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My NFL dream was within reach. I'd just led my team to a State Championship, and a scout from the Dallas Cowboys wanted to meet me. Life felt perfect. Then Sophia called. Not to congratulate me, but to demand I attend her ex-fiancé, Lucas Sterling's, "recovery party." He, a supposedly paralyzed race car driver, apparently needed my emotional support. I missed the crucial Cowboys meeting. At that lavish party, Lucas, always the victim, publicly humiliated me, forcing a humiliating apology. He then "accidentally" ruined my championship jacket, a cherished symbol of years of dedication. Sophia just brushed it off, offering expensive gifts as "compensation." I began logging every sacrifice, every forced compliance, in a personal ledger-a "debt" I owed Sophia for her family's help with my mother's experimental treatment. Each "gift" was just another painful tally of what I'd lost, from my father's treasured football to my dignity. Was my life just currency for them? When the Jacksonville Jaguars offered a tryout, a second chance, Lucas orchestrated a horrific car crash, ending my career with a shattered arm. Sophia, fully aware, prioritized his theatrical injury, leaving me bleeding and broken. The 99th debt was paid, but I was done. I disappeared, leaving behind a life that had cost me everything.