He Chose Her Over Our Child’s Corpse - Chapter 1: Chapter 1
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Spencer Jones was on his way home to pick up our daughter Dora from school when he suddenly called, his voice urgent. He abandoned her halfway, leaving me—burning up with fever—to rush to her instead.
But I was too late.
A speeding truck with no plates struck her and vanished, leaving my little girl broken on the pavement. I collapsed beside her, clutching her lifeless body, my screams swallowed by the indifferent city.
Meanwhile, Spencer's first love, Gloria Smith, posted a glowing tribute online: "You always show up when I need you most. So grateful for you!" Beneath it, a cozy photo of them, all soft smiles and lingering touches.
Hands shaking, I screenshotted it and sent it to Spencer. "Is this why you left Dora alone?"
Silence.
Only after our daughter's ashes were buried did he finally reply: "Dora was six. She could handle herself. Gloria can't."
That was it. The last thread snapped.
"We're done."
I filed for divorce and blocked him—every call, every message, every memory.
Spencer had been my sun for thirty years. We grew up side by side, inseparable. I followed him like a shadow—through his crushes, his heartbreaks, his endless pining for Gloria. I endured the ache of loving him while he loved someone else.
When Gloria left him shattered, I picked up the pieces. I confessed. We married. Had Dora.
For three decades, I gave him everything—my youth, my devotion, my quiet sacrifices. I never demanded. Never complained. Even through childbirth, illnesses, the loneliest nights, I swallowed my needs so he wouldn't be burdened.
This one time—just once—I asked for help. And he chose Gloria.
Now Dora was gone.
At her grave, I wept until no tears remained. Then I stood, hollowed out, and walked away.
That's when I saw them.
Spencer, arm draped around Gloria's shoulders, guiding her through the cemetery. She clutched an urn, her face drawn, while he gazed at her with heartbreaking tenderness.
"Danny would've loved this place," Gloria murmured.
Danny. Her damn poodle.
Spencer's pitying expression hardened the second he noticed me.
"Linsey," he snapped, "enough. First the divorce, now this? Are you stalking me?"
I didn't flinch. "Move."
For the first time in thirty years, my voice didn't waver.
But I was too late.
A speeding truck with no plates struck her and vanished, leaving my little girl broken on the pavement. I collapsed beside her, clutching her lifeless body, my screams swallowed by the indifferent city.
Meanwhile, Spencer's first love, Gloria Smith, posted a glowing tribute online: "You always show up when I need you most. So grateful for you!" Beneath it, a cozy photo of them, all soft smiles and lingering touches.
Hands shaking, I screenshotted it and sent it to Spencer. "Is this why you left Dora alone?"
Silence.
Only after our daughter's ashes were buried did he finally reply: "Dora was six. She could handle herself. Gloria can't."
That was it. The last thread snapped.
"We're done."
I filed for divorce and blocked him—every call, every message, every memory.
Spencer had been my sun for thirty years. We grew up side by side, inseparable. I followed him like a shadow—through his crushes, his heartbreaks, his endless pining for Gloria. I endured the ache of loving him while he loved someone else.
When Gloria left him shattered, I picked up the pieces. I confessed. We married. Had Dora.
For three decades, I gave him everything—my youth, my devotion, my quiet sacrifices. I never demanded. Never complained. Even through childbirth, illnesses, the loneliest nights, I swallowed my needs so he wouldn't be burdened.
This one time—just once—I asked for help. And he chose Gloria.
Now Dora was gone.
At her grave, I wept until no tears remained. Then I stood, hollowed out, and walked away.
That's when I saw them.
Spencer, arm draped around Gloria's shoulders, guiding her through the cemetery. She clutched an urn, her face drawn, while he gazed at her with heartbreaking tenderness.
"Danny would've loved this place," Gloria murmured.
Danny. Her damn poodle.
Spencer's pitying expression hardened the second he noticed me.
"Linsey," he snapped, "enough. First the divorce, now this? Are you stalking me?"
I didn't flinch. "Move."
For the first time in thirty years, my voice didn't waver.
End of He Chose Her Over Our Child’s Corpse Chapter 1. Continue reading Chapter 2 or return to He Chose Her Over Our Child’s Corpse book page.