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Last Moments with Holden Novel Cover

Last Moments with Holden

The pain struck like lightning through my abdomen, doubling me over so violently that I crashed into the kitchen counter. My breath came in sharp gasps as another wave of agony twisted through my torso, radiating outward until every nerve screamed in protest. "Mom," I whispered, then louder, "Mom!" But she was already rushing past me toward the living room, her arms laden with heating pads and chamomile tea. "Alessandra, sweetheart, how are you feeling now? David, help me prop up these pillows behind her back." I pressed my palm against the counter, knuckles white as another spasm seized my middle. The Christmas tree lights blurred through tears I refused to let fall. "Please," I managed, my voice barely audible above the family's concerned chatter. "The heating pad isn't warm enough," Alessandra murmured from the couch, her voice carrying that familiar whine that had haunted my high school years. "And could someone get me the ginger tea instead? This chamomile tastes awful." My brother David immediately jumped to attention.
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Chapter 1

The pain struck like lightning through my abdomen, doubling me over so violently that I crashed into the kitchen counter. My breath came in sharp gasps as another wave of agony twisted through my torso, radiating outward until every nerve screamed in protest.

"Mom," I whispered, then louder, "Mom!"

But she was already rushing past me toward the living room, her arms laden with heating pads and chamomile tea. "Alessandra, sweetheart, how are you feeling now? David, help me prop up these pillows behind her back."

I pressed my palm against the counter, knuckles white as another spasm seized my middle. The Christmas tree lights blurred through tears I refused to let fall. "Please," I managed, my voice barely audible above the family's concerned chatter.

"The heating pad isn't warm enough," Alessandra murmured from the couch, her voice carrying that familiar whine that had haunted my high school years. "And could someone get me the ginger tea instead? This chamomile tastes awful."

My brother David immediately jumped to attention. "Of course, whatever you need. Mom, where did you put that special ginger blend?"

I stumbled toward them, one hand clutched to my side where it felt like something was tearing apart inside me. "I think... I think something's really wrong. The pain is—"

"Kya, please keep your voice down," Mom snapped without even looking at me. "Can't you see Alessandra isn't feeling well? She's been having stomach troubles all evening."

Alessandra shifted delicately on the couch, her perfectly manicured hand resting on her barely visible bump. At four months pregnant, she looked radiant despite her supposed discomfort—her skin glowing, her auburn hair falling in soft waves around her shoulders. "It's just been such a difficult day," she sighed. "The baby has been so active, and my stomach feels so unsettled."

Another wave of pain crashed through me, this one so intense that black spots danced at the edges of my vision. I gripped the back of David's chair, my legs threatening to give out. "David, please, I need to go to the hospital. Something's really wrong."

He barely glanced at me, too busy adjusting Alessandra's blanket. "Kya, we're dealing with a family emergency here. Alessandra might need medical attention if this gets worse."

"But I—" The words died in my throat as the pain reached a crescendo, leaving me gasping and shaking.

Mom finally looked at me, her expression cold with irritation. "For heaven's sake, Kya, you're being dramatic. It's probably just something you ate. Take some antacids and go lie down. We don't need two people making a fuss tonight."

The dismissal hit harder than the physical pain. I watched my family hover around Alessandra like devoted servants, offering pillows, blankets, different teas, gentle touches. Mom stroked Alessandra's hair with a tenderness I'd never received, while David held her hand and murmured sweet reassurances.

Nobody looked at me as I doubled over again, biting my lip to keep from crying out. Nobody noticed when I grabbed my keys from the hook by the door, my hands shaking so badly I could barely grip them.

"I'm going to the hospital," I announced to the room.

"Mm-hmm," Mom replied absently, adjusting Alessandra's heating pad. "Drive carefully. The roads might be icy."

Not 'are you okay?' Not 'should someone come with you?' Just a perfunctory warning about road conditions, delivered without even turning around.

I stood there for a moment, watching my family care for the woman who had tormented me through four years of high school. The woman who had torn up my homework, spread cruel rumors, and once shoved me so hard I'd needed stitches. Now she was their precious daughter-in-law, deserving of every comfort and attention.

And I was still nothing.

The drive to the emergency room passed in a haze of pain and Christmas lights blurring past my windshield. Each red light felt like an eternity as I gripped the steering wheel, breathing through contractions of agony that seemed to be getting worse by the minute.

The ER waiting room was nearly empty on Christmas Eve, just a few other souls who couldn't ignore their bodies' desperate warnings. I gave my information to the triage nurse, trying to explain the pain that felt like something vital was dying inside me.

Hours crawled by. Blood tests, CT scans, more waiting. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead while I sat alone in a hospital gown, watching other patients reunite with worried families who had rushed to their sides.

My phone stayed silent.

When Dr. Sarah Chen finally entered my room, her expression was carefully neutral in that way doctors practice when delivering life-altering news. She pulled up a chair and sat close, her dark eyes kind but serious.

"Kya, I need to talk to you about your test results."

The words that followed seemed to come from underwater. Terminal liver cancer. Six months. Maybe less. Treatment options limited. I heard her voice explaining procedures and possibilities, but all I could think about was my family at home, still fussing over Alessandra's minor stomach upset.

I was dying, and they didn't even know I was gone.

The house was dark when I finally returned, my discharge papers crumpled in my trembling hands. Through the living room window, I could see the soft glow of the television and the silhouettes of my family, still clustered around Alessandra on the couch.

I sat in my car in the driveway, staring at that warm tableau of care and love that had never included me. The diagnosis felt surreal, like something happening to someone else. Six months to live, and I would spend them exactly as I'd spent the rest of my life—alone, unloved, invisible to the people who should have mattered most.

The Christmas lights on our neighbors' houses twinkled cheerfully, but inside me, something had gone permanently dark. I was dying, and just like everything else in my life, I would face it alone.

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