Her Family Sold the Ring During Surgery, Then the Truth Broke Them-lbsuong

When I woke up after three days in St. Mary’s Hospital, the first thing I felt was not pain.

It was absence.

The room smelled like antiseptic, plastic tubing, and the weak coffee Daniel had probably bought from the machine down the hall and forgotten on the tray.

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The monitor beside me kept beeping in a calm little rhythm, as if my body had not just scared every person I loved half to death.

My mouth was dry.

My throat hurt.

My stomach felt like it had been stitched together by someone who had done their best under bright lights and bad news.

But the second my eyes opened, I did not reach for the call button.

I did not reach for the cup of water.

I did not reach for my phone.

I reached for my left hand.

My engagement ring was gone.

The panic was instant.

It did not build slowly or politely.

It ripped through me so violently that the heart monitor started shrieking before I could make a sound.

A nurse came in quickly, her sneakers squeaking on the polished floor.

Behind her came Daniel.

His hoodie was wrinkled, his hair was flattened on one side, and his face looked like someone had taken every hour of sleep from him and left only worry behind.

“Emily,” he said, taking my hand gently. “Breathe.”

I tried.

The nurse checked the leads on my chest and told me I was safe.

Safe was a strange word to use when the one thing I had trusted my mother to protect was missing from my finger.

I remembered pieces of what had happened.

Tuesday afternoon at work.

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