SWIB is a self-coined acronym;
S
he
W
anted
I
t
B
ad. This is a dark tale of a woman, whose desire to be treated like a slut cost her everything.
Slowly, I became conscious. Usually, you just wake up. Somehow, I knew this was not usually. I knew that because of the pain in my chest. I heard beeping and something hard was in my mouth. I tried to swallow, there was something in my throat.
I developed the courage to open an eye. I was in a hospital. Something I did, consciously or not, alerted someone and a nurse came into my area, "Oh, great, Mr. Wilson, you're awake. How do you feel?"
Wilson? My name is Wilson? I thought about it. I think she is right! My name is Ralph Wilson. That is beyond strange, I don't think I'd have been able to come up with a name. It hadn't occurred to me there was no way for me to answer with the tube in my throat.
"Oh, I am sorry Mr. Wilson, no wonder you look confused. You can't speak with the ventilator in place. Your lung had collapsed, and it was touch and go for a while, but it looks like you are going to make it. I have called the doctor to see if we can get that tube out of your throat."
I lay there, it was like nothing I'd ever experienced. I felt normal, well my chest hurt like hell. Maybe I'd had a heart attack? How did I know about heart attacks, when I didn't know who I was beyond a name? Maybe this is just a brain fog, and it will come back to me.
A tall, slim man walked in the room. "Mr. Wilson, I am Doctor Atherton, I am going to have the nurse remove the ventilator. You can just shake or nod your head. Do you know why you are here?"
I shook my head. I didn't have a clue. He nodded. "Not uncommon after a trauma. I am sure everything will come back quickly. You were shot in the chest, Mr. Wilson. You were brought here in the early hours of Saturday morning; it's now, about Noon on Wednesday. Unlikely as it may seem, you are one lucky man.
"The bullet hit you right in the center of your chest. It should have gone into your heart and been the end of you. But it hit at an angle, was small caliber, and hit a rib. It diverted the path, pierced a lung, and allowed you to live. Fortunately, the EMTs got to you quickly, they got you here, and two surgeries later, I think you are going to make it."
The nurse finished her work and now I could talk. Well, talk is a big word. I could rasp and squeak. She said, "I will get you some water, the doctor will complete his examination, and we will allow Detective Harmon to talk with you."
The two of them fiddled, prodded, and made notes. They were talking to one another as they left the room. I thought to myself, they certainly got more points for efficiency than friendliness. Come to think of it, people who operate on gun-shot victims should have those traits in those quantities. No sooner were they out the door than a man in a well-worn, cheap suit walked in.
"Mr. Wilson, I am Detective Roland Harmon." He was showing me a badge and ID, as he spoke. "Do you feel up to a few questions?"
I was surprised when I answered. My voice was returning. "The questions will be fine. It is the answers which may present a problem."
He looked like that might be somehow meaningful. He didn't say how. "There was a call to 911", he checked his notes, "at 1:47 am, Saturday morning. It was from your cell phone. The fire department broke into your home because a gunshot had been heard on the call. Can you tell me who fired the shot?"
I sat and stared at nothing. I must know something. It seemed forever, nothing was coming to mind, nothing at all. Finally, I said, "Detective, can you describe what they found, where I was, something to maybe jar my memory."
"Surely. The doctors told me you were having some memory issues. You were found on the floor of your bedroom, near your bed. The bed had been slept on on only one side, the side you were found laying beside. Just inside the bedroom door lay your wife, she was holding the gun."
"My wife? Had she been shot?"
"No, Mr. Wilson, she had not been shot."
"Did she shoot me?"
"Again, Mr. Wilson, we know she was not the shooter. If you can, try to focus on that night. Did you hear anything? See anything?"
I stared off into space, again. Suddenly I got an image. "Oh no! There is someone in the house!"
I sat straight up. I was shaking. I looked right at the detective, "My wife was out, with her lover. I was resigned to divorce. I went to bed, alone. I was asleep and I heard a deep man's voice say, 'Shit!' It was like he'd stumbled on something. I had my cell phone in my hand in case she called. I called 911, put the phone on speaker. He came in just as the man on the phone said, 'This is 911, state the nature of your emergency.' He heard it. He shot."
"He? Who?"
"Big. Wearing a ball cap, I didn't see his face."
"White? Black? Hispanic?"
"Sorry, no idea. It was a flash. I think I looked at the phone, wanting the voice to quiet down. I heard the shot. Then everything went black."
"You were shot, center mass and fell back against your night table. It hit you in the back of the head and knocked you unconscious. The shooter probably thought you were dead."
"I don't know this guy. Ask my slut of a wife. She knows every inch of him, or so I've been told."
He actually turned and walked out of the room. He returned in less than a minute, accompanied by a nurse. She had a syringe and walked toward the IV bottle dripping down into my arm. Detective Harmon started talking, which distracted me from whatever the nurse was doing.
"Mr. Wilson, I am afraid I have some bad news. When the EMTs entered your bedroom, the first thing they saw was your wife, laying on the floor with the gun in her hand. They were understandably cautious. She was not moving.
"One of the EMTs stepped on the gun, still no movement. He knelt down and found no pulse. She was dead. The room was set up to appear you had beaten her and she had shot you."
"I swear, I..."
"No, we know. We don't know much about your wife's murderer, other than a criminal master mind, he is not. Though your wife was beaten and bloody, there was none of her blood in your home. She had stopped bleeding before he or they brought her home. The gun was placed in her lifeless hand. There was no gunshot residue on her skin and her time of death was at least two hours before the shooting."
I felt tears. I was not as said as you'd think, but the announcement that my wife had been murdered was too much to take in. I saw the nurse pushing the syringe into my IV and everything went black.
++++++++++++++
I awoke. I was starving. I searched around the bed and found a call button. I pushed it. A nurse appeared. "I am so hungry. Is there any way I can get something to eat?"
"We have your breakfast tray right here. We knew you'd be hungry."
Hospital food doesn't have a good reputation. But as hungry as I was it tasted like the finest cuisine available anywhere. I ate and felt better. It was time to do some thinking, to see if I could put together a life out of the mess, I was currently in.
My first thought was Grace and Jimmy. I had an 8 year-old daughter and a 6 year-old son. How could I have been so far out of it I didn't know? I hit the call button, again.
"Yes, Mr. Wilson. How may I help?' said a very pleasant nurse.
"My children?"
"Your children are with your mother, at your home. She calls frequently but being alone she can't get here."
Well, thank God for that. Mother had moved to live near us after Dad died a couple of years ago. I am an only child, and she absolutely loves her grandchildren. Doreen, suddenly I remembered my wife's name, it was Doreen. Her parents lived a thousand miles away, in Florida. I wondered if they had been told. Surely.
"Can you get me my cell phone? I need to talk to Mother."
Needless to say, it was a difficult conversation.
"Hi, Mom. How are they?"
"It has been a tough few days. Both of them want to know where their mommy and daddy are. I have not told them about Doreen."
"There is no reason for you to go through that. It will just upset them more. I hate to say it, but there is no good time for a child to learn their mother is dead. Whatever else she was, she was a great mother."
"What else was she? I had no idea, Ralph."
"I didn't, either, Mom. Not until a couple of weeks ago. It's too painful to talk about right now."
"Oh no, don't go into it. I wasn't prying, just fretting. Listen, Ralph, a Mr. Jordan called and said your salary would continue for at least six months. I can stay here and hold the fort, until you get home."
"Mom let's think about moving you into our, well, my home."
"Ralph, it would be my fondest wish, but let's get you home and then back to work. The future will take care of itself."
My mother was a wise woman.
Well, my children were at least with their grandmother and my income was secure. Things could be worse. I had been up for only an hour. Eating and a short conversation tired me out, I took a nap.