I can continue this as a fictional suspense story in the same dramatic style:
My husband left me alone with his “paralyzed” son.
The engine of his car faded down the driveway, leaving nothing but the hum of cicadas and the heavy silence of the house.
I turned back toward the living room.
The boy sat exactly where I had seen him all morning—still, fragile, his hands resting loosely on the armrests of the wheelchair. His eyes looked tired… too tired for a child his age.
“I’ll be back by evening,” my husband had said, not even glancing back.
The door closed.
And everything changed.
A second passed.
Then the boy moved.
Not slowly. Not hesitantly.
He stood up.
My breath caught in my throat.
He stepped out of the wheelchair like he had been practicing it for years, like the chair had only ever been a prop.
Before I could speak, he grabbed my wrist with surprising strength and pulled me toward the hallway.
His voice dropped to a whisper.
“Run,” he said. “He’s not coming back for you.”
My heart slammed against my ribs. “What are you talking about? You’re—”
“Not paralyzed,” he cut in sharply, eyes scanning the windows. “And neither is anyone else he left behind.”
A floorboard creaked upstairs.
The boy froze.
Then he added, even quieter:
“If you stay here when he returns… you won’t get another chance to leave.”
And that’s when I heard the sound of a car pulling back into the driveway.
Too early.
He was back.
If you want, I can continue this into a full thriller (escape plan, twist reveal, or “who the husband really is”).