The water around the San Juan Islands was cold that October. Colder than Chloe' s eyes when she looked at me.
She said this trip was for us, a way to fix things.
Things had been tight for a month. I didn' t want her having a baby for Liam, her childhood friend. He claimed he was dying, that he needed an heir. He even said he was the one who gave Chloe a kidney years ago when hers failed.
That was my kidney. My sacrifice.
But Chloe believed him.
So, this private island, she said, was to rekindle our love.
I wanted to believe her. I loved her more than anything.
  We landed the small rental boat on the rocky beach. The cabin was old, small.
 "It' s perfect,"  she said, her voice too bright.
I started to unload our bags. Minimal supplies, she' d said. A real getaway.
Then I saw her pick up my satellite phone.
 "Chloe, what are you doing?" 
She didn' t answer. She smashed it against a rock. Again and again.
My stomach dropped.
 "Chloe!" 
She turned to me, her face hard. She pulled my wallet from my back pocket, took out my ID, my cards. She threw them into the shallow water.
 "This is for us, Ethan. A new start. No distractions." 
 "My medication, Chloe! It' s in my bag. I need it."  I had only one kidney, her kidney now, and I needed pills every day.
She walked to my duffel bag. Marcus, her executive assistant, had packed it. He was always loyal to her, did whatever she asked.
She found the small orange bottle.
 "This?"  she asked, holding it up.
 "Yes! Please, Chloe. This isn' t funny." 
Marcus stepped out from behind the cabin then. I hadn' t even seen him arrive. He must have come on a different boat.
Chloe handed him the bottle.
He walked to the edge of the water, a little smirk on his face. He opened it, poured the pills into his hand, and then tossed them into the sea. He kicked the empty bottle after them.
 "No!"  I lunged, but he was too quick.
Chloe just watched, her arms crossed.
 "Liam needs me healthy, Ethan. He needs this baby. You were always a complication." 
Her words hit me harder than any fist.
 "He lied to you, Chloe! I gave you my kidney!" 
 "Liam saved my life,"  she said, her voice flat.  "You' re just jealous." 
They got back on their boat. Not the rental we came in. A sleeker, faster one.
 "You' ll be fine for a bit,"  Chloe called out over the engine' s roar.  "Someone will pick you up in a few days. Think about what you' ve done." 
Then they were gone.
Leaving me with a small tent, a few cans of food, and no way to call for help.
And no medication.
The first day was bad. The ache in my side started, a familiar pain when I missed my pills even by a few hours.
It grew. Spread.
By nightfall, I was shaking, feverish.
I crawled into the tent. The wind howled outside.
I thought of Chloe, the woman I married, the woman I saved.
The pain was a fire in my body. My breath came in gasps.
I remembered the warmth of her hand in mine, years ago, in the hospital.
Then, just cold.
I died on that island, alone. Betrayed.
My last thought was her name. Chloe.