
Her words haunted me. Desperate, I secretly set up the camera while Eric was undergoing a scan.
I hid the tiny device inside a hollowed-out book on the shelf facing his bed. My heart was pounding so hard I thought the nurses could hear it. When the orderlies wheeled Eric back in, he looked frail and pale, his breathing shallow.
âIâm so tired, baby,â he whispered, gripping my hand weakly. âI just need to sleep.â
âI know,â I said, kissing his forehead, fighting the urge to vomit. âIâm going to go to the cafeteria to get some coffee. Iâll be back in twenty minutes.â
I walked out, went straight to my car in the parking garage, and pulled up the live feed on my phone.
For the first two minutes, Eric lay perfectly still. I started to feel guilty. That woman was crazy, I thought. Iâm spying on my dying husband.
But then, the door to his room clicked shut.
On the screen, Ericâs eyes snapped open. He didnât look tired anymore. He sat upâcompletely unassistedâand stretched his arms over his head, cracking his neck. The âfrailâ man who couldnât lift a spoon yesterday swung his legs over the side of the bed and walked briskly to his duffel bag in the closet.
He pulled out a burner phone and a bag of beef jerky.
He dialed a number, chewing aggressively. âHey,â he said, his voice strong and clear. âYeah, she just left. Itâs working perfectly. The doctor is an idiot, he thinks the test results are degraded, but heâs buying the symptoms because Iâm playing it up.â
I covered my mouth to scream.
âYeah,â Eric laughed. âThe GoFundMe is up to $80,000. Plus the early payout on the life insurance hits next week. Once the money is in the offshore account, âEricâ dies, and we meet in Mexico. Just be patient, babe.â
My world shattered. There was no cancer. There was no tragedy. Just a scam. He was faking the symptomsâlikely taking something to make himself vomit or look paleâto steal money from friends, family, and me, to run away with someone else.
I didnât go back to the room. I went to the police station.
The Aftermath
Three hours later, I walked back into the hospital room, but this time, I wasnât alone. Two officers followed me in.
Eric was back in bed, putting on his âdyingâ act. He gasped when he saw the police. âHoney? Whatâs going on?â
âThe performance is over, Eric,â I said, holding up my phone. âI saw everything. The jerky. The phone call. Mexico.â
His face went from pale to beet red in a second. He tried to stammer an excuse, but the officers were already moving in. They found the burner phone under his mattress. It contained texts detailing the entire plan with his mistress.
As they handcuffed him and led him awayâmiraculously walking just fine nowâI saw a familiar figure standing by the nursesâ station.
It was the stranger.
I walked over to her, tears streaming down my face. âYou saved me. Who are you?â
She gave me a sad smile. âMy name is Sarah. Five years ago, Eric did the exact same thing to me. He faked a brain tumor, drained my savings for âtreatments,â and vanished. Iâve been tracking him ever since. I promised myself I wouldnât let him do it to another woman.â
Eric went to prison for fraud and grand larceny. I eventually rebuilt my life, but I never forgot Sarah. Sometimes, the hardest truth is better than the sweetest lie.