I'd sent them 150,000 dollars already!
"How much more do we need?" My voice shook, "I'll see what I can scrape together."
"Another 100,000 dollars."
"One hundred thousand dollars?" I gasped, "Mom, how do you expect me to pull another hundred grand out of thin air? I've already maxed out what I could borrow."
Mom's tone grew impatient, interrupting me, "Then find a way to borrow more. Can you bear the thought of your brother just lying in a hospital morgue? Don't be heartless, Jess. Didn't he always treat you right when he was alive?"
The call ended abruptly. I buried my face in my hands. 100,000 dollars—where would I get that?
A thought struck me, and I quickly searched "neuroblastoma" online. Most sources said survival was typically just three to six months.
I've known my brother to be sickly ever since I can remember.
And now, after 27 years, besides this illness, he seemed free from any severe complications.
A dreadful suspicion began to gnaw at me, sending a shiver down my spine.
My phone buzzed—it was another picture from Katie, the same wild party scene.
In the center, a guy clutched an ice block, poised to jump into a pool, his face a mask of exhilaration.
"Sis, you really think this guy doesn't look like John?"
"Remember the burn scar on John's ankle from that accident when we were kids? Look, this guy in the picture has one too."
I zoomed in on the man's ankle as Katie suggested. Indeed, there was a scar, adorned with a tiny bat tattoo.
John detested bats; he'd always said they were vile, disease-ridden creatures.
I remembered John always having a gentle smile, despite his pale complexion.
"I said it's not him, Miss Sherlock," I texted back.
Katie replied with a sassy smirk emoji.
After drying off, a friend video-called to ask how my chat with Alex went.
I shook my head at her through the screen, "I'm not feeling it. He was all over my brother's diagnosis right from the start. Who knows his case better than me, after all?"
"You might be surprised. Alex is a big deal in his field. Heard he's even part of a team that developed a new drug saving loads of neuroblastoma patients!"
"He's a specialist in that?" I responded, taken aback.
"Exactly! Why else do you think I set you two up? He's a hot ticket in the medical world."
After the call, I stared blankly at Alex's WhatsApp profile picture for a long while.
Eventually, I typed out a message, "Hey, sorry to disturb..."