The Billionaire Boyfriend Begged for Another Chance
I used to be a top ballet dancer.
The year I was diagnosed with a spinal hemangioma, my boyfriend Julian Blackwood said, "Wherever you go, I go."
We'd been together three years.
He walked beside me as I went, step by step, from the most luminous dancer on that stage to a woman in a wheelchair.
Every time the nerve pain hit and I collapsed, he was the one who lifted me off the floor.
Every round of electrostim and acupuncture, he sat in the corridor outside the therapy room and waited for me to come out.
Before I got sick, he promised me—the night I finished my final performance of Swan Lake, we'd sign the marriage license.
He'd bought tickets for that show three months in advance.
I never stood on that stage again.
And the marriage license never came up.
Until the morning I noticed the collar of his white dress shirt carried a smudge of lipstick that wasn't mine.
I heard him on the balcony.
A woman's voice on the other end.
"Mr. Blackwood, you left your jacket at the hotel last night. I'll bring it over."
I stared at that smear of red, and something in me snapped. I laughed.
"Send me to Westbrook. The locked-down rehab facility. I don't want to drag you down anymore."
Something flickered in his eyes—a brief, animal panic. Then he nodded.
He thought I meant rest.
He didn't know I'd already signed the papers to donate my body to science. I was going there to die.