Forever After All: Chapter 3
Forever After All: A Billionaire Marriage of Convenience Novel
The nurse that usually takes care of my mother greets me warmly as I walk into her hospital room. âHappy birthday, sweetie. I wish we didnât have to call you tonight. You deserve to act your age every once in a while, but you know what Dr. Johnson is like.â
âThank you, June,â I say, trying my best to smile at her as I sit down next to my mother.
Dr. Johnson doesnât believe in keeping my mother here when he could be using her bed for a patient that he might be able to save, but he canât turn me away either. Not while Iâm still able to pay the bills.
Eight years. My mother has been in a coma for eight years now, and Iâm the only one who still believes sheâll wake up one day. I canât help but feel like itâs a race against the clock. Itâs become a question of what will run out first, the money that keeps her alive, or my motherâs remaining health.
The doctor walks into the room and nods at me. I donât think Iâve ever seen the man smile. âDr. Johnson,â I say, nodding back.
âI have some difficult news to share with you,â he says, a grave expression on his face. I close my eyes, not wishing to hear it. Whatever it is, it canât be good.
âYour mother has an infection. Itâs getting harder and harder to keep her state from deteriorating. There are many costs associated with the ongoing infections, too.â
I nod, knowing what heâs going to say. âI understand, doctor. But Iâm not willing to give up on my mother. I still believe sheâs going to wake up. Iâll pay whatever I need to keep her alive.â
Dr. Johnson nods, and I hate the pity I see in his eyes. Itâs obvious he doesnât believe sheâll ever wake up again, and I wish I could change my motherâs doctor. I want her to be treated by someone who believes in her recovery as much as I do.
âPlease sign here. Iâll send you the bill. Itâs higher this month by a couple of thousand dollars,â he says eventually.
I sign the forms, authorizing her treatment and the associated costs, my eyes falling closed in resignation the second I lift the pen off the paper.
Iâm relieved when I hear Dr. Johnson close the door behind him. Five thousand dollars. A few years ago, I wouldnât have blinked twice at the amount. I used to own several handbags at least four times the price of that. Not anymore.
A year after my mother fell into a coma, my father managed to get her doctors to declare her brain-dead so he could get remarried. The day he married my stepmother was the day our insurance company informed me theyâd stop paying for my motherâs treatments. I didnât think much of it then, being a Rousseau, but I shouldâve known. I shouldâve seen the signs before it was too late.
Iâd only been sixteen then, and within a few months Iâd lost my mother, and my brother and I had been forced to live with our stepmom and her daughter. I hadnât coped well with the way my father abandoned my mother, but I wouldâve found a way to deal with it. I even wouldâve played nice if my stepmother hadnât asked my father to stop paying for Momâs medical bills.
I thought my brother and I would be able to save Mom. I thought heâd be on my side. I couldnât have been more wrong. My stepmother has her claws in him so deep, sheâs got him convinced that all Iâm doing is wasting money on a lost cause. I barely recognize Matthew anymore. I left home as soon as I turned eighteen, but he stayed.
Iâm lucky that my mother set up a trust fund for me thatâs allowed me to keep her alive. Until now. This time, I donât have the money. I literally donât have the money to keep my mother alive, and I canât help but burst into tears.
I regret buying myself those couple of drinks at the bar earlier, even though I know it wouldnât have made a difference. Iâve run through more than eight million dollars in hospital bills over the last six years, often paying roughly two-thousand dollars per day on days that she doesnât have complications. Eight million dollars is the exact amount of my trust fund, and Iâm at my witsâ end. The few belongings I had helped keep her alive a little longer, but I donât know how Iâll be able to pay for next monthâs bill. I have no valuables left. Iâm well and truly broke.
I hold my motherâs hand, hoping sheâll squeeze my hand back. Of course, she doesnât. Every single time my hopes are dashed, yet I never stop believing.
âMom, please,â I whisper, sounding as broken as I feel. âPlease wake up. Donât do this to me. I really need you. I canât give up on you now, but Iâm not sure how Iâm going to get enough money this month. Please wake up, Mom. Please,â I beg, trying my hardest to suppress a sob.
No matter how much I plead, she never wakes up. Part of me believes that sheâll wake up when she realizes Iâm really in trouble this time, but realistically I know she wonât. If only I could harden my heart. Would life be easier if I were more like Dr. Johnson and Matthew, and faced reality and the probability of my motherâs recovery?
I rest my head on the edge of her bed, my hand desperately clutching hers. I cry my heart out, my lungs burning, and itâs not until I feel someone patting my back that I realize Iâm not alone in the room. I sit up and take the tissue nurse June hands me.
âI didnât realize you were struggling with the bills, honey.â
She pats my shoulder, her eyes laced with concern. I try my best to smile at her, but I canât bring myself to. I canât bring myself to pretend that Iâm okay.
âHow long have you been struggling, sweetie? I had no idea that itâs been hard on you financially.â
I nod and wipe at my tears, my eyes on my mother. âIt gets harder every year,â I tell her honestly. âThis time⦠this time Iââ I canât even finish the words. I canât say what I know to be true. After years of fighting, I might⦠I might lose my mother. I sniff loudly, fresh tears in my eyes. Helplessness unlike anything Iâve experienced before overwhelms me and I inhale shakily, trying my best to remain positive, to keep my thoughts in check.
June takes a black business card out of her breast pocket and hands it to me, looking unsure.
âThe sister of one of my other patients told me about this place,â she says, hesitating. âWhen she struggled to pay her sisterâs bills, they helped her. I think itâs a gentlemenâs club or something like that. She⦠she told me they pay quite handsomely for innocent types.â
June looks devastated, and itâs obvious that she doesnât want to be telling me this.
âI hope you wonât need to use this card. But if you do, know that thereâs no shame in doing what it takes to keep someone alive.â
I nod and stare at the card. It just says Vaughnâs, with an address. No phone number or other information. The card is thick and heavy, the letters gold. It looks incredibly luxurious.
I stare at it, praying I wonât need to use it, and knowing I probably will.