The day of my father’s funeral, my “loyal” wife took my credit cards and flew her entire family to a 5-star resort in Bali

The air inside the sprawling, six-bedroom colonial was suffocating, thick with the cloying, aggressively sweet scent of Casablanca lilies. They were arranged in massive crystal vases on the mahogany dining table, the kitchen island, and the entryway console. But they weren’t for my father, Henry, whose lungs were failing in a sterile hospice room ten miles away. They were for the “Spring Soiree” my wife, Miranda, insisted on hosting three days after we received his terminal diagnosis.

For seven years, I had been the load-bearing wall of our marriage, a successful architect in Massachusetts who poured every ounce of his energy into designing a life that looked perfect from the street. Miranda treated my career not as a partnership, but as an unlimited ATM. She was a social climber of the highest order, a woman who viewed my father—a retired high school history teacher with a modest pension—not as family, but as an inconvenient obstacle to a theoretical inheritance.

I sat by my father’s bedside on a rainy Tuesday, clutching his frail, translucent hand, listening to the shallow rattle of his breathing. The rain lashed against the hospital window. I closed my eyes, but instead of peace, my mind replayed the echo of Miranda’s voice from the hallway of our home the night before. She had been on the phone with her mother, Cynthia, complaining loudly.

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