Author's Note: When I first started lurking on Lit years ago there were certain types of LW stories that easily got my hackles up. One of the worst was the cheating wife on her deathbed confessing all her indiscretions to her husband to ease her conscience. Sometimes she'd tell him, but other times she was even more heartless and just wrote him a letter. This is my take on the pain, betrayal and anger revolving around a cheater's deathbed confession.
Warning: There's no graphic sex in this one. If that's what you're looking for, I'd skip this one.
Thanks to blackrandl1958, Mostera1 and outofshadows for making this a better read. Any mistakes you find are mine, since I always tend to mess with my stories after I get them back from my editor.
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Margaret Connors lay propped up in the hospital bed, which resided in her master bedroom. The long stream of visitors had finally ended, and she was left with only her immediate family.
She sighed deeply, adjusting her body to lessen the continuous pain. It was still manageable with the current medication, but that time was quickly coming to an end. The simple fact was that she was dying. The doctors had sent her home with Hospice. They'd told her it would be just a week or two before the pain would require stronger medication, medication which would make her incoherent and cause her to sleep most of the time. If she needed to get her life in order, now was the time to do it.
She looked over at her husband of twenty-eight years. Her eyes began to fill with tears as she thought of the pain she was about to inflict. Again she questioned the wisdom of what she was about to do. For her to be able to leave this world in peace, however, she needed to tie up some loose ends. She'd spoken with all the friends and family who had stopped by to say goodbye. Now, only those closest to her were still there. Harold, her husband, still hovered over her in the room, while she could hear Elizabeth, her little sister, and Becky and John, her niece and nephew, in the living room.
Confession, supposedly it was good for the soul. Maggie certainly hoped it would be. Even though it would be painful, she knew she couldn't die with so many secrets hanging over her. She prayed they'd forgive her.
"Sweetheart?" she said softly, her voice full of emotion.
"Yeah, Babe?" he said, the concern on his face making what she had to do even harder. He saw her tears and quickly went to her side.
"Is it the pain?" he asked softly.
She nodded and looked up into his gentle blue eyes.
"Yes, but right now it's not the cancer. Hal, it's my heart that's breaking."
He looked at her strangely, an odd look on his face. She gathered herself and continued.
"Dear, I need to tell you some things, some things that'll be hard to hear. Actually, I'm not strong enough to do this twice, so it would be better if I did this only once. Would you ask Lizzy to join us?"
Harold's questioning face slowly morphed into a deeply concerned one.
"Maggie," he said quietly, but with an evident underlying dread. "What are you doing?"
"Sweetheart, I'm trying to set things right. I can't leave this world with the heavy burden I've kept hidden. Now, please could you get Lizzy?"
He nodded, and then went into the living room. She could hear the muffled voices.
Can I really tell them everything, she questioned herself. Can I break the hearts of those I love?
The things she needed to say would hurt, but there was no other way to clear her conscience. She'd considered writing farewell letters, but it seemed to be cowardly. No, she'd hold her head up and confess what needed to be said. Her sins seemed like they occurred a lifetime ago, but she knew they'd altered so many lives. It had begun twenty-five years ago; a simple slip which snowballed into something much larger.
Harold traveled on business a great deal during the early years of their marriage. As low level engineer in a construction engineering firm, he'd been sent to oversee one remote building site after another. As he gained more experience and seniority, his traveling had decreased to only short visits to major construction sites.
It was just the opposite for Maggie. She'd initially traveled very little for work. However, before being diagnosed with cancer, Maggie had spent the last fifteen years traveling extensively around the world. As a senior trainer for a large corporation, she'd flown all around the world training their on-site technical support staffs.
Maggie smiled, thinking of the respect and praise she'd earned over the past years. She was very good at her job and had been well recognized and compensated. She'd become the successful, strong, independent woman she'd always dreamed of being. Twenty-five years earlier, she certainly wasn't those things; she'd been a woman who'd recently turned thirty and was fighting off the occasional loneliness found in most two career marriages. That's when she'd fallen.