Chapter 42
Sweet Subterfuge
As soon as Larissa left Travisâ room and went by the nursesâ station, she was stopped by the nurse whoâd given her the ice packs earlier.
âOh, perfect timing.â
The nurse beckoned. Confused, Larissa walked over to her.
âHere!â The nurse handed her a bill. âYou can pay downstairs.â
Larissa looked at the bill in her hands. It was yet another fiveâthousandâdollar bill.
âI think youâve made a mistake.â She smiled at the nurse. âIâm not related to Travis. I think itâs better if you have his parents pay for this.â
âWhat?â The nurse was evidently surprised. âArenât you his wife? I heard his parents say heâs married, but his wife-â She hesitated, looking embarrassed.
Even though the nurse did not say anything else after that, Larissa was well aware that whatever the Hardys had said about her, it couldnât have been flattering.
âIâm so sorry. Youâre the only one besides his parents to visit him in the hospital, and youâre a woman too, so I just assumed,â the nurse apologized awkwardly, blushing as she placed the bill back.
âItâs fine.â Larissa remained her composure. âOh, and-â She prepared herself to voice the question sheâd been harboring in her mind since she heard of Travisâ accident. What kind of injury does Travis have anyway?â
Since he was in the spinal surgery ward, Larissa supposed there was a problem with his spine. And problems related to the spineâthey sounded serious enough to her.
âI heard heâd been in an accident and fractured his spine. Some of the nerves in his spinal cord were damaged too. Heâll probably be paralyzed for the rest of his life.â The nurse paused and glanced in the direction of Travisâ room. When she was certain that no one was coming out anytime soon, she lowered her voice and continued, âPoor Travis. They say heâs married, but ever since heâs been admitted, his wife has not been here once. It was always just his parents. They took care of him, and, speaking of his parents, they look like good, honest peopleâthey really do, but their tempers are simply unbelievable! They would start fighting in the ward, almost never for good reason, and they even got physical a few times. Sometimes, the commotion would be so great that the other patients in the ward who arenât bed- bound would get out of bed to watch. One of our patients even left the room because of them, and the other initially wanted to switch rooms, but was forced to stay there as we donât have any other available beds.â
Larissa did not pay much attention to what the nurse said next. Her attention was entirely focused on the phrase âparalyzed for the rest of his lifeâ.
She suddenly understood why Mrs. Hardy had been so adamant about getting her to the hospital.
Travis was paralyzed. His life was pretty much over.
And from Mrs. Hardyâs reaction to Amber, Larissa guessed that Amber was either the reason why Travis had been in an accident, or sheâd completely ignored Travis after the accident.
Mrs. Hardy had come looking for her because she had hoped that Larissa would be responsible for Travis for the rest of his life.
She sneered coldly. It looked like theyâd really thought this through.
When Mr. Hardy finished smoking and returned to the ward, Larissa was already gone.
Mrs. Hardy was still unconscious, and the ice pack on her forehead had slipped down to the side of her face.
Mr. Hardy was shocked. âWhereâs Larissa? Where did she go?â he asked Travis hurriedly.
Travis lay supine on the bed, motionless, his lifeless eyes staring blankly at the ceiling.
âShe left.â His tone was expressionless, resembling that of a zombie.
Mr. Hardy immediately flew into a temper, the volume of his voice rising. âAnd you let her leave, just like that? Do you even know how hard your mother has worked to get her in here?â
âWho asked you to go out for a smoke, then? Travis mocked. âDo you think I couldâve stopped her in my current state?â
Mr. Hardyâs face turned a violent shade of purple, his rage preventing him from speaking for a long time.
âJust you wait!â His hands shook as he pointed at Travis. âWait till wakes up. See if she doesnât scream at you!â
your mother Travisâ expression remained unchanged, unaffected by his fatherâs words in the