Mark’s money constantly, mysteriously vanished into the black hole of his younger sister, Chloe. Chloe was a twenty-six-year-old chronic disaster. She was a professional victim, perpetually entangled in DUIs, failed business ventures, and massive credit card debt. Mark viewed bailing her out not as an option, but as a religious duty, constantly sacrificing our own marital stability to appease her endless, chaotic demands.
Today was the day before my scheduled surgery.
I was sitting on the nursery floor, the laptop resting on my swollen thighs. I opened my secure banking portal to initiate the wire transfer to the hospital’s billing department.
I clicked on the specific, restricted medical escrow account I had opened in my name, though Mark had joint access for emergencies.
The screen loaded.
I stared at the numbers. My brain violently, completely short-circuited, entirely unable to process the data in front of me.
BALANCE: $0.00
I hit refresh. My hands began to shake violently.
BALANCE: $0.00
Recent Transaction: $23,000.00 – Wire Transfer Outbound. Executed 2 hours ago.
The blood drained entirely from my face. The room spun sickeningly.
“Mark!” I screamed, my voice cracking with pure, unadulterated panic.
Mark stepped into the doorway of the nursery. He was wearing his expensive wool overcoat, adjusting his watch. He didn’t rush to my side. He didn’t look concerned. He actively avoided looking me in the eye, staring at a spot on the yellow wall just above my head.
“What did you do?” I gasped, pointing a trembling finger at the laptop screen. “Where is the surgery money?!”
Mark sighed, a heavy, deeply annoyed, and incredibly patronizing sound. He ran a hand through his hair, projecting the aura of a burdened, long-suffering patriarch.
“Chloe was in trouble, Elena,” Mark said, his voice dripping with a sickeningly calm, rationalizing tone. “She got in deep with some very dangerous people. Illegal gambling debts. They were threatening to hurt her. She would literally die without that money.”
“I am going to die without that money!” I shrieked, the sheer, staggering sociopathy of his words hitting me like a physical blow. “Mark, the surgery is tomorrow! The hospital won’t admit me without the deposit! I have placenta accreta! I will bleed out!”
Mark rolled his eyes, genuinely irritated by my fear. “Oh, stop being so dramatic, Elena. You’ll just go to the regular ER. The doctors there are fine. They have to treat you by law. It’s just a baby, women do it every day.”
He was prioritizing his sister’s gambling debts over his wife and unborn child’s literal, physical survival.
Before I could speak, a sharp, agonizing, tearing pain ripped through my lower abdomen. It was a pain so intense, so hot and blinding, that it completely stole the oxygen from my lungs.
I dropped the laptop. It clattered loudly against the hardwood floor. I collapsed forward onto my hands and knees, letting out a guttural, wretched cry of pure agony.
A sudden, warm rush of fluid flooded the floor beneath me. My water had broken. I was in active, premature labor.
“Mark!” I sobbed, clutching my stomach, terrified beyond rational thought. “The baby is coming! Call 911! Please!”
Mark looked down at me. He didn’t reach for his phone. He didn’t drop to his knees to comfort me. He checked his watch again, a deep frown creasing his forehead.
“I can’t deal with this right now, Elena,” Mark commanded, his voice utterly callous and devoid of any human empathy. “Just take an aspirin or something to delay the birth. I have to go to the city to calm Chloe down and make sure the transfer cleared. Call a cab if you really need to go to the hospital.”
He turned his back on me.
“Mark, please!” I screamed, reaching a trembling, wet hand out toward him.
He didn’t look back. He walked down the hallway, the sound of his expensive leather shoes echoing on the hardwood floor. The heavy oak front door opened, and then slammed shut with a sickening, definitive thud.
I was alone. In a pool of amniotic fluid. Going into complicated, high-risk labor.
But as the agonizing pain of a second, brutal contraction tore through my body, forcing me to curl into a tight, shivering ball on the nursery floor, I didn’t reach for a towel. I didn’t succumb to the panic. The terrified, accommodating wife completely, permanently died in that room.