“Claire, we’re in the middle of your cousin Jenna’s bridal shower,” she said. I could hear laughter behind her, glasses clinking, someone calling for ribbon scissors. “Can this wait?”
I was standing in the hospital parking lot, a folder clutched in my hand, a biopsy report that had just split my life into before and after.
My knees were shaking so badly I had to brace myself against my car.
“No,” I said. “It can’t wait. I have cancer.”
There was a pause—but not the kind I had imagined.
Not shock. Not grief. Just annoyance, like I’d brought up a plumbing issue in the middle of dessert.
“Oh my God,” she muttered.
“Are you serious?”
“Yes.”
Another burst of muffled laughter drifted through the phone. Then she sighed. “Well, what do you want me to do right now?
We have people here.”
I remember staring at the pavement beneath my feet and feeling something inside me go cold. “I thought maybe you’d say you were coming.”
“Tonight isn’t possible,” she said quickly. “Call your sister if you need company.”
My sister, Megan, didn’t answer.
She texted twenty minutes later: Mom said you’re upset. I’m at the shower. We’ll talk tomorrow.
Tomorrow turned into next week.
Next week turned into the start of chemotherapy.
I drove myself to every appointment except one—when my neighbor, Denise, took time off work because she said no one should go through their first infusion alone. She held my coat while I threw up into a paper bag in the parking garage. She shaved my head in her kitchen when my hair began falling out in thick, humiliating clumps.
My mother sent flowers once, but the card read, Stay strong! Sorry we missed your call. Love, the family.
The family—like they were a committee.
Mom, Megan, and my stepfather, Ron. Smiling. Holding a grocery-store fruit tray like they were auditioning for kindness.
I was on the couch under a blanket, pale and aching, when Megan perched on the armrest and said, “You look better than I expected.”
I almost laughed.
Mom folded her hands and gave me that careful expression people use before asking for something they know they shouldn’t.
“So,” she began, “we need a little favor.”
Ron explained that Megan had found a car she loved, but the bank wanted a stronger co-signer.
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