Doctors rushed me into emergency surgery after confirming the aneurysm was actively leaking. Before the operating room doors closed, I looked at Chloe holding the envelope and whispered, “Don’t touch that money.” Then the anesthesia pulled me under.
When I woke up days later, Dr. Hayes told me I had nearly died. My mother had already been asking about billing, visitor access, and how to collect my belongings. Chloe sent flowers I was allergic to and texts blaming “wedding stress” for everything she said in the ER.
Then came the message that ended us forever: Chloe asked if I could still pay the venue balance because canceling would ruin her wedding. I stared at the screen in disbelief. She had watched me bleed out on a hospital bed and still cared more about centerpieces than my life.
That night, I canceled every cashier’s check and used the money to pay my medical bills instead. For the first time, I understood something painful but freeing: love that only values your sacrifice is not love at all-
