
Last Moments with Holden
Chapter 2
The laptop screen glowed harsh blue in my darkened bedroom, the cursor blinking mockingly in the empty text box. Three days had passed since my diagnosis, three days of carrying this death sentence alone while my family continued their devoted care of Alessandra's every minor discomfort.
I'd tried to tell them twice. Both times, Mom had cut me off with complaints about Alessandra's morning sickness or David's work stress. The words 'terminal cancer' felt too big, too final to force into conversations about grocery lists and baby shower plans.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard, trembling slightly. The anonymous forum glowed with dozens of relationship advice posts, heartbreak stories, and desperate pleas for guidance. Maybe strangers would understand what my own family couldn't.
*If someone you love has a terminal illness, what would you do?*
I hit submit before I could lose my nerve, then immediately regretted it. What was I hoping for? Sympathy from faceless usernames? Magic solutions that didn't exist?
The responses came quickly. Most were generic—*spend time together, make memories, stay strong.* Others shared their own losses, painting pictures of hospital vigils and final goodbyes that made my chest ache with longing. At least their loved ones had people who cared enough to hold vigils.
Then I saw it. A response that made my breath catch:
*Stay with her until the very end.*
Six simple words, but I knew that writing style. The quiet certainty, the way he never wasted words but somehow said everything that mattered. My heart hammered against my ribs as I clicked on the username—anonymous like mine, but the voice was unmistakably his.
Holden.
My hands shook as I opened a private message window. What could I possibly say? *Hi, remember me? I'm dying and I need you?* The cursor blinked accusingly as I typed and deleted a dozen different openings.
Finally, I just wrote the truth:
*It's me. Kya. I saw your response about staying until the end. I need to tell you something, and I don't know who else would understand.*
I hit send before my courage failed, then stared at the screen, waiting. Minutes crawled by. Maybe he wouldn't respond. Maybe he'd moved on, forgotten about the girl who'd been too scared of her own unworthiness to accept his love.
My phone buzzed. A notification from the forum's messaging system. My heart stopped.
*Kya? Is that really you? What's wrong?*
Tears blurred my vision as I typed back: *I have terminal liver cancer. Six months, maybe less. I posted that question because... because I wanted to know what it would feel like to have someone who would actually stay.*
The response came immediately: *Send me your number. Now.*
I barely had time to type out my digits before my phone rang. Holden's name on the caller ID made my chest constrict with a mixture of hope and terror.
"Kya." His voice was exactly as I remembered—warm, steady, real. "Tell me everything."
The words poured out of me like a dam bursting. The Christmas Eve pain, the lonely hospital visit, the diagnosis delivered to an empty room. My family's continued indifference, their obsession with Alessandra's pregnancy while I carried death inside me like a secret.
"I'm so sorry," I whispered when the story was done. "I shouldn't have contacted you. You have your own life, and I don't want to be a burden—"
"Stop." His voice was fierce, cutting through my spiral of self-doubt. "Don't you dare apologize for reaching out to me. And don't you ever call yourself a burden."
I pressed my hand to my mouth, trying to muffle the sob that escaped.
"Where are you right now?" he asked, his tone shifting to something urgent and determined.
"At home. In my room."
"I'm coming to get you."
"Holden, no. You can't just—"
"I can and I will. I meant what I wrote, Kya. Until the very end. That's a promise."
I heard movement in the background, the sound of keys jangling, a door closing. He was already leaving, already choosing me when no one else ever had.
"I'll be there in three hours," he said. "Pack whatever you need. We're getting out of there."
"Where are we going?"
"Somewhere beautiful. Somewhere you can breathe." His voice softened. "The Rocky Mountains, maybe. You always said you wanted to see them."
I had said that, years ago during one of our late-night conversations when we'd shared dreams and fears in equal measure. He'd remembered.
"Holden, I'm scared."
"I know. But you're not alone anymore. I'm coming, and I'm not leaving you. Not ever again."
The line went quiet except for the sound of his breathing, steady and sure. For the first time since that Christmas Eve night, I felt something other than despair unfurling in my chest.
Hope.
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