
After My Husband's Public Betrayal, I Was Dying
Chapter 2
I ended the call with Chloe and stared at Ryan's name flashing on my screen. My thumb hovered over the green button, trembling. What would I even say? 'Hey, I saw you declare your love for another woman in front of thousands, and by the way, I'm dying'? I let the call go to voicemail. He could wait. For once in our marriage, my needs would come first.
The next morning, I gathered my medical files, the treatment plan from Dr. Hanson, and the MD Anderson brochure. The experimental treatment was my only real chance—a sliver of hope in a hopeless diagnosis. Five hundred thousand dollars. A fortune, yes, but we had it in our joint savings. Money we'd been setting aside for a future that I now realized had always been Ryan's future, never ours.
I found him in his home office, the morning light streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating the expensive furniture that had always felt more like a showroom than a home. He was typing furiously, probably damage control for yesterday's viral disaster.
"I need to talk to you," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
Ryan barely glanced up. "Not now, Sarah. I'm in the middle of a PR nightmare."
"A nightmare you created," I said, stepping forward and placing the folder on his mahogany desk. "But that's not why I'm here."
He sighed dramatically, leaning back in his ergonomic chair. "What's this?"
"I have cancer. Stage four pancreatic cancer." The words hung in the air between us, heavy and final. "There's an experimental treatment at MD Anderson. It costs five hundred thousand dollars."
I watched his face, searching for a flicker of the man I'd married—concern, shock, anything human. Instead, his lips curled into a smirk as he shoved the folder aside without even opening it.
"Really, Sarah? This is what you're going with?" He let out a cold laugh that chilled me to the bone. "You saw the video and now you're inventing a terminal illness to guilt me into staying? To drain our savings before I can file for divorce?"
My knees nearly buckled. "You think I'm lying?"
"I think you're desperate." He stood up, towering over me. "And pathetic. There's nothing wrong with you except that you've never had the spine to live your own life. You've been riding on my coattails for years."
"I have the medical reports right there," I whispered, pointing to the folder he'd dismissed. "The scans, the blood work—"
"Anyone can fake paperwork, Sarah." He walked around the desk, his voice dripping with disdain. "I'm not giving you a penny of our money. In fact, I've already called my lawyer. You'll be hearing from him soon."
He brushed past me, the expensive cologne he wore—the one I'd given him last Christmas—lingering in the air. The door closed behind him with a decisive click, leaving me alone with the realization that the man I'd loved for years had never existed at all.
* * *
Hours later, I stood in our kitchen, mechanically chopping vegetables for a dinner I had no appetite for. My phone lay silent on the counter—no calls from Ryan, no texts. Just the occasional ping of another notification about the viral video that had exposed my husband's affair to the world.
The knife slipped, nearly cutting my finger. I hadn't eaten all day, and the room was starting to spin. Black spots danced at the edges of my vision as a wave of nausea hit me. Dr. Hanson had warned me about this—the cancer was already affecting my liver function, causing episodes of weakness and dizziness.
I gripped the edge of the counter, trying to steady myself. But my legs gave way, and I crumpled to the floor, my head striking the tile with a sickening crack. Pain bloomed at my temple as warm wetness trickled down my face.
The ceiling swam above me, the recessed lights blurring into halos. I fumbled for my phone, which had fallen beside me. With trembling fingers, I managed to punch in 911, but my vision was tunneling fast.
As consciousness slipped away, a strange thought floated through my mind: Would Ryan even care if I died here on our kitchen floor? Or would it simply save him the trouble of a divorce?
* * *
Beeping machines. The antiseptic smell of hospital disinfectant. Voices murmuring nearby. I drifted in and out of awareness, catching fragments of conversation.
"...severe dehydration... anemia consistent with her diagnosis..."
"...head laceration, minor concussion..."
"...next of kin has been notified..."
I forced my eyes open, wincing at the harsh fluorescent lights of what I recognized as an emergency room bay at Mount Sinai. A nurse noticed I was awake and approached, checking the IV line running into my arm.
"Welcome back, Mrs. Mitchell. You gave us quite a scare."
I tried to speak, but my throat was parched. She offered me a sip of water through a straw.
"Someone's been waiting to see you," she said, nodding toward the doorway.
I turned my head, expecting—hoping, despite everything—to see Ryan. Instead, a familiar figure stepped into view, his face lined with concern. It took my foggy brain a moment to process what I was seeing.
"Daniel?" I whispered, disbelieving.
Daniel Chen moved to my bedside, gently taking my hand in his. His touch was warm, solid—real in a way nothing had felt since Dr. Hanson had delivered my diagnosis.
"Hey, Sare-bear," he said softly, using the nickname from our childhood that no one had called me in fifteen years. "I came as soon as I heard."
"How did you—"
"I saw the video," he said, his jaw tightening briefly before his expression softened again. "I booked the first flight from San Francisco. I was actually trying to find your address when the hospital called me."
"They called you?" I was struggling to make sense of it all.
"You still have me listed as your emergency contact in your phone," he explained, a sad smile touching his lips. "Some things don't change, I guess."
I stared up at him, this ghost from my past who had materialized when I needed someone most. Daniel, who had confessed his love to me in high school, whom I had rejected for Ryan. Daniel, who had disappeared to California and built an empire while I had slowly erased myself trying to be the perfect wife.
"I'm not leaving," he said firmly, as if reading my thoughts. "Whatever you're going through, Sarah, you're not going through it alone. Not anymore."
A tear slipped down my cheek as his promise washed over me. For the first time since the doctor had said the word "cancer," since I had watched my husband declare his love for another woman, I felt something other than despair.
I felt seen.
What I didn't know then was that Daniel's arrival would change everything—not just for me, but for Ryan too. And that the man who had abandoned me in my darkest hour would soon discover exactly what he had thrown away.
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