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Then Megan asked when I would “retire permanently.”
“Soon,” she said. “I switched his heart medication three weeks ago. I’ve been crushing digoxin into his morning smoothies. One day he’ll fall asleep and not wake up. Then we own everything.”
The room lost its air.
And every morning, she had been poisoning me.
Then came the final blow.
Beatrice smiled and said, “He gets that from his father.”
“No,” Beatrice said. “Terrence is Silas’s son.”
My best friend.
The man who had officiated my wedding, baptized my son, and eaten Sunday dinner at my table for thirty years.
“If you destroy this, you destroy your only advantage,” he said. “This isn’t a family argument. It’s a conspiracy.”
He was right.
So I called my attorney, Ms. Sterling.
Then I went home.
Beatrice was waiting with a green smoothie.
“I made your favorite,” she said sweetly. “You missed it this morning.”
I took the glass.
I pretended to drink.
The liquid tasted bitter beneath the ginger. I spat it into a napkin when she looked away, then acted weak.
Thirty minutes later, I collapsed onto the living room rug.
Beatrice did not scream.
She did not call for help.
She nudged me with her shoe and whispered, “Wake up, old man.”
When I stayed still, she laughed.
Then she called Megan.
“It’s done,” she said. “He drank it. Bring the binder. We need the medical power of attorney and DNR ready before anyone calls paramedics.”
Soon after, Terrence came in.
“Dad!” he shouted, dropping beside me. “Call 911!”
For one second, I felt hope.
Then Megan snapped, “Don’t touch that phone. He’s supposed to die.”
Terrence sobbed, but Beatrice told him I had signed a DNR.
I had not.
Still, Terrence let go of my arm.
“Okay,” he whispered. “We wait.”
That was when something inside me stopped being his father.
Not because he was not my blood.
Because he chose not to save me.
They began arranging their story. Megan opened the binder. Beatrice told Terrence what time to write. He signed.
Then I coughed.
The room froze.
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