The answering machine blinked. Seven messages.
I pressed play.
[BEEP]
"Dr. Farber, this is Linda from the clinic. I know it's your wedding day, but we have a problem. The autoclave broke mid-cycle. We can't sterilize instruments. I had to cancel tomorrow's appointments. Call me when you can."
[BEEP]
"Barry, it's your father. What the hell happened? Call us immediately."
[BEEP]
"Dr. Farber, this is American Dental Supply. Your account is 90 days past due. If we don't receive payment by Monday, we'll be forced to suspend your line of credit and repossess the leased equipment."
[BEEP]
"Barry, it's Mom. Your father is furious. I'm worried. Please call."
[BEEP]
"Dr. Farber, Linda again. The X-ray machine is making a grinding noise. Marcus thinks it might fail soon. Should we call the repair service?"
[BEEP]
"This is Dr. Green. We need to discuss the financial aspects of today's... situation. The venue is demanding full payment despite the cancellation."
[BEEP]
"Hey Barry, it's Mindy. Just checking on you. Rachel's really upset but I think she'll be okay. Are YOU okay? Call me if you need to talk."
I stood there. Staring at the blinking light.
Seven messages.
Seven problems.
The wedding was canceled.
My clinic was failing.
I was ninety days behind on equipment payments.
My parents were furious.
Rachel's parents were probably already calculating lawsuit potential.
I walked to the filing cabinet. Pulled out the clinic ledgers.
Original Barry had kept paper records. Meticulous handwriting. Numbers that told a story of slow decline.
Monthly Revenue: $18,000
Monthly Expenses:
Rent: $4,500
Staff salaries: $6,200
Equipment lease: $2,800
Supplies: $1,500
Insurance: $900
Utilities: $600
Miscellaneous: $500
Total: $17,000
Net Monthly: +$1,000
That looked fine.
Until I flipped to the next page.
Outstanding Debts:
Equipment lease (3 months overdue): $8,400
Supplier invoices (unpaid): $4,200
Emergency repairs (credit card): $2,100
Total debt: $14,700
Bank Account Balance: $1,847
Wedding Costs Already Paid (non-refundable):
Venue deposit: $8,000
Catering deposit: $5,000
Band: $3,000
Flowers: $1,200
Photography: $2,500
Total lost: $19,700
Additional Wedding Costs Owed:
Venue (remainder): $6,000
Catering (remainder): $7,000
Total still owed: $13,000
Rachel's parents had paid what they'd promised. The rest—the penalties, the contracts, the mess—were his.
I did the math.
If I paid wedding debts plus clinic debts: $27,700 needed.
Current assets: $1,847.
Shortfall: $25,853.
I sat on the floor of my apartment, surrounded by paper bills and ledgers.
The wedding was canceled.
Rachel was gone.
The honeymoon had been scheduled for the following week.
Rachel's parents had paid for it—called it a gift. Europe had been the plan at first, but the bookings were full by the time everything was finalized. Aruba became the compromise.
In another version of this life, I would have gone there with Mindy.
Not this one.
I didn't have the time.
And more importantly, I didn't have the interest.
And my entire professional life was collapsing.
Original Barry had been so busy trying to prove he deserved Rachel that he'd destroyed everything else.
I had one chance to fix this.
But I had no idea where to start.
The phone rang.
I stared at it.
Picked up.
"Barry Farber."
"Dr. Farber, this is Margaret Chen from Botanical Gardens Venue. We need to discuss payment for today's cancellation. Our contract specifies full payment within 48 hours of the event date, regardless of whether the ceremony occurred."
I closed my eyes.
"I understand. Can we discuss a payment plan?"
"Our policy is immediate payment—"
"I'm asking for an exception. The situation was unusual. I'm not trying to avoid the cost. I'm asking for structured terms so I can pay you and keep my business operational."
Silence.
"I'll need to speak with my supervisor."
"I'll be here."
She hung up.
I sat on the floor. Stared at the ceiling.
Second chance at life.
Same financial nightmare.
Different choices to make.
But this time, I wasn't going to coast.
This time, I was going to build something real.
Even if I had to do it from the wreckage of everything original Barry had broken.
I stood.
Walked to the window.
Looked out at the city.
Manhattan stretched out below. Millions of people. Millions of problems.
Mine was just beginning.
The phone rang again.
I answered.
"Barry Farber."
"Dr. Farber, this is Linda. I'm so sorry to bother you today. But I need to know—are we opening Monday? Because if the autoclave isn't fixed, we can't—"
"We're opening Monday," I said. "I'll fix the autoclave myself if I have to."
"You know how to fix autoclaves?"
"I know how to read manuals and follow instructions."
A pause. Then, quietly: "Are you okay?"
"I will be."
"The wedding—"
"Is over. And I need to focus on what matters now."
"Which is?"
"Saving the practice. Paying my debts. Building something that lasts."
Another pause.
"You sound different," Linda said.
"I am different."
"Good different?"
I looked at the ledgers spread across my floor. At the mountain of problems I'd inherited from Barry's mistakes.
At the opportunity to do it right this time.
"Ask me in six months," I said.
I hung up.
Sat back down with the numbers.
And started planning.
One problem at a time.
One payment at a time.
One choice at a time.
I had 120 days to stabilize the clinic before the debt crushed it completely.
I had a second chance at life.
And I wasn't going to waste it trying to be someone I wasn't.
Not anymore.
END CHAPTER 1 (3)
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