I Disappeared After Ninety-Ninth Engagement
For our ninety-ninth engagement ceremony, Julian booked us a skydive. He said he wanted to tell me he loved me at thirty thousand feet.
My chute didn't open.
I got tangled in a big tree. I survived, yet suffered multiple fractures all over my body.
In the ward, I accidentally saw a message on the screen of our jump instructor's phone. It was addressed to Julian, and it carried a video. The video showed someone tampering with my chute before we boarded.
So the "accident" was Julian's idea?
I dragged myself out of bed on crutches, every bone in my body screaming, ready to confront him. I made it as far as the hallway. He was already there, talking to someone, and the moment I saw the other man, the floor tilted under me.
The man across from him was the same driver who'd hit me with his car the night before our last engagement. The hit-and-run that should have killed me.
"Mr. Veil, if you ever need me again, please reach out."
Julian's voice was flat, almost tired.
"There won't be a next time. I've tried everything I can think of. The engagement can't be postponed anymore."
"And the woman you actually love, sir?"
"I'll keep loving her," Julian said. "But Ada is the one I marry. Her mother gave my father a kidney. That's the debt. I have to pay it."
I stood there shaking, and the truth rearranged itself behind my eyes.
The camping trip he had planned, where I got lost and nearly died of hypothermia in the woods. That had been him.
The vitamin C he had handed me, the one that put me in the ICU. Him too.
And this time — the skydive, thirty thousand feet, “I want the sky to witness our love”. All of it.
Every single one of those accidents was him trying to delay the wedding.
But Julian, I thought, I could save you the trouble.
The next morning I accepted an offer that had been sitting in my inbox for weeks: an invitation from a world-class orchestra on the other side of the planet.