"Congratulations on graduation," he said, settling onto his stool. "Valedictorian I hear?"
"News travels fast," I replied, fidgeting with the paper covering the examination table. "Small town." he reminded me. "How are you feeling? Truthfully." I considered lying, but there was little point. My test results would tell the real story. "Worse. The tightness is constant now. Coughing fits are more frequent. I'm using the supplemental oxygen at night." He nodded, making notes. "Any hemoptysis?" "Some." I admitted. "Small amounts." His expression remained neutral, but I'd known him long enough to see the concern in his eyes. "Let's listen to those lungs." The examination was thorough, as always. When he finished, he sat back down, reviewing my chart with a furrowed brow. "Your FEV1 is down to 39%," he said finally. "That's an 8% drop since your last visit." I absorbed this news silently, having expected something similar based on how I'd been feeling. FEV1—forced expiratory volume—measured how much air I could exhale in one second, a critical indicator of lung function. Normal was above 80%. I'd been hovering around 50% for years, but this new drop was significant. "We need to adjust your treatment plan," Dr. Aaron continued, his tone gentle but serious. "I'm going to increase your antibiotic dosage and add another breathing treatment. And Samantha..." he hesitated. "I think it's time we discussed listing you for transplant." The word hung in the air between us. Transplant had always been the distant last resort, the option we'd consider ' someday' when things got 'really bad'. Apparently, someday was now. "What's the timeline?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt. "For listing? We can start the evaluation process immediately. For how long your current lungs can sustain you?" He sighed. "That's harder to predict. At this rate of decline, without transplant, we're looking at months rather than years." Months. The word echoed in my head, both terrifying and strangely liberating. At least now I knew. "What about the bucket list?" I asked. "Can I still...?" Dr. Aaron gave me a searching look. "Is this about that boy? The one who always waits in the parking lot for you?" "Rafael's just a friend," I said automatically. "Hmm.." he replied, unconvinced. "To answer your question, some activities may be inadvisable given your current lung function. Skydiving, for instance, with the altitude and pressure changes...." "But if I'm careful? If I use oxygen before and after?" I pressed. He studied me for a long moment. "Samantha, you're an adult now. I can advise you, but I can't forbid you from living your life. Just promise me you'll listen to your body. If something feels wrong, stop immediately." "I promise." I said, relief washing through me. "And please consider telling Rafael about your condition," he added gently. "From what May has told me, he cares about you deeply. He deserves to know." I looked away. "I'll think about it." But I'd already thought about it. Endlessly. And every time, I reached the same conclusion: the truth would only hurt Rafael more in the end. Better he remember me as his reckless friend who died suddenly than watch me wither away, knowing it was coming and being helpless to stop it. "Alright." Dr. Aaron said, clearly unsatisfied but respecting my decision. "I'll see you in two weeks. Call immediately if anything changes." "Thanks Dr. Aaron," I said, gathering my things. "For everything." In the parking lot, I paused to use my inhaler, leaning against a light post as I caught my breath. The summer air was thick with humidity, making each inhalation an effort. As I stood there, a familiar motorcycle rumbled into the lot, pulling up beside me. Rafael removed his helmet, concern etched across his features. "Sunny? What are you doing here?" My heart seized with momentary panic before I remembered my cover story. "Asthma check-up," I said smoothly. "What about you?" "Oil change," he replied, gesturing vaguely towards the garage across the street. "Need a ride home?" I hesitated, weighing my fatigue against the desire to be close to him. "Sure," I decided. "But drive slow, okay? I'm not in a rush." "For you? I'll practically crawl," he promised, handing me the spare helmet. As I climbed onto Persephone behind him, wrapping my arms around his solid warmth, I rested my cheek against his back and closed my eyes. Months rather than years. The clock was ticking faster now, each second precious. "Ready?" Rafael called over his shoulder. For our midnight swim? Yes. For what came after, the slow deterioration, the inevitable goodbye, the final separation? Never. But I tightened my hold on him anyway and called back, "Ready!" After Dr. Aaron's appointment, I sat on my bedroom windowsill, staring at the crescent moon and trying not to think about the word 'month' . A soft thump and familiar meow pulled me from my thoughts as Midnight landed gracefully beside me, his green eyes luminous in the darkness. He butted his head against my arm, demanding attention. "Hey there." I whispered, running my fingers along his sleek fur. "Did you bring me any good news?" Midnight purred and settled into my lap as if he knew I needed the comfort. I'd been feeding him since sophomore year when I found him huddled under the bleachers during a rainstorm. Now he came and went as he pleased, sometimes disappearing for days before returning as if he'd never left. "What do you think about my bucket list?" I asked, scratching under his chin. "Is it stupid to want these things when I'm running out of time?" Midnight just blinked slowly, offering the simple wisdom of creatures who live fully in each moment, something I was desperate to learn before my time ran out."I don't know how to do this," I confessed. "How to be here without you. How to wake up every morning knowing you won't be there. How to go through all the fucking motions of living when you're gone."I traced her name on the headstone, the letters cold and unyielding beneath my fingers. "But I promised. And you always said I never break my promises."It was true. In our decade of friendship and the few months as more than friends, I'd never once broken a promise to Sam. No matter how small or seemingly insignificant, if I said I'd do something, I did it. She'd trusted that about me completely."So I'll try..." I whispered. "I'll go to MIT like we planned. I'll build those robots we talked about. I'll look after Midnight."The mention of the cat brought a fresh wave of pain. Sam had rescued Midnight three years ago, a half starved stray who followed her home from the bakery. He'd become her shadow, seemingly aware of her illness in the uncanny way animals sometimes are. He'd curl up
The quarry stretched before me, a gaping mouth of darkness swallowing the last traces of daylight. I folded Sam's letter carefully, tucking it into my jacket pocket, and walked to the edge of the cliff. Forty feet below, black water lapped against jagged rock, the same water where Sam and I had swum naked under the moon.I closed my eyes, feeling the emptiness yawn inside me. It would be so fucking easy. One quick turn of the handlebars, one moment of acceleration. Then nothing. No more ache. No more waking up to a world without her in it.I turned back to Persephone, my hand running along her sleek frame. Sam had named the motorcycle, claiming that since she sent me to the underworld regularly with my reckless driving, Persephone was the only appropriate choice. "Queen of the Underworld," she'd said, tracing the curves of the gas tank. "Beautiful but dangerous."Like Sam herself.I swung my leg over the seat, feeling the familiar vibration as the engine roared to life. The headlig
Sam's handwriting filled sheet after sheet, some portions written in her neat, careful script, others in a more hurried scrawl that I recognized from her bad days when breathing was difficult and concentration limited.{ My dearest Shade,If you're reading this, I'm gone. (Sorry for the cliché opening, but there's really no good way to start a letter like this)First, I want you to know how much I love you. Present tense, because even though I'm not there anymore, my love for you doesn't end just because I did. That's not how it works. Love doesn't disappear, it transforms. Maybe into memory, maybe into starlight, maybe just into the person left behind who carries it forward.I know you're angry right now. Angry at the world, at the disease, maybe even at me for leaving you. That's okay. I'd be furious too. Be angry. Throw things. Scream at the sky. Curse my name if you need to. I won't be offended, I promise.But don't stay there, Rafael. Don't let the anger harden into something per
I considered telling him to go fuck himself, but the energy required seemed immense.Instead, I refilled my glass and followed him back into the living room.The next hour passed in a blur of meaningless conversations. I accepted condolences, nodded at stories about Sam, and drank steadily from both my glass and the flask. The alcohol dulled the edges of my consciousness but did nothing for the hollow ache in my chest."You doing ok?" Dr. Aaron asked, appearing at my side as I stared blindly out the back window."Fantastic," I replied flatly.He sighed, running a hand through his hair. "I know there's nothing I can say. Just... we're all worried about you.""Don't be." I took another drink. "I'm fine.""Rafael — ""She suffered," I interrupted, the words tumbling out before I could stop them. "At the end, she was in pain. Even with the morphine. You didn't see it because she hid it when you were there, but I saw. I was there all night, every night. I heard her crying when she thought
I didn't cry during the funeral. Not when they lowered her casket into the ground. Not when May completely broke down during her eulogy. Not even when Midnight, who I'd somehow smuggled into the cemetery inside my jacket, escaped my grasp to paw at the fresh dirt covering Sam's grave.I felt nothing. A vast, echoing emptiness where my heart used to be.The cemetery was packed, Sam had touched more lives than she'd ever realized. Her classmates, regulars from the bakery, even teachers who remembered the brilliant girl who'd never let her 'asthma' hold her back. Dr Aaron stood stoically beside his wife Karen, who kept shooting concerned glances my way. Damien hovered nearby, uncharacteristically subdued in a borrowed suit. Jennifer had closed shop for the day, bringing her entire staff to pay respects.Even Marcus showed up, standing at a respectful distance with red-rimmed eyes. I couldn't bring myself to hate him anymore. Not when I'd seen his genuine grief when the trial medication
By the time I finished, tears were streaming freely down my face. Sam reached up, brushing them away with trembling fingers."That's the most beautiful thing anyone's ever written for me," she whispered.I shook my head, unable to speak through the knot in my throat."Rafael," she said, her voice suddenly stronger, demanding my attention. "Look at me please.."I met her gaze, those brown eyes still so vibrant in her pale face."I need you to promise me something.""Anything," I repeated, meaning it completely."Live," she said simply. "Not just exist. Not just go through the motions. Really live, enough for both of us."I started to shake my head, but she pressed a finger to my lips."You can do it," she insisted. "You're the strongest person I've ever known, even if you don't see it. Promise me you'll try.""I promise," I whispered against her finger, the words a covenant I wasn't sure I could keep but would die trying.She smiled then, soft and sad and somehow peaceful. "I'm tired,