The Envelope Behind the Painting Changed Everything for Her Husband-habe

The doctor said I had seven days left on a Tuesday afternoon that smelled like antiseptic, stale coffee, and dying flowers.

I remember that detail because Bruce had brought lilies again.

He always brought lilies.

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The petals were already curling brown at the edges beside the hospital window while Dr. Anderson sat across from me with both hands folded over a clipboard like he was trying to hold bad news steady.

The fluorescent lights above us hummed softly.

A machine beside my bed traced thin green lines across a black monitor.

Steady.

Calm.

Almost peaceful.

Nothing in that room matched the terror sitting inside my chest.

“We still don’t understand the cause,” Dr. Anderson said carefully.

Bruce squeezed my hand immediately.

Too quickly.

Like he had rehearsed the timing.

“The toxicology panel from St. Catherine’s is inconclusive,” the doctor continued. “But your organs are deteriorating much faster than they should.”

Bruce lowered his head.

Perfect husband posture.

The grieving man trying to stay strong.

If someone had walked past the room right then, they probably would have felt sorry for him.

That almost makes me laugh now.

Almost.

Dr. Anderson kept talking about liver markers from my 8:10 a.m. bloodwork.

About kidney strain.

About abnormal deterioration.

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