The deposit for the specialized team and the VIP surgical suite was staggering. Exactly twenty-three thousand dollars. Cash up front.
I was a successful commercial architect. For the last six months, I had taken on grueling freelance drafting projects, working until my hands cramped and my vision blurred, meticulously saving every single penny to hit that number. My husband, Mark, worked in mid-level marketing. He made decent money, but he possessed a staggering, pathological inability to hold onto it.
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.