Punished for Skipping a Dog’s FuneralChapter 1
When the nanny held a funeral for the family dog, I was at the hospital with my daughter Lily for her heart check-up, and couldn’t attend.
That evening, my husband Richard Hayes confronted me.
“I told you to go to the funeral in my place, didn’t I? Why didn’t you go? Do you know how heartbroken Lily was? That was her favorite dog.”
“Or was this intentional? Did you poison the dog yourself?”
He spoke like an angry machine gun, each word harsher than the last.
I couldn’t help snapping back. “How can a dog ever compare to my daughter? Besides, I told her in advance.”
Richard lowered his head and apologized.
“I’m sorry, honey. It was my oversight. Please don’t be upset.”
I thought the matter was over.
But when Lily finally got a chance at a new heart, Richard used it against me—forcing me to carry the dog’s ashes up a mountain in 108-degree heat.
“You missed the pet funeral. Now, at the pastor’s memorial blessing, you’ll carry the ashes up the hill.”
“You said before a dog couldn’t compare to your daughter. What about now?”
So, he had held that grudge in his heart all along.
…
Tears filled my eyes as I demanded, “Richard, in your heart, am I and your daughter really worth less than a dog?”
The urn was custom-made, weighing over fifty pounds.
I myself weighed barely ninety, and my right leg had just undergone surgery.
If I really carried it uphill, it would kill me.
“A dog truly can’t compare to either of you,” Richard said, seizing my chin. His voice sharpened: “But you must learn rules. You must not be cold-hearted. This is your punishment.”
Hatred flickered in his narrowed eyes.
“Whose idea was this? Yours, or hers?”
I glanced toward Vanessa Moore, who was standing nearby watching like it was theater, and let out a bitter laugh.
Who would have thought that eight years of marriage could be shattered so easily by an outsider?
Feigning panic, Vanessa said, “Mr. Hayes, please stop! The harsher you are with your wife, the more she’ll hate me. I begged her to let me stay in this house…”
Her lips trembled, tears brimming in her eyes, as if I had always bullied her.
Richard’s grip tightened, nearly choking me.
“Look what you’ve done—scaring Vanessa like this. Today you’ll pay the price.”
He finally released me, turned, and gently took Vanessa’s hand.
“Let’s go,” he said softly.