When Forever Crumbles: Love's Harsh Reality
s, was perfect. For two years, he adored me, an
red, holding the hand of a pale,
m. After an accident at the hospital, his son had a seizure. In
carrying his son, and lef
at day, alone. He
, he was wearing a different suit. He begged for forgiveness
. A dark hick
her while I was
parents married. He begged me to agree to a t
, selfish face, and a str
said. "I
pte
on the edge of an examination table, watching a nurse neatly ban
ly, but Jackson insi
and he rushed in, his expen
r, are y
ooms, were wide with worry. He hurried over,
fine. It' s ju
the fresh bandage as if it were a major
his voice low and full of a familiar, posses
woman with a kind
woman. He must lov
eeling spreading throug
rmer mixologist who gave up her career for the tech billionaire who ado
ugh the quiet clinic. It was a sound of pure pain
m the room next do
on turning sad. "Poor little
ed, my own small
uietly. "Only four year
couldn' t imagine the pain that chi
errible,"
issive. "It' s sad, but it has nothing
en it came to things outside our perfect world. H
woman with tired eyes and cheap clothes walke
ined. The woman looked desperate, her eyes s
sted with a mix of shock and
ward, pulling the l
, her voice trembling
ff beside me. He didn' t
ep. "It' s me. Karly. Fr
art starting to beat a little too fast
, pale face, I saw it. The same sharp line of his jaw. The
is face a mask of disbeli
was quick
ning strength. "You were there for a tech co
drunken mistake in Vegas before he met me. He' d said it was a me
k to the boy, Le
simple. The m
n didn' t just pop. It shattered
my voice barely a whi
n't meet
s feeling foreign in my mouth. My own voice so
holding her son, her expression calm, almost victorious. Jackson paced the
rying to hold myself together. I felt numb, like
eet of paper. She didn't have to say a
nfirmed it. 99
Jackso
looked at me, his mouth opening and closing, but
calculated, pitiful soun
tors say he needs a bone marrow transplant. Yo
ck little boy, at the tears on his face, and something in my husband shifted. Th
nt. It was like he was already in anoth
ained. "Go home. I' ll... I' ll ha
h
away. In the first real crisis of our marriag
erdict. And in that mo
hollowing sadness. This was the man who had promised to love and
cret who was now dying. And I couldn't
tly. I walked out of the clinic, leaving him there with his
edding portrait in the foyer seemed to mock me. Our
ss hit me, and th
d. Our housekeeper, Maria, was loo
ou fainted. I cal
ed man, was packing hi
, Mrs. Watkins. Y
gna
flickered inside me, immediately followed by a
on even want
ed Maria, my voice wea
home, ma' am. He
at the hospit
ach, the other clutching my phone, a
al all night. He never
the huge dining table trying to fo
rom an unkn
ing for your family
My family. The family I couldn' t remember.
k a single,
is t