ADVERTISEMENT
We had been married for ten years—ten years during which I, Vanessa, gave everything I had. I wasn’t merely a wife. I became his anchor, his constant presence, and for the last three years, I served as his father’s full-time caregiver.
So I stepped in.
I cleaned Arthur when he was sick. I sat beside him as morphine blurred his memories and turned his past into half-formed stories. Every morning, I read him the newspaper. In the quiet hours before dawn, when fear tightened its grip, I held his hand. Curtis would stop by occasionally—perfectly groomed—to pat his father’s arm and casually ask, “Did he mention the will today?”
The day Arthur passed away, my world collapsed. I had lost a man who had become a father to me. But for Curtis, it was as though life had just opened its doors. At the funeral, he cried—beautifully, convincingly—wiping tears with a silk handkerchief while discreetly sizing up the businessmen in attendance, calculating fortunes by the cut of their suits.
Continue reading…