Five Minutes Before “I Do”
Five minutes before the ceremony, I called off the wedding.
In my last life, right in the middle of our vows, Sandra Crowe suddenly demanded another 300 thousand dollars as a "marriage guarantee."
She pulled out her phone in front of everyone, chin tipped up, a payment screen glowing.
"Three hundred thousand! Not a dollar less, or I'm not putting on that ring."
Ten years together, and we were right at the finish line.
I forced myself to go through with it and transferred the money. It was what Dad had scraped together over two years for his kidney transplant.
That same night, his condition crashed. I went to Sandra and asked if she could lend me the money back for his treatment.
She yelled at me instead.
"You're asking me for money on our wedding night? Seriously? That 300 grand is mine! Don't even think about touching it!"
Dad missed his window and died in the hospital hallway.
The day he died, Sandra was out shopping with her friends, dropping thousands on a Chanel bag without a second thought.
"Good. One less burden. At least he won't drag us down anymore."
When I filed for divorce, she brought her guy friend to the funeral and made a scene, knocking over Dad's urn and damaging the headstone.
Then she turned around and accused me of sexual assault, demanding 500 thousand in damages.
Mom couldn't take it. She drank pesticide and died.
On my way to pursue the case, I was hit by a car.
When I opened my eyes again, I called off the wedding.
Then Sandra stepped closer, already pulling up her payment screen.
"Transfer me three hundred thousand as a marriage guarantee, or we're not getting married."
I tossed the ring into the trash.
"Works for me."