She Used Her Illness To Steal My Life, Then Asked For Mercy Too-ruby - Chainityai

She Used Her Illness To Steal My Life, Then Asked For Mercy Too-ruby

The first thing I remember is the waffles.

Not Daniel’s face, not Mara’s white dress, not the way my hand shook when I understood the date at the top of the screenshot.

The waffles.

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I was standing in the frozen food aisle, holding the cheapest box, wondering whether buying them counted as giving up on adulthood.

Then my phone buzzed.

Mara never texted like a normal person.

She dropped little emotional emergencies into the middle of a day and then acted surprised when everyone around her started bleeding.

The photo was a white dress hanging on a closet door.

Too much?

For a second I smiled, because that was exactly the sort of thing she sent when she wanted attention and praise at the same time.

Then I saw the date.

It was my anniversary.

Ten years with Daniel.

Ten years of birthdays, rent, family dinners, flu medicine, cheap vacations, and plans so ordinary they felt holy.

That morning Daniel had kissed my forehead and said a work emergency was pulling him out of town.

Before I could answer Mara, she texted again.

Wrong person? Sorry.

Then the photo vanished.

At home, flowers waited outside our apartment door.

Daniel had ordered pale expensive roses with a card that said, Rain check. I owe you big.

He signed it Cora.

That was the nickname his family used for me.

My parents lived out west, but my treatment was near Daniel’s family, and his parents opened their home before I even knew how to thank them.

His mother learned which toast I could keep down.

His father did math flash cards with me in hospital waiting rooms.

His grandfather, Mr. Ellis, told me pain was weather, not destiny.

I grew up half in their house.

Daniel and I were not some strange childhood promise.

We were just two people who kept circling each other until everyone finally sighed with relief when we chose each other.

His mother cried when we got together.

Mr. Ellis said we had taken long enough.

Mara knew all of this.

She knew how much that family meant to me.

She also knew my worst habit was compassion.

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