The silence in the living room had grown so dense it felt almost suffocating. It wasn’t an empty silence; it was thick, vibrating with everything that had been hidden, everything that was now on the precipice of tearing my reality apart.
For the past six months, my entire existence had been reduced to a singular, desperate mission: saving my husband’s life.Julian had been diagnosed with a rare, aggressive neurological deterioration. At least, that was the name written on the pristine, intimidating letterheads of the private clinic. I remember the day he told me, sitting on the edge of our bed. I had just entered my second trimester. I had held him, my hand resting instinctively on the small, growing bump of our unborn child, promising him through my tears that our baby would not grow up without a father. I promised him I would do absolutely anything.
And “anything” had a price tag. Five hundred thousand dollars.
It was for an experimental, highly classified stem-cell treatment in a private facility in Switzerland. Julian’s mother, Beatrice, a woman whose heart was as cold and meticulously styled as her platinum blonde hair, had wept perfectly calculated tears in my kitchen, lamenting that her fixed income couldn’t save her only son.
So, I made the only choice a devoted wife and mother-to-be could make. I sold my grandmother’s estate—a beautiful, sprawling property in upstate New York that I had inherited and planned to pass down to our child. The buyer’s funds had cleared into escrow. All that was left was for me to authorize the final wire transfer to the “Swiss medical liaison” from my laptop.If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.