
I Was Critically Ill and Begged My Husband to Come Home – He Kept Texting 'Almost There,' but Then His Coworker Told Me the Truth
I never imagined I’d be in this position—trapped in my own body, feverish, trembling, and helpless. My world had narrowed to the pounding of my head, the ache in my limbs, and the overwhelming sense of dread building in my chest.
My one-year-old daughter, Emma, sat quietly on the carpet near the bed, chewing on the ear of her stuffed elephant. Every now and then, she’d glance up at me, babble something unintelligible, then return to her toy. She didn’t understand what was happening, didn’t know that I was barely able to lift my head, much less care for her.
My phone was on the nightstand. With effort, I reached out, my hand shaking violently, and called my husband, Tyler. He answered after a few rings, his voice casual, distracted.
"Hey, babe," he said, background noise buzzing behind him. I could tell he was still at work.
"Tyler," I whispered, my voice dry and cracking. "I need you. I’m really sick. I can’t take care of Emma."
There was a pause.
"What’s going on exactly?" he asked, not alarmed, just… inconvenienced.
"I can’t move. I can’t sit up. I think I have a fever—something serious. Please come home," I begged, each word a struggle.
He sighed. "Alright. I’ll finish what I’m doing and head out soon."
"How soon is soon?" I croaked.
"Twenty minutes. I promise."
Those two words—I promise—gave me a thread of hope. I closed my eyes, holding onto them.
But twenty minutes passed. Then thirty. Then an hour.
My fever spiked. I started shivering uncontrollably, my teeth chattering. Emma began to fuss. She was tired and hungry, and I couldn’t even lift her into bed with me. I tried to sit up again, only to slump back down, dizzy and nauseated.
With the last of my energy, I picked up my phone and texted Tyler.
Me: Are you close?
Tyler: Just finishing up. Leaving soon.
I stared at the screen. Something felt wrong. I knew how long it took to get from his office to our house—it was a fifteen-minute drive, twenty tops. And we lived in a small town; there was never any traffic worth mentioning.
Thirty more minutes crawled by. I was slipping in and out of awareness. My skin was on fire, my head pounding. Emma had started crying loudly, scared now, her tiny fists pounding the carpet.
I forced myself to text again.
Me: I really need you here. Now.
Tyler: Stuck in traffic. Almost home.
Traffic? At 2 p.m. on a weekday?
That’s when panic set in. I rolled over and vomited onto the floor. I couldn’t even make it to the trash can. My body was giving out.
I needed help. Real help.
My thoughts turned to someone I usually wouldn’t bother—Tyler’s coworker, Ben. They were close at work, and I had his number from a holiday party invite months ago.
I sent the message with trembling fingers.
Me: Hi, Ben. Is Tyler still at the office?
His response came immediately.
Ben: Yeah, he’s here. Why?
My heart dropped.
He was still at work.
Still at work while I was lying half-conscious, my daughter crying beside me, and I was too weak to even lift a spoon.
I stared at the message in disbelief. He had lied. Repeatedly. He had chosen to stay at work for reasons I couldn't begin to understand, while I was possibly dying at home.
I tried to call him. No answer. I called again. Voicemail.
At that point, I couldn’t hold back the tears. I was scared—scared for my life and scared for Emma.
In desperation, I scrolled through my contacts and found Mrs. Collins, our elderly neighbor. She was kind and had always offered to help if we ever needed anything. I hit “Call.”
She picked up immediately. "Hello?"
"M-Mrs. Collins… I need help," I whispered.
"Sweetheart, what’s wrong?" she asked, her tone instantly alert.
"I’m very sick. I think I need to go to the hospital. I can’t take care of Emma. Tyler’s not here."
"I’m coming right now," she said without hesitation.
I could have cried with relief.
I let the phone fall from my hand and closed my eyes. Emma was still crying, but her voice sounded distant, muffled. Everything felt far away.
The next time I opened my eyes, I was in the hospital.
The lights were too bright. My mouth was dry. My body ached from head to toe, and a nurse was adjusting the IV in my arm. A monitor beeped steadily somewhere near my head.
"You gave us quite a scare," a doctor said gently. He was in his fifties, glasses perched on the edge of his nose. "You were very close to going into septic shock. You had a severe kidney infection, and your heart rate was dangerously high when you arrived."
"How close?" I whispered.
He hesitated. "Another couple of hours, and we might not be having this conversation."
His words struck me like ice water. Another couple of hours. That’s all it would have taken.
Hours Tyler had spent pretending to come home.
Hours I had spent alone, helpless.
Mrs. Collins had saved my life.
Two hours later, Tyler finally showed up.
I heard him in the hallway first, joking with a nurse like nothing was wrong. Then he entered the room, holding a cup of coffee.
"Hey," he said, smiling like we’d just met for lunch.
I stared at him, unable to summon the energy to speak.
"You look better," he said, stepping closer. "You’ll be out of here in no time, huh?"
I still said nothing.
He shrugged. "I didn’t realize it was that bad. You should’ve told me."
A crack opened inside me.
"I did," I whispered. "I begged you."
He rubbed the back of his neck, glancing away. "I thought you were just overwhelmed or something. You know how things get."
No apology. No regret. Just deflection.
I stayed in the hospital for two more days. My parents drove up from four hours away to pick up Emma. When they arrived, my mother cried and held me tight. My father refused to look at Tyler.
Tyler visited once more, brought me a protein bar and a bottle of water. That was it.
On the day I was discharged, I sat in the car beside him, listening to him complain about traffic and work deadlines like I hadn’t almost died. He never once asked how I felt.
That night, as we lay in bed, him scrolling on his phone, chuckling at videos, something hardened inside me.
I thought about Emma. What if she had been sick and I wasn’t there? Would he have ignored her, too? Lied to her?
I turned to look at him. He didn’t notice.
And I knew, in that moment, I didn’t love him anymore.
After he fell asleep, I reached for his phone. I had never done it before, never felt I had to. But something pushed me.
His passcode hadn’t changed. My hands shook as I opened his messages.
What I found was worse than I imagined—flirty conversations with multiple women, full of emojis, pet names, compliments he never gave me.
“I can’t stop thinking about last night.”
“You’re the best part of my day.”
I scrolled through app after app. Tinder. Instagram DMs. Work emails with no mention of me, no request for time off, not even a casual note of concern.
While I was nearly dying, he had been chatting, laughing, swiping.
I put his phone back and lay beside him, eyes wide open.
The next morning, I scheduled an appointment with a divorce lawyer.
It wasn’t rage. It was clarity.
I began looking for apartments. Quietly. Methodically. I told no one—not even my parents. I wanted to make sure everything was ready.
Tyler acted like everything was normal, so I played along. But I knew the truth now. I had been alone in that marriage for a long time. I had just refused to see it.
But I saw it clearly now.
And just like he hadn’t told me he wasn’t coming, I wouldn’t tell him I was leaving.
Not until I was already gone.
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