
He Died On Her TableWhen my son suffered a heart attack in the middle of the night, I rushed him to the hospital where my wife worked.
Instead of taking charge herself, she handed the operation to an intern. "New doctors need opportunities to learn. I'll be right there supervising. Nothing will happen."
But before the surgery even began, a phone call pulled her away, leaving a trembling Marvin Vance alone in the operating room.
My son never made it off the operating table.
I collapsed in the hallway, sobbing in grief. Yet I overheard my wife gently comforting Marvin. "For your first surgery, you held on this long. You've done an amazing job, my little cinnamon roll."
Awkwardly copying trendy slang younger people used online, she reassured him with endless patience. Then she turned to me with a cold expression and demanded that I sign a letter forgiving Marvin.
"He has his whole future ahead of him. You can't destroy his life."
I tore the document to pieces and threatened to call the police and expose what had happened.
In response, she arranged for a medical donation and had my son's body dissected that very night.
Driven insane by grief, I threw myself from a building while clutching my son's ashes.
When I opened my eyes again, I found myself back on the day of my son's surgery. This time, I immediately contacted my parents and transferred him to another hospital.
But that night, they still dissected a child.