
Escaping My Doctor Ex-Boyfriend's Terminal Neglect
Chapter 2
The restaurant was dim, hushed, smelling of old wine and roasted garlic. I pushed open the private dining room’s heavy oak door, and the murmur of my colleagues—my soon-to-be-former colleagues—stopped. They looked up, a dozen faces I’d shared five years of compromises with.
“Hey,” I said, my voice clear and steady. I held up the manila envelope containing my resignation letter, the crisp copy I’d printed just an hour ago. “I’m leaving. I’m leaving Annsberg.”
Lily’s mouth dropped open. Julian Vance, our department head, set his whiskey glass down slowly. No one spoke.
“My mother needs me,” I continued, walking to the head of the table where my empty seat waited. “And I need to be with her. So, this is my goodbye.” I placed the envelope on the polished wood. “I’ve handed my formal notice in. Today’s my last day.”
The silence stretched, then broke with a flurry of questions and murmured sympathies. I nodded, answered vaguely, my mind already miles away, in a small hospital room with my mother. This dinner, this farewell, was the final cut. Severing the last tie to the life I’d built here, the life built around Sebastian.
Julian cleared his throat, cutting through the noise. He reached into his inner jacket pocket and pulled out a simple, pale blue envelope. He slid it across the table toward me, his expression grave. “Madelaine.”
I looked at it. No company logo. Just a plain envelope.
“Open it,” he said quietly.
My fingers felt clumsy. I tore the flap, and inside was not a letter, but a plastic card. A bank card. A plain, silver debit card. My name was embossed on it. Madelaine Goode.
“What is this?” I whispered.
Julian’s eyes were steady. “We all chipped in. Some more than others. It’s not from the company. It’s from us. Your friends.” He paused. “It’s seventy-two thousand dollars. For your mother’s treatment. For whatever she needs.”
The air in the room vanished. Seventy-two thousand dollars. The number hung in the space between us, immense, impossible. My throat closed. I stared at the card, the cool plastic warming in my grip.
Sebastian.
The thought sliced through the shock. In the twenty days since Mom’s diagnosis, Sebastian Ross had not visited her once. Not a single trip to the hospital. Not a phone call to her. He’d sent a generic “Thinking of
You” floral arrangement through a corporate service, the kind you order for a client’s funeral. His contribution to her fight for life was a vase of wilting lilies and a credit card receipt.
And here, on this table, was a card holding seventy-two thousand dollars, collected by people who knew her only through my stories, through my worried tears at my desk. People who’d seen me crumbling and decided to build something for me.
The last thread of sentiment I’d felt for him, that fragile, stupid strand of hope that maybe he’d wake up, maybe he’d see—it didn’t just break. It incinerated. It turned to ash and blew away, leaving nothing but a clean, cold void in my chest.
I picked up the card. It felt solid. Real. “I don’t… I can’t…”
“You can,” Julian said, his voice firm. “You will. It’s already done. The account is active.”
I looked around the table. Lily was nodding, her eyes wet. Others were smiling, some awkwardly, some with genuine warmth. This was it. This was the real world, the one I’d been blind to. It wasn’t Sebastian’s polished, empty promises. It was this—imperfect, messy, but human. And it was worth more than any diamond ring.
“Thank you,” I said, the words thick in my throat. “I… I don’t know how to…”
“Don’t,” Lily interrupted, reaching over to squeeze my hand. “Just take it. And go be with your mom.”
The dinner resumed, but the mood had shifted. It was lighter, celebratory almost. We ate, we talked about nothing important, we laughed a little. I felt present, for the first time in weeks. Present in my own life.
When the plates were cleared, I stood. “I’m going to settle the bill,” I announced, grabbing my purse. “This was… this was perfect.”
I made my way toward the restaurant’s main lobby, the sounds of the private room fading behind me. The main dining area was quieter, a few late-evening couples lingering over desserts. The air was cooler here, carrying the faint scent of the street from the open front door.
I was halfway to the host stand when a hand caught my sleeve.
Lily had followed me out. Her face was pale, her eyes wide and urgent. “Maddie.”
“What’s wrong?”
She didn’t speak. Instead, her fingers tightened on my arm, and she pointed. Not at anything in the restaurant, but through the large plate-glass window of the entrance, out into the softly lit lobby beyond the dining area.
My gaze followed her trembling finger.
And there, standing in the center of the lobby under a modern chandelier, was Sebastian Ross.
He was wearing the grey suit he’d worn to our last “date” night—the one he’d cut short for a “client emergency.” His hair was perfectly groomed, his posture relaxed and confident. He was smiling, chatting easily with the concierge.
And in his arms, cradled against his chest like a precious object, was a small, fluffy white dog.
Beside him, one hand stroking the dog’s head, her body leaning into his side with casual, possessive ease, was
Suzanna Locke. Her hair was down, falling in soft curves around her shoulders. She wore a sleek black dress that clung to every curve, and she was laughing. That same high, piercing laugh I’d heard over the phone six weeks ago. It cut through the lobby’s murmur like a shard of glass.
They weren’t just together. They were a picture. A couple. Comfortable. Intimate. He held her pet. She touched him without hesitation. They were here, in a restaurant far from their office district, on a Friday night, while my farewell dinner was happening in the back.
My feet stopped moving. My breath stopped moving. The world narrowed to that frame of glass, to that scene playing out just feet away from me, separated only by a door I hadn’t yet opened.
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