Escape from Toxic Love

"Dad?" I whispered again, terror gripping my chest as his face contorted with pain. His breathing became shallow, each gasp more labored than the last. "Someone help! Please!" I screamed, my voice echoing through the chapel's vaulted ceiling.

The memorial service dissolved into chaos. People rushed forward, voices overlapping in panic. Through my tears, I saw Nathan frozen in place, Isabella clutching his arm with white knuckles. His eyes met mine across the space between us, but he didn't move.

"Call 911!" someone shouted, and I fumbled for my phone with trembling hands.

"He's having a heart attack," a woman's voice said nearby—one of my mother's friends who was a retired nurse. She knelt beside my father, loosening his tie. "Has he had heart problems before?"

"No," I managed, though my voice sounded distant to my own ears. "Never."

I pressed my father's hand between both of mine as the nurse checked his pulse. His skin felt clammy, his eyes unfocused. "Stay with me, Dad," I pleaded. "Please stay with me."

My father's lips moved, forming words I couldn't hear. I leaned closer, my tears falling onto his ashen face. "Nathan," he whispered. "Where is he?"

I turned, searching the chapel for my fiancé—ex-fiancé—the man who should have been by my side in this moment of crisis. He stood near the back now, one arm around Isabella's shoulders as she pressed her face against his chest, her body shaking with theatrical sobs.

The sight burned like acid. My mother's memorial service. My father collapsed on the floor. And Nathan was comforting Isabella.

The paramedics arrived within minutes, though it felt like hours. As they loaded my father onto a stretcher, I pulled out my phone again, fingers shaking as I dialed Nathan's number. It rang once, twice, then went to voicemail.

"Nathan," I said, my voice breaking. "Dad's had a heart attack. They're taking him to Seattle General. Please... I need you."

I ended the call and hurried alongside the stretcher, holding my father's hand until they reached the ambulance. The paramedics worked with practiced efficiency, attaching monitors, inserting an IV, placing an oxygen mask over my father's face.

"Are you family?" one of them asked me.

"His daughter," I nodded. "I'm all he has."

"You can ride with us."

Inside the ambulance, the reality of what was happening crashed over me in waves. The beeping monitors, the urgent voices of the paramedics, the siren wailing above us—it all felt surreal, like I was watching someone else's nightmare unfold.

"Blood pressure's dropping," one paramedic said to another, and fresh fear surged through me.

"Is he going to be okay?" I asked, my voice small.

"We're doing everything we can," came the measured response that told me nothing.

As we raced toward the hospital, I checked my phone repeatedly. No missed calls. No texts. Nothing from Nathan.

At the hospital, they whisked my father through double doors marked "Authorized Personnel Only," leaving me alone in a sterile waiting room with mint-green walls and uncomfortable plastic chairs. I sank into one, my body suddenly leaden with exhaustion and fear.

Hours passed. I called Nathan again and again, each call going straight to voicemail. The betrayal cut deeper with every unanswered ring.

A paramedic who had been on the ambulance approached, holding something in his hand. "Ms. Matthews? I think you should see this."

He handed me his phone, open to a voicemail screen. "This came through while we were transporting your father. It's from the same number that's been calling the patient's phone."

I pressed play, and Isabella's voice filled the space between us.

"Nathan, darling, don't bother calling Olivia back. She's just being dramatic as usual. The old man probably just had indigestion or something. I need you to stay with me—I'm feeling so anxious after being in that depressing chapel. Come over tonight? I'll make it worth your while."

The paramedic's expression was grim. "I thought you should know."

The phone nearly slipped from my numb fingers. Isabella had intercepted my call—my desperate plea for help during a life-or-death emergency—and deliberately kept Nathan away.

As this realization crashed over me, the hospital doors swung open. Nathan rushed in, his face flushed, with Isabella trailing close behind him. Three hours too late.

Our eyes met across the waiting room, and in that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that whatever had once existed between us was not just broken—it was dead.

And I would never forgive either of them for what they had done.

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