Elena had always believed in building a secure life before love. In her early thirties, after years of working two jobs and sacrificing vacations, she finally bought her own small apartment in the city. It wasn’t luxurious, but it was hers—every inch earned with sweat and persistence.
Then she met Pavel.
He was kind, attentive, funny—the kind of man who brought flowers just because. For the first time, Elena let her guard down. After two years of dating, they married.
But marriage slowly unraveled the version of Pavel she once knew.
He started complaining about work more often, then eventually quit, saying he needed time to “figure things out.” Elena supported him. But months passed, then years. Pavel never found another job. Instead, he filled his days with video games and naps, while Elena shouldered all financial responsibilities.
Then came the diagnosis: stage four cancer. Doctors gave her limited options. Surgery wasn’t possible. Chemo might give her time, but not hope.
When she broke the news to Pavel, she expected heartbreak, tears, at least some sense of loss.
He was quiet at first. Then he asked, “So… what happens to the apartment?”
Elena blinked. “What?”
“I mean, if anything happens to you,” he continued, “does it go to your family? Or to me?”
She couldn’t believe what she was hearing.
In the following days, his behavior changed. He started asking more about her will. He suggested adding his name to the deed “just in case.”
In those weeks, Elena saw the truth with painful clarity: Pavel hadn’t loved her. He had admired what she had, relied on her strength, and quietly taken advantage of her willingness to give. When she became vulnerable, instead of stepping up, he reached out—not to comfort, but to claim.
So she made her own plans.
She rewrote her will, leaving everything to her sister. She asked a close friend to stay with her during her treatment. And one evening, with more resolve than fear, she told Pavel she wanted a divorce.
He was stunned. “You’re seriously leaving me? When you’re dying?”
She looked him in the eye and said, “Yes. Because I’m dying. And I won’t spend my last months with someone who’s already mourning what he can take.”
He left that night.
Elena’s health continued to decline, but her spirit grew lighter. Friends rallied around her. Her sister visited often. For the first time in years, she felt genuine love—not the kind that takes, but the kind that simply shows up.
Pavel tried to come back once, weeks later, claiming he’d changed. But it wasn’t regret in his eyes. It was panic. She didn’t let him in.
In her final journal entry, Elena wrote:
“People think dying is the hardest part. But it’s not. The hardest part is realizing who’s really been living beside you. I thought love meant sacrifice. But now I know: real love doesn’t drain you. It protects you, especially when you can’t protect yourself.”
She passed away surrounded by the people who truly cared. The apartment? It remained in her name, just as she wanted.