When my daughter needed surgery, I braced myself for massive hospital bills. What I wasn’t prepared for was the choice her father would make, or the call I’d have to place because of it.
I was 24 when I fell in love with Derek. Back then, he had a way of making big promises sound easy.
By 26, we had Molly, a tiny bundle, and what I believed was a steady marriage.
Two years later, Derek was promoted to regional sales director at his company, and that’s when things changed.
I was 24 when I fell in love with Derek.
The new title came with a raise, longer hours, and business trips that stretched from two to four days. It also came with secretive smiles at his phone and a password I suddenly didn’t know.
I remember standing in the kitchen one evening, watching Derek type quickly with his back turned.
“Who are you texting?” I asked, keeping my tone light.
Derek didn’t look up. “Work.”
At the time, I wanted to believe that answer.
“Who are you texting?”
By the time I turned 29, I learned the truth the hard way. The woman’s name was Tessa. She was seven years younger than me, worked in marketing, and had bright blond hair.
I found out because I chose to look when the suspicions wouldn’t go away.
I borrowed Derek’s laptop one afternoon when he left it open on the dining room table. My hands shook, but I opened his email anyway. I told myself I’d stop if I saw nothing.
I didn’t stop.
The woman’s name was Tessa.
There were hotel confirmations. Dinner reservations. Messages that began with “Can’t wait to see you again.”
When I confronted Derek, he didn’t even try to deny it.
“I didn’t mean for it to happen,” he said. “You and I… we’ve been distant.”
“Distant?” I laughed, but it sounded like something breaking. “We have a three-year-old. That’s called being parents.”
The divorce was quick and bitter.
“Can’t wait to see you again.”
Derek moved in with Tessa within a month.
I stayed in our small house with Molly and learned how to stretch every dollar.
I picked up freelance bookkeeping at night after she went to bed, folded laundry while answering emails, and clipped coupons as if it were a competitive sport.
Derek paid child support. Only the bare minimum and always on time, like a generic bill.
He rarely called unless it was his scheduled weekend.
Derek paid child support.
Molly would sit by the window waiting for Derek’s truck. Sometimes he’d text 15 minutes before pickup.
Molly was five but was already learning how to swallow disappointment.
***
The day everything shifted started like any other Saturday.
It was bright and warm, and Molly begged to ride her pink bike in the driveway.
“Mommy, watch me go fast!” she shouted, her helmet sliding slightly over one eye.
Sometimes he’d text 15 minutes before pickup.
“I’m watching,” I said, smiling as I wiped down the patio table.
It happened in a second. The front tire caught on a crack in the concrete. Molly flew forward and landed wrong. I ran to her.
“Molly, baby, don’t move!”
It should’ve been a Band-Aid-and-ice-pack kind of afternoon, but it was much worse.
Her leg bent at an angle that made my stomach flip. I scooped her up while she cried, trying not to panic.
It happened in a second.
At the emergency room, the doctor spoke gently. “It’s a clean break, but it’s severe. She’ll need surgery to place pins. The sooner we do it, the better.”
I nodded as if I understood medical terms, but all I heard was surgery. Insurance covered part of it.
The specialist, a well-known pediatric orthopedic surgeon, was out of network. The woman at the billing desk handed me a printed estimate. The numbers blurred.
The bill made my hands shake.
All I heard was surgery.
I drove home that evening with Molly’s leg in a temporary cast, my mind racing.
I sat at the kitchen table long after she fell asleep on the couch with her stuffed rabbit.
I hated asking Derek for anything. But that wasn’t about pride. I called him.
“Our daughter needs surgery,” I said after a polite greeting, keeping my voice steady. “I need help to cover it. I sent you the bill.”
There was a pause on the line, long enough for me to hear faint music in the background.
I hated asking Derek for anything.
“I don’t have that kind of money right now,” he finally replied, sighing.
I gripped the phone tighter. “Derek, this is Molly.”
“I said I don’t have it,” he repeated. “Maybe ask your parents.”
My parents were retired. They helped when they could, but they weren’t a backup plan.
“Okay, I’ll figure it out,” I said quietly and hung up before my voice betrayed me.
I didn’t cry right away. I sat there, staring at the wall.
“Derek, this is Molly.”
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