The voicemail from the hospital billing department arrived three weeks after I opened my eyes. I was sitting in my friend Deborah’s apartment, still moving carefully because my ribs protested every deep breath, when the automated message played through my phone speaker.
“This is St. Catherine’s Hospital regarding outstanding balances for patient Wendy Thomas. Please contact our billing department at your earliest convenience to discuss payment arrangements for services rendered.”
I set the phone down and stared at it for a long moment. Services rendered. That was one way to describe the surgery that had saved my life—the surgery my father had explicitly refused to authorize, the surgery he’d signed a Do Not Resuscitate order to prevent, the surgery that happened anyway because a nurse named Pat Walsh had looked harder at my employee file than my own father had ever looked at me.
My name is Wendy Thomas. I’m twenty-nine years old, and I’m a registered nurse at St. Catherine’s Hospital near Philadelphia. For three weeks, I was also a patient there, lying in a coma while my father made calculations about whether saving my life was worth the cost. He decided it wasn’t. What he didn’t know was that I’d wake up, discover everything he’d done, and within twenty-four hours, dismantle his entire life with the same cold efficiency he’d used to try to end mine.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. To understand what happened in that hospital room, you need to understand the twenty-nine years that led up to it.
PART 2 HERE : 