My name is Jane Prescott, and I am thirty-two years old. Exactly three weeks ago, at 11:52 p.m., I collapsed at my desk while finishing an audit for my company.
The doctors later explained that I had suffered a major hemorrhagic stroke. They told my family that if I had been found just forty-eight hours later, I would have faced permanent brain damage or even death.
The hospital managed to reach my mother at 7:10 a.m., and she finally arrived in my room by 9:40 a.m. However, by 3:20 p.m., she had already decided that my older sister’s wedding venue tour in the Caribbean could not be rescheduled.
By 7:00 p.m. that same evening, my entire family was boarding a flight to Saint Kitts, leaving me to spend seven days in the Intensive Care Unit alone. At least, that was what I believed until I finally woke up.
When I opened my eyes, a nurse named Sarah handed me a digital tablet and whispered that I really needed to see something important. It was the visitor log, and it showed the same name registered every single night.
This man, whom I had never met, stood outside my glass door for three hours on the first night just watching me breathe. He eventually paid my entire hospital bill of $141,000 in cash and insisted that his identity stay hidden.
When my mother eventually saw that name, the sheer terror on her face told me everything she had been concealing for over three decades. This is a story about how I discovered that family isn’t about the blood in your veins, but about who stays when the world goes dark.
The Sunday Phone Call
Every Sunday at exactly 6:00 p.m., my phone rings without fail. My mother, Jeanette Prescott, never calls to ask how I am feeling or what is new in my life.
She calls to go over the family expenses and tell me how much I owe them. “Jane, honey, your father’s truck needs a new transmission, which is about $1,200,” she said during our last call.
“Also, your sister Brianna needs the deposit for her florist, so that will be another $3,000,” she added casually. She then mentioned that the heating bill was higher than usual and asked if I could send an extra $400.
I did the math quickly and realized she was asking for $4,600 on top of the $1,000 I already sent every month. When I told her that I had just sent money the previous week, her voice turned cold and manipulative.
“You don’t have a family to support, Jane, while Brianna is starting a new life and needs our help,” she lectured. She reminded me that I made good money and asked what else I could possibly be spending it on.
I wanted to tell her about my own rent in the city, my student loans, and the savings account I kept draining for them. Instead, I simply sighed and told her I would transfer the funds the following morning.
“Tonight would actually be better because the shop needs the parts ordered early,” she replied before hanging up. I opened the spreadsheet where I had tracked every dollar I had sent home since I turned twenty-five.
The total came to $192,860, which was nearly a third of my post-tax income over the last seven years. Almost every entry was for Brianna, covering everything from her car payments and credit cards to her designer handbags.
The Weight of Expectations
My phone buzzed with a message from Brianna showing a photo of an incredibly expensive lace wedding gown. “Isn’t it beautiful? Mom said you would help with the $6,000 cost and the $28,000 wedding fund,” the text read.
I stared at the screen for a long time before replying that I would see what I could do. Later that night, my mother called again to talk about the upcoming venue tour at a luxury resort.
When I told her I couldn’t go because of the upcoming company IPO, she sounded deeply disappointed in me. “You always have an excuse involving work, but Brianna really needs your opinion on the oceanfront terrace,” she complained.
She then insisted that since I wasn’t going, the least I could do was pay for the flights and the resort for the three of them. I agreed to transfer the $8,800, which left my personal bank account balance at only $4,615.
I looked in the mirror and noticed, not for the first time, how different I looked from the rest of my family. I am tall with bright blue eyes and blonde hair, while my parents and Brianna are short with dark features.
I remembered asking my mother about this when I was sixteen, but she had reacted with such anger that I never brought it up again. My thoughts were interrupted by an email from my boss, Simon Vane, stating that the IPO had been moved up.
I began working eighteen-hour days to finish the investor reports and compliance filings. My doctor had warned me that my blood pressure was dangerously high for a woman my age, but I felt I couldn’t slow down.