The words hung in the air like a death sentence. Michael’s face went blank with shock. His mother started crying softly. His father’s jaw clenched as he processed what this meant for his son’s future.
I was still trying to process that sentence, still trying to make it make sense in my seventeen-year-old brain, when my own parents arrived at the hospital about an hour later.
They stood stiffly, awkwardly at the foot of Michael’s hospital bed, offering perfunctory sympathy that already seemed to be fading into cold calculation. I could see it in their faces—the wheels turning, the assessments being made, the future being recalculated without him in it.
On the drive home that night in their expensive sedan, they didn’t ask how Michael was doing emotionally. They didn’t ask about his prognosis or his pain levels or what his recovery would look like. They asked how I was feeling—but not in the way that caring parents ask. In the way that people ask when they’re about to tell you what you should be feeling.
“This is not what you need in your life,” my mother said from the passenger seat, her voice artificially calm but absolutely final. “Not at your age. Not with your whole future ahead of you.“
“You’re only seventeen,” my father added from behind the steering wheel, his eyes meeting mine in the rearview mirror. “You can find someone else. Someone healthy. Someone with prospects. Someone who can give you a normal life. Don’t ruin your entire future over this.“
My parents were both respected attorneys in our city—partners at different prestigious firms, both with immaculate reputations to maintain. Reputation mattered enormously to them. Appearances mattered. Social standing mattered. Success mattered. To them, Michael had transformed overnight from a promising young man with a bright future into a burden, a liability, something to be discarded.
I told them I loved him. That love meant staying, not running when things got hard.
They told me that love wasn’t enough. That I was being naive and foolish. That I’d understand when I was older and wiser.
When I refused repeatedly to leave Michael’s side, when I kept visiting him every single day at the rehabilitation hospital, when I made it clear I was choosing him over their approval, they finally followed through on their threats.
They cut me off financially—completely, immediately, ruthlessly. They took away the college fund they’d been contributing to since I was born. They removed me as a beneficiary from their accounts. They closed every door they had the power to close.
And then they told me, in no uncertain terms, not to contact them again until I “came to my senses.”
I packed a single duffel bag with clothes and a few precious belongings, walked out of their expensive house in the nice neighborhood, and went straight to Michael.
