The Million-Dollar Trap

The Million-Dollar Trap

Shirlee Melnick

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My grandfather, a proud Vietnam vet, was wasting away in his rundown house, neglected by my "perfect" family who deemed him a "downer" on their holiday plans. I was the only one who bothered to visit him, bringing him real food and doing my best to fix his crumbling home. But then, he collapsed right in front of me, his face turning blue. I fumbled to call 911, frantic with fear. When I desperately reached out to my family group chat, informing them Grandpa was dying, the "read" receipts popped up instantly under my message. Every single one of them saw it. No replies. No calls. Just silence. And later, when the doctor confirmed he had a month at most, my own father and uncle called, not to offer comfort, but to scream at me for running up hospital bills. "You should have just left him be!" they yelled, furious that I had dared to get involved. How could these people, his own children, be so heartless, so utterly consumed by greed? Didn't they feel an ounce of shame, an ounce of love, for the man who raised them? What kind of family was this? Then, a weak whisper from Grandpa's bed cut through my despair. "I know how to make them come." He pointed to his old footlocker, revealing a shocking secret: a bank statement showing over $1.5 million. And with a grim nod, he told me what to text them next: "Grandpa is discussing his will. There's money." This was going to be a Thanksgiving performance they'd never forget.

Introduction

My grandfather, a proud Vietnam vet, was wasting away in his rundown house, neglected by my "perfect" family who deemed him a "downer" on their holiday plans. I was the only one who bothered to visit him, bringing him real food and doing my best to fix his crumbling home.

But then, he collapsed right in front of me, his face turning blue. I fumbled to call 911, frantic with fear. When I desperately reached out to my family group chat, informing them Grandpa was dying, the "read" receipts popped up instantly under my message. Every single one of them saw it.

No replies. No calls. Just silence. And later, when the doctor confirmed he had a month at most, my own father and uncle called, not to offer comfort, but to scream at me for running up hospital bills. "You should have just left him be!" they yelled, furious that I had dared to get involved.

How could these people, his own children, be so heartless, so utterly consumed by greed? Didn't they feel an ounce of shame, an ounce of love, for the man who raised them? What kind of family was this?

Then, a weak whisper from Grandpa's bed cut through my despair. "I know how to make them come." He pointed to his old footlocker, revealing a shocking secret: a bank statement showing over $1.5 million. And with a grim nod, he told me what to text them next: "Grandpa is discussing his will. There's money." This was going to be a Thanksgiving performance they'd never forget.

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The Surgeon's Wife: A Postmortem Love

The Surgeon's Wife: A Postmortem Love

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5.0

I feel the cold first. It' s the stainless-steel table beneath me, as my soul hovers just above, watching. The man in blue scrubs, my husband Dr. Ethan Cole, picks up a scalpel. He's a surgeon, brilliant they say, but today he' s playing forensic pathologist to my dismembered body. My body is in pieces-a leg here, an arm there. My soul is hollow, devoid of anger or jealousy, as Ethan and his assistant try to piece me together. He remarks, "This is a mess. The killer was thorough. Almost… personal." His voice sends shivers down what used to be my spine, reminding me of all the times he' d used that same dismissive tone. He finds a dark splinter near my ribs, speculating about where I was held. Moments later, his phone rings, and his voice softens for Olivia Hayes, inviting her to her birthday, then turning to me with pure disgust, muttering, "Let' s get this over with." Then he finds our secret. A tiny, nascent fetus within me. His mask shatters, replaced by a choked, guttural sound of shock, horror, and something else-a child he just declared not worth his money. Clara, my best friend, calls, frantic. Ethan coldly dismisses her, claiming ignorance of my whereabouts and indifference. Olivia arrives, radiant in red, bringing him soup. As she turns, her elbow bumps a tray of instruments, and caught off guard, a flash of pure, venomous rage twists her face – a look that unmasks my killer: Olivia. My last memories flood back: Olivia, silhouetted, smiling, whispering, "He' s mine, Chloe," before raising the hammer. Now I watch her ladle soup for Ethan, realizing my death freed him, made him hers. And a foolish, broken part of me thinks, 'Maybe it' s for the best. If my death makes him happy, then let him be happy.' But then Olivia answers Clara' s call, and, with a cruel smirk, lies, framing me as an unfaithful wife who ran off with "Ryan something." Just before Ethan rushes off, claiming a work emergency, I see him make a furtive call to Detective Ryan O' Malley, telling him to ping my real phone. And just as Olivia confidently shoves something into her bag after he leaves, it slips out: my phone, with its cracked screen and cat charm. I know exactly where Ethan is going now-to find my phone at Olivia' s other apartment-and the labyrinth of lies begins to unravel.

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