
On the night of March 8, Manila was bright.
On the streets from Makati to Quezon City, men held hands and gave flowers and gifts to their beloved women.
But amidst the happy crowd, there was one woman sitting quietly in a small apartment – Isabel Cruz, 32 years old.
Beside her was a cold dining table, with a bowl of greasy sinigang, a plate of adobo that she had been working hard to cook since the afternoon for her husband – Marco.
She had sent her 6-year-old son to his mother’s house in Cavite, just so the couple could have a private night.
She chose the red dress Marco had given her, sprayed her with his favorite jasmine perfume.
She imagined her coming in, smiling, and saying:
“Happy Women’s Day, my love.”
But it was all just in her imagination.
7pm.
The phone rang.
Marco’s voice rang, hurried and unfamiliar:
“Honey, excuse me? I have an urgent meeting with a partner, I won’t be back on time. Eat first.”
Isabel was silent for a few seconds, then replied softly:
“Remember to come home early.”
“Yes, I know.”
She hung up the phone. No flowers. No greetings. No more messages.
Her heart ached with a wife’s intuition.
This wasn’t the first time Marco had been “suddenly busy” on special occasions.
She looked at the wedding photo hanging on the wall – where they had once been smiling brightly, happily holding hands.
Now, she was alone, with the suffocating cold silence.
8pm. 9pm.
He still didn’t come home.
The apartment was gradually getting darker.
The flickering candle on the table also d.ied.
Then the phone vibrated.
A text message from an unknown number.
Isabel’s heart pounded. She opened it with shaking hands:
“My husband is at the motel with me.
He said he’s tired of his ‘lewd wife at home’.
If you don’t believe me, go to the Mabini Hotel, room 307 and see.”
A photo was attached.
Marco, her husband, was hugging a young woman, who was drunk.
Red light flashed across their faces – the kind of light that only exists in places where people go to ch:e:at, not to love.
Isabel’s hands were shaking.
The phone fell to the floor, the screen shattered.
She dialed her husband.
One call. Two calls.
No one answered.
She called again.
Three calls. Five calls. Ten calls…
On the thirtieth call, the cold operator’s voice rang out:
“The number you called cannot be reached at this time.”
Isabel’s chest ached terribly.
She quickly put on her coat, grabbed her car keys, and hurried out onto the street.
The Manila night was still vibrant.
Lovers holding hands, bouquets of bright roses, laughter mixed with music from the bars.
Everyone around her was overjoyed.
While driving, she cried, whispering,
“(Marco… why did you do this to me?)”
As she rounded a curve near EDSA, the headlights of a truck on the other side hit her directly in the eyes.
A moment of losing control of the steering wheel as her vision blurred due to her tears…
“BAM!”
A loud crash rang out in the middle of the night.
The motorcycle overturned, Isabel fell to the road.
Blood flowed from her forehead, mixing with the rainwater and yellow light.
Intense pain spread through her body, but it was nothing compared to the pain in her heart.
She reached for her phone, desperately trying to unlock the screen, and sent a final message to her husband:
“Marco… it hurts… help me…
Then the phone fell from her hand.
The screen went dead.
The light gradually faded from her eyes.
It was six in the morning.
In the small hotel room on Mabini Road, Marco woke up.
His head ached from the alcohol.
Beside him was his girlfriend, Kyla, still sound asleep.
He picked up his phone – he had turned it off since last night to “be quiet.”
When he opened it, dozens of notifications popped up:
30 missed calls from “Wife ❤️”, several from his mother-in-law, and dozens of messages.
The last message stopped him:
“Marco… it hurts… help me…”
Soon, a message from an unknown number:
“The owner of this number had a serious accident and is currently being treated at the Philippine General Hospital. Please have her family come immediately.”
Marco jumped as if he had been electrocuted.
He threw down the phone, quickly got dressed, and rushed out of the hotel like a madman.
When he arrived at the hospital, he saw his in-laws standing there, their faces confused.
When he saw him, his in-laws – a kind man his whole life – came over and slapped him hard in the face.
“You no longer have the right to be called my daughter’s husband!”
Marco bowed his head, not daring to speak.
He peered into the emergency room mirror – where Isabel lay motionless on a white bed, her head wrapped in a bandage, the ventilator continuously humming.
The doctor came out, his voice heavy:
“Serious head trauma, internal bleeding. We did everything we could. Now, it’s up to her determination… and a miracle.”
After listening, Marco collapsed to the floor.
He remembered the ignored messages, the cold food his wife was waiting for, the times he had used the excuse of being “busy at work” to be with others.
Everything came back quickly, like a knife stabbing his conscience.
He fell down, crying like a child:
“Isabel… I’m sorry… wake up… please…”
But the emergency room was still silent.
No one answered him.
30 missed calls, one last text message – all that remained was evidence of his indifference.
Marco understood, perhaps in this life he would never hear that voice again, never have the chance to say “I’m sorry” or “I love you”.
And he realized:
The woman who had waited for him all night with a cold meal – the most precious thing he had lost forever.
Don’t wait until you see someone lying in a hospital bed to learn to appreciate them. Because there are messages, there are calls – after we don’t answer, there are no second chances.