Burning with fever and too weak to stand, I begged my husband, Ryan, to come home and help with our baby.
Hours passed, but he never showed. I could barely hold my phone as my body ached, and my fever spiked. Lily, our one-year-old, played nearby, oblivious to my distress.
I called Ryan again. He promised he’d leave soon, but an hour later, he was still nowhere to be found. I texted him.
He claimed he was stuck in traffic, but we lived in a small town—there was no traffic. Desperate,
I reached out to Mike, Ryan’s coworker, who confirmed Ryan was still at work. My heart sank. I needed help.
I called Mrs. Thompson, our neighbor. She came right away, taking me to the hospital, where the docto
r revealed I was dangerously close to septic shock from a severe kidney infection.
Two hours later, Ryan showed up, casually holding a coffee in one hand and his phone in the other.
He asked, “You okay?” I could barely speak. “I begged you,” I whispered. “I needed you.” He shrugged. “I didn’t realize it was that bad.”
I spent two days in the hospital. Ryan visited once, bringing only a bottle of water.
When I was discharged, he barely acknowledged what had happened. His focus was on work, not me.
That night, as Ryan scrolled through his phone, I realized I was done. The neglect, the lies—it had taken everything
out of me. I wasn’t angry anymore, just numb. I began looking for apartments and made an appointment
with a divorce lawyer the next day. Ryan had no idea, and I was already planning my escape.