My 5-Year-Old Daughter Di:ed – After Her Fu:neral, I Found a Flash Drive and a Nurse’s Note That Said, ‘Your Husband Is Lying to You. Watch the Video’

My 5-Year-Old Daughter Di:ed – After Her Fu:neral, I Found a Flash Drive and a Nurse’s Note That Said, ‘Your Husband Is Lying to You. Watch the Video’

“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I managed to get into the security feed. I picked up Grace’s clothes for you, too. Check it when you get home.”

Then she glanced up at the ceiling camera. One glance. One flinch. And she walked away.

At home, I went into Grace’s room and shut the door.

“Your husband is lying to you.”

Her bed was still made. Her stuffed rabbit was still propped against her pillow.

I emptied the bag onto the blanket. Tiny socks. Star leggings. The pink sweater she’d worn when we rushed out the door.

I folded it the way she liked, because my hands needed something to do.

A crumpled note slid out of the right sleeve. A black flash drive was taped to the bottom. The note read:

“Your husband is lying to you. Watch the video. Alone.”

My heart started pounding so hard that my vision blurred.

The first angle was the ICU hallway.

That night, I waited for Daniel to fall asleep. When his breathing finally settled, I slipped out of bed, took my laptop to the kitchen, and sat at the table in the dark.

My hands shook as I plugged in the flash drive.

One file. A long name made of numbers.

I clicked it.

The timestamp in the corner hit me first: the day Grace died.

Dr. Patel walked in holding a syringe and a vial.

The first angle was the ICU hallway.

There I was on screen, pacing, crying, begging. Kara’s arm was out, blocking me from the door. I watched myself reach for the handle and get stopped.

Then the video switched to inside Grace’s room.

Grace was awake. Her cheeks were pale, her eyes glassy, her red allergy band bright against her wrist.

Nurse Hannah stood beside the bed and adjusted the IV. She kept looking at the door like she was waiting for someone to back her up.

Dr. Patel waved her off like she was in his way.

Dr. Patel walked in holding a syringe and a vial.

Hannah read the label and went still.

She looked down at the chart, then pointed to the allergy line. Then to Grace’s wrist. Then back to the vial.

No. Not right.

Dr. Patel waved her off like she was in his way.

Hannah stepped between his hand and the IV port, palms up, pleading.

The screen went black.

Dr. Patel leaned close and said something sharp. Hannah flinched and moved aside.

He pushed the medication.

Grace’s body jerked. The monitor numbers spiked, then crashed.

People rushed in and blocked most of the view, but I could still see Grace’s arm with the red band as it slipped off the bed.

Someone looked up at the corner camera. Someone reached up.

The screen went black.

The video wasn’t over.

I made a sound I didn’t recognize, then slapped my hand over my mouth.

The video wasn’t over.

It cut to a small conference room.

Dr. Patel sat at a cheap table, hands clenched.

Across from him sat a man in a suit with a hospital badge. His name tag said “Mark.”

This clip had audio.

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