I Married a Paralyzed 20-Year-Old Millionaire I Cared for to Save My Daughter – After the Wedding, He Gave Me an Envelope with Her Name on It and Said, ‘This Was Why I Really Needed You’
By the end of the week, Vivian tried to humiliate me at a private foundation luncheon.
“This woman took advantage of my nephew,” she announced.
I walked to the front.
“No,” I said. “My daughter was treated like paperwork.”
I held up Lisa’s graduation photo. “This is Lisa. No one caused the storm. But what happened after was a choice.”
Then I read Vivian’s memo aloud.
“No further contact with Lisa’s family is recommended. Further contact may create unnecessary liability. Matter closed.”
A man at the nearest table turned pale. “Vivian, is that real?”
“For six months, I sat beside my daughter while doctors asked me to be realistic and billing offices asked me for money I didn’t have. And the whole time, someone in this family knew Lisa had been on that road too. Someone knew she had a mother. Someone knew she was alive. They just decided she was easier to close than to face.”
Adrian rolled beside me. “It’s real.”
Vivian whispered, “I was protecting you.”
“No,” he said. “You were protecting my wealth. I know you were preparing to argue I was not stable enough to manage my own medical fund.”
His attorney stood. “Pending review, Vivian is removed from discretionary medical approvals.”
Vivian looked at me. “You think you won?”
I looked at Lisa’s photo.
“No,” I said. “Lisa did.”
Three weeks later, Lisa entered rehab.
One afternoon, her finger twitched in my hand.
“Baby,” I whispered, “squeeze if you hear me.”
Her fingers curled weakly around mine.
Adrian stopped in the doorway, his eyes wet.
Lisa hadn’twoken overnight. The road ahead was still long.
But she’d answered me.
And for the first time since I slipped Adrian’s ring onto my finger, I stopped feeling like a woman who had sold herself to save her child.
I was Lisa’s mother.
And the woman who had called her a closed matter had to stand there while the whole room said her name.