I collapsed in the hospital trauma bay barely conscious, hearing doctors shout while nurses searched my jacket for identification. Hidden inside were two things my family never expected anyone to find: a medical report warning I was bleeding internally and a sealed bank envelope holding twenty-three thousand dollars for my sister Chloe’s wedding.
Hours earlier, a clinic had told me to go straight to the ER for a dangerous splenic artery aneurysm. Instead, I ignored the pain because Chloe kept threatening to remove me from her wedding if I missed another appointment. I planned to hand her the money first, then seek treatment afterward. I never made it past the valet stand.
When the envelope spilled open, Chloe read the note I had written for her. I had sold my motorcycle, worked double shifts, and nearly destroyed my body trying to fund her perfect wedding. Shame spread across her face as the truth finally hit her.
But my mother’s first question was not whether I would survive. She only stared at the envelope and asked, “That’s for the wedding?” In that moment, something inside me finally broke-
