
Cancer - Forsaken by Husband
Chapter 2
The apartment key felt foreign in my hand, its jagged edges digging into my palm as I struggled with the stubborn lock. After three attempts, the door finally gave way, swinging open to reveal my new home—a cramped one-bedroom with faded beige walls and a view of the hospital parking lot where I would spend my remaining days.
Sixteen steps from door to window. Twelve from bedroom to bathroom. A kitchenette barely large enough for one person to turn around in. So different from the sprawling mansion I'd left behind, yet somehow more honest. At least here, the smallness was visible, tangible—not hidden behind marble countertops and designer furniture.
"Home sweet home," I whispered to no one, my voice bouncing off empty walls.
I placed my single suitcase beside the secondhand couch I'd hastily purchased online. The delivery men had left it centered in the living room, its faded blue fabric the only splash of color in the sterile space. I ran my fingers along its arm, wondering if the previous owner had been happy, healthy, in love.
My phone vibrated against my hip, the screen lighting up with Melanie's name for the third time that morning. I let it ring until silence returned, then watched as a text appeared:
*Isabella, Ryan needs you at the Vanity Fair photoshoot tomorrow. Car will pick you up at 9. Wear the blue Armani—it photographs better with his new suit.*
Ten minutes later, another:
*Please confirm receipt of this message. Ryan is asking.*
I doubted that. Ryan hadn't asked about me in months. He'd demanded, assumed, expected—but not asked.
With trembling fingers, I typed: *I won't be attending. I've moved out.*
The response was immediate, but it wasn't from Melanie. Ryan's name flashed across my screen:
*Stop this childish game and come home. You're embarrassing both of us.*
I stared at his words, feeling nothing but a hollow ache where anger should have been. Even now, facing the end of my life, all he cared about was appearance.
*I'm not coming back,* I replied.
His response came like a slap: *Then don't expect another dime from me. Your little tantrum just cost you everything.*
I set the phone down on the windowsill, watching as an ambulance pulled into the emergency bay across the street. Everything, he'd said. As if the mansion, the cars, the designer clothes were everything. As if they could save me now.
---
"Deep breath in," Dr. Sharma instructed, her gentle hands guiding me back against the reclining chair as the nurse prepared the IV line. "This first session will take about three hours. Are you comfortable?"
I nodded, though comfort seemed like a distant memory. The oncology ward's chemical smell burned my nostrils, a stark reminder of what was to come. Around me, other patients sat in identical chairs, some reading, others sleeping, all connected to the same clear bags of poison that would simultaneously save and destroy us.
"Mrs. Mitchell—" Dr. Sharma began.
"Chen," I corrected quietly. "I'm using my maiden name now."
Something flickered in her eyes—understanding, perhaps. Or pity. "Ms. Chen, then. Has your support situation... improved since our last conversation?"
I forced a smile as the nurse slid the needle into my vein. "I'm managing fine on my own."
"Cancer isn't something to face alone," she said, lowering her voice. "There are resources, support groups—"
"I'm fine," I repeated, my tone sharper than intended. My hands trembled in my lap, and I quickly tucked them under the thin hospital blanket. "Really."
Dr. Sharma held my gaze a moment longer, clearly unconvinced, before making a note in my chart. "The social worker will stop by before you leave. And Isabella? The offer to talk stands. Anytime."
I watched her walk away, her white coat disappearing around the corner as the first drops of chemotherapy entered my bloodstream. Alone in a room full of people, I closed my eyes against the sudden burn of tears.
---
"My name is Isabella," I said quietly, my voice nearly lost in the community center's basement room. "I was diagnosed with stage four gastric cancer three weeks ago."
Twelve faces turned toward me, their expressions a familiar mixture of sympathy and relief—the latter because it was me sitting in this circle of metal folding chairs, not them.
"Welcome, Isabella," the facilitator, a silver-haired woman named Joan, responded warmly. "Would you like to share anything else?"
I glanced around at the group—mostly older, a few my age, all bound by the common enemy growing inside us. What could I say? That my husband, the beloved Ryan Mitchell whose face graced magazine covers and movie posters, had abandoned me at my darkest hour? That I was dying alone while he partied with his ex-girlfriend?
"Not much to tell," I said instead. "I'm taking it one day at a time."
"That's all any of us can do," a man with a oxygen tank beside him offered. "I'm Thomas. Lung cancer. Year two of 'six months to live.'"
A ripple of knowing laughter moved through the circle. Dark humor, I was learning, was the language of the terminally ill.
"Do you have family supporting you?" asked a woman with a colorful head scarf.
I hesitated, the lie forming automatically to protect Ryan's precious image. "My husband travels for work. He's... doing his best."
The words tasted bitter on my tongue. As the conversation shifted to someone else's story, I sat back in my chair, the familiar loneliness settling over me like a second skin. Even here, among those who understood suffering, I couldn't speak my truth.
My phone vibrated in my pocket—another text from Ryan's world demanding my presence, my compliance, my silence. I ignored it, focusing instead on the stories around me, wondering if any of them felt as alone in their truth as I did in mine.
You may also like





