mother's grave, I finally understood. My sacrifices, my hard work, my love-
pte
iet of my office. It was a neighbor,
! You need to come quick!
ing in the sudden silence. I mumbled something, a thank you or a
bandages, but blood was already seeping through, staining the cloth a
spered, my v
it was a grimace. "It's
ound was deep. They were
expensive suit unwrinkled, his hair perfectly in place. He lo
ss? I was in the m
almost bored. It gra
her, Cohen. It w
. The woman who looked at me like I wa
d, but not with concern fo
st playful. Your mom
t I was hearing. Playful? The doctor h
illary would never let him hurt anyone on purpose. Your mot
h me. I looked from my mother's p
ing to pet him.
eyes wide with fake concern. She rushed
. Caesar has never done anything like thi
k when Cohen wasn't looking. The loo
her. "It's not your fault, H
important business trip to Zurich tomorrow. I can't cancel it. Make su
over me. It was the kind of q
oing?" I asked,
-dollar deal, Jaycee. You
He didn't see the tiny cracks in my
I said softly.
n't making a scene. "That's my
her patronizing pat. "I'
und her shoulders as she dabbed at her dry eyes. I did
rse. The infection had spread. Her fever spiked. The doctors
d that
of the machines stopped. The only
. I tried again. And again. No answer. His phone was off. He must be
at I couldn't bring myself to read. My mother had been so excited for the wedding. She had already bought her dres
and family
that bastard Cohen?" my cousi
on a business trip. He doesn't know.
them. I was l
d have wanted. I stood at her graveside, the cold wind wh
turned earth. My phone buzzed in my pocket. It was a not
embled as I o
llary. He had his arm around her, and she was laughing, holding a glass of champagne. The caption
was burying my mother, he was on a lavish vac
ping for air, my stomach heaving. The betrayal was a
was all a lie. His concern, hi
dirt. The screen of my phone was blurry with my tears.
red, my voice raw. "I'm so
d seeping into my bones. When I finally
one last time, at his
my voice clear and steady. "He's
o her then, a sile