Skip to content

Foodly

  • Sample Page

My wife and I went out to dinner with my son and his wife at a restaurant on Mother’s Day

articleUseronMay 7, 2026

“You just told the waiter, in front of this entire restaurant, that you wouldn’t pay for her.”

I gestured to Kathy.

“You said it loud enough for everyone to hear. And he nodded.”

Jason looked down.

I opened the folder.

The first document was a bank statement, preserved in a plastic sleeve. The date was March 15, 2008. The transaction line was highlighted in yellow.

Transferred to Jason Michael Sullivan.

Amount: $2,000,000.

“Do you remember this?” I asked.

Jason stared at the paper.

“Dad—”

“Do you remember? The day I sat you down in our kitchen and gave you everything your grandparents left me. Every cent. You were 30 years old. You said you would make me proud.”

Kathy was crying openly now.

I set the bank statement down and pulled out the next document.

A hospital bill.

March 10, 2024.

Patient: Catherine Sullivan.

Diabetic ketoacidosis.

Amount due: $12,847.

Status: unpaid.

I laid it beside the transfer record.

Then I pulled out the stack.

Hospital bills. Pharmacy receipts. Insurance denial letters. Collection notices. Three years of paper held together with a binder clip, edges worn from being handled too many times.

“This,” I said, holding the stack where everyone could see, “is what your mother and I have been paying since we gave you everything.”

Amber tried to recover.

“That was 16 years ago. You can’t expect—”

“I can’t expect what?” I asked. “My son to remember that his parents gave him $2 million? That we kept nothing? That we trusted him?”

Her mouth snapped shut.

I looked at Jason.

“Your grandparents worked their whole lives to leave that money. They died in a car accident on I-10. Three weeks later, I signed every cent over to you because I thought you’d do something good with it. Something that mattered.”

My voice caught, but I forced it steady.

“Instead, your mother is dying by inches because we can’t afford to keep her alive. I’m working myself into the ground at 71. We’re about to be evicted. And you ordered $185 steak and didn’t even ask if she was okay.”

Jason put his head in his hands.

Amber sat frozen.

But I was not done.

The next document was about me.

I held up a single page with medical letterhead.

“My legal name is Frank Sullivan,” I said. “Everyone calls me Hank. This is my diagnosis from March 3, 2024.”

I read it aloud.

“Stage 2 prostate cancer. PSA level 47. Recommended treatment: immediate radiation therapy and hormone treatment. Estimated cost: $78,500.”

The restaurant became impossibly still.

“I have cancer,” I said, looking at Jason. “I’ve had it since March 3, 7 days before your mother collapsed. I haven’t treated it. I haven’t told anyone. I haven’t done anything because we didn’t have $78,000. We didn’t have $7,800. We barely had 78.”

Kathy grabbed my arm.

“Hank,” she whispered. “You didn’t tell me.”

“I couldn’t,” I said, turning toward her. “We couldn’t afford your insulin. How was I supposed to tell you we needed another $80,000 for me?”

Jason stood so fast his chair scraped.

“Dad, no. You have to get treatment. You have to.”

“I chose your mother over my own life,” I said. “That’s what you do when you love someone. You sacrifice.”

Then I reached into the folder one last time.

“And this is what the opposite of love looks like.”

Amber’s eyes widened when she saw the printed pages in my hand.

“What is that?”

I held up the first receipt.

“BabyBump.com. Order date March 25, 2024. One silicone pregnancy belly. Fourteen-week size. Price $47.99.”

The crowd gasped.

Amber shot to her feet.

“That’s insane.”

I held up the second page.

“Fake Ultrasound Generator. Upload a photo, add a date, and it creates a medical-looking ultrasound image in 5 minutes.”

I set both pages on the table.

“Your wife is not pregnant,” I told Jason. “She never was.”

Amber’s voice went shrill.

“You’re crazy. You’re making this up because you’re jealous that we’re successful and you’re not.”

She put her hand on her stomach, as if protecting something real.

But when she moved, the silicone belly shifted.

The elastic band had loosened during the meal. As she stood, gesturing in panic, the bottom edge separated from her actual stomach. It slipped just enough for everyone nearby to see the gap.

The prosthetic.

The fake.

The lie.

Someone cried out.

Amber grabbed at it with both hands, trying to smooth her dress, trying to hide what was already visible to 30 or 40 phones.

“She faked it,” someone whispered.

“The pregnancy was fake,” another voice said.

Amber stood with both hands pressed to her stomach, face burning, tears streaming down her cheeks. Not tears of sorrow. Tears of humiliation.

“I can explain,” she said.

“No,” I said quietly. “You can’t.”

I picked up the receipts.

« Previous Next »

My Ex-Husband Invited Me to His Wedding, so I Hired an Actor as My Plus-One

My Coworkers Teased Me for Eating Lunch with the Lonely Janitor Every Day for 11 Years – At His Funeral, His Lawyer Pulled Me Aside and Said, ‘Mr. Wilson Left This for You’

My 12-Year-Old Daughter Cut Off Her Hair for a Girl with Cancer – Then the Principal Called and Said, ‘You Need to Come Now and See What Happened with Your Own Eyes’

I Never Married Because I Raised My Brother’s Twin Sons Alone – What They Did After They Turned 18 Left Me Speechless

When Grandma Rejected Her Grandson, One Daughter Broke the Silence

He sla:pped me so hard my lip bl.ed, all because I asked him where he’d been last night. Early this morning, I quietly prepared a lavish Southern feast and set out silver cutlery.

Recent Posts

  • My Ex-Husband Invited Me to His Wedding, so I Hired an Actor as My Plus-One
  • My Coworkers Teased Me for Eating Lunch with the Lonely Janitor Every Day for 11 Years – At His Funeral, His Lawyer Pulled Me Aside and Said, ‘Mr. Wilson Left This for You’
  • My 12-Year-Old Daughter Cut Off Her Hair for a Girl with Cancer – Then the Principal Called and Said, ‘You Need to Come Now and See What Happened with Your Own Eyes’
  • I Never Married Because I Raised My Brother’s Twin Sons Alone – What They Did After They Turned 18 Left Me Speechless
  • When Grandma Rejected Her Grandson, One Daughter Broke the Silence

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Uncategorized
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Justread by GretaThemes.