The diagnosis report crinkled between my trembling fingers, the words blurring together through my tears. *Organ failure. Three months.* The sterile hospital room felt suffocating, the steady beep of monitors marking time I no longer had.
I pressed the paper against my chest, feeling the rapid flutter of my failing heart beneath the thin hospital gown. Three months. Ninety days. It seemed both impossibly short and unbearably long.
The sound of expensive leather shoes clicking against linoleum made me look up. Alexander stood in the doorway, his tall frame filling the space with an authority that had once made me feel protected. Now, his presence only brought a chill that had nothing to do with the hospital's air conditioning.
His dark eyes swept over me with undisguised disgust, taking in my pale complexion and the IV line snaking from my arm. "Catherine."
Even my name sounded like an accusation on his lips.
"Alexander." I tried to keep my voice steady, tucking the diagnosis beneath my pillow. "I wasn't expecting you."
"I'm sure you weren't." He stepped into the room, his movements sharp and deliberate. From his briefcase, he withdrew a thick stack of papers and dropped them onto my bedside table with a sound that seemed to echo through my chest. "Divorce papers."
The words hit me like a physical blow, though I'd been expecting this moment for months. I stared at the official documents, their legal language a stark contrast to the vows we'd once exchanged.
"Sign them," he commanded, his voice devoid of any warmth. "I want this finished."
I reached for the papers with shaking hands, my vision blurring as I tried to focus on the text. "Alexander, please. Can we talk about—"
"There's nothing to discuss." His tone was ice-cold, final. "Vanessa told me everything."
My blood turned to ice water in my veins. "What did she tell you?"
A bitter laugh escaped his throat. "Don't play innocent with me, Catherine. She told me the truth about the company crisis last year. How it was her money that saved everything, not yours. How she sold her assets, liquidated her trust fund, while you sat back and did nothing."
The room spun around me. My grip tightened on the bed rails until my knuckles went white. "That's not... Alexander, that's not what happened."
"Stop lying!" His voice cracked like a whip, making me flinch. "I know you've been taking credit for her sacrifice. All this time, I thought you were the one who saved my family's legacy. But it was Vanessa. It was always Vanessa."
Each word was a dagger to my heart. I opened my mouth to defend myself, to tell him the truth about the sleepless nights I'd spent liquidating my inheritance, about the calls I'd made to every contact I had, about the pieces of my soul I'd sold to keep his company afloat. But what was the point? He'd already chosen to believe her version of events.
"She showed me the bank records," he continued, his dark eyes boring into mine. "Her accounts, emptied for my sake. While you... you couldn't even be bothered to help your own husband."
My throat closed up completely. Vanessa had been thorough, I'd give her that. She'd managed to erase every trace of my contributions, every sacrifice I'd made. In Alexander's eyes, I was nothing more than a selfish wife who'd watched from the sidelines while his first love swooped in to save the day.
"I trusted you," he whispered, and for a moment, I heard an echo of the man I'd fallen in love with. "I thought you loved me enough to fight for us, for what we built together. But you just... gave up."
Tears burned behind my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not in front of him. Not when he looked at me like I was something distasteful he'd found on the bottom of his shoe.
"Sign the papers, Catherine." His voice had returned to its cold, businesslike tone. "Make this easy for once."
I picked up the pen with numb fingers, my hand hovering over the signature line. Five years of marriage, reduced to a few sheets of legal documents. Five years of love, sacrifice, and devotion, dismissed because of another woman's lies.
The pen felt impossibly heavy as I pressed it to the paper. My signature looked foreign, shaky, nothing like the confident flourish I'd used on our marriage certificate all those years ago.
"There." I set the pen down and pushed the papers toward him. "It's done."
Alexander gathered the documents without looking at me, his movements efficient and cold. "I'll have my lawyer file these immediately. You'll need to be out of the house by the end of the week."
"The end of the week?" The words slipped out before I could stop them.
"Vanessa and I are getting married next month," he said matter-of-factly, as if he were discussing the weather. "We need time to prepare."
Next month. He was replacing me that quickly, that easily. As if our years together had meant nothing at all.
He turned to leave, then paused at the door. "For what it's worth, Catherine, I hope you find whatever it is you're looking for. Maybe someone who won't mind your... selfishness."
The door closed behind him with a soft click that sounded like a gunshot in the silence.
I waited until his footsteps faded down the hallway before I allowed myself to break. The sobs came in waves, shaking my entire body as I pressed my face into the sterile hospital pillow. Everything I'd given, everything I'd sacrificed, had been for nothing.
My hand drifted to my side, fingers tracing the surgical scar hidden beneath my gown. The kidney I'd sold in secret, the one that had provided the emergency funds to save his company when the banks had refused to extend our credit. The procedure that had weakened my already fragile health, accelerating the organ failure that was now killing me.
Three days. In three days, I was scheduled for heart surgery – a transplant that might buy me a few more months, maybe a year if I was lucky. Alexander didn't know. He'd never bothered to ask why I was in the hospital, too consumed with his anger and Vanessa's poison to care.
I closed my eyes and tried to imagine what it would be like – dying alone, with the man I'd loved believing the worst of me. At least the pain would end soon. At least I wouldn't have to watch him build a life with her, using the foundation I'd bled to create.
The irony wasn't lost on me. In trying to save his world, I'd destroyed my own.
Three months earlier, the world had felt like it was crumbling beneath my feet.
I stared at the stack of foreclosure notices scattered across Alexander's mahogany desk, each one a death sentence for everything we'd built together. The afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of his office, casting long shadows that seemed to mirror the darkness creeping into our lives.
"How bad is it?" I whispered, though I already knew the answer from the hollow look in Alexander's eyes.
"We have two weeks," he said, his voice barely audible. "Two weeks before the banks seize everything. The house, the company, all of it."
I watched him bury his face in his hands, his shoulders shaking with the weight of three generations of family legacy about to disappear. The Blackwood empire, built by his grandfather's blood and sweat, reduced to nothing more than unpaid debts and broken dreams.
That night, while Alexander drowned his sorrows in whiskey, I made my first call.
The phone felt slick with sweat in my palm as I dialed the number I'd found buried in the darkest corners of the internet. Places decent people never ventured, where desperate souls traded pieces of themselves for cold, hard cash.
"You have something to sell?" The voice on the other end was gravelly, businesslike.
"A kidney," I whispered, my throat tight with fear and determination. "Type O negative. Healthy donor."
The silence stretched between us like a chasm. "Five hundred thousand. Cash. No questions asked."
My hand trembled as I gripped the phone tighter. Five hundred thousand wouldn't be enough to save the company, but it would buy us time. Time to find another solution.
"When?" I asked.
Two days later, I stood in a sterile room that smelled of disinfectant and desperation. The surgeon's mask hid his face, but his eyes were kind as he explained the procedure.
"Are you sure about this?" he asked, his gloved hands gentle as he prepared the IV. "There are risks. Your remaining kidney will have to work twice as hard. It could affect your health long-term."
I thought of Alexander's broken expression, of the family photos lining the walls of our home that would soon belong to strangers. "I'm sure."
The anesthesia pulled me under like a dark tide, and when I woke, five hundred thousand dollars richer and one organ poorer, I told Alexander I'd liquidated some old investments. He was too grateful to question the details, too relieved to notice the way I winced when I moved too quickly.
But even with the temporary reprieve, it wasn't enough. The company hemorrhaged money faster than we could plug the holes. Suppliers demanded payment, employees threatened to quit, and the banks circled like vultures.
That's when I heard about Sinclair.
Old money. Older than the Blackwoods, with connections that reached into every corner of the city's power structure. But Edmund Sinclair was dying, had been for months, and his business empire was fracturing without a clear heir.
I found him in his penthouse office on the forty-second floor, the city sprawling beneath us like a glittering web. He was smaller than I'd expected, his once-powerful frame reduced to skin and bones, but his eyes still burned with an intelligence that made my skin crawl.
"Mrs. Blackwood," he wheezed, gesturing for me to sit in the leather chair across from his desk. "I've been expecting you."
"You have?" I tried to keep the surprise out of my voice.
"Desperate times call for desperate measures," he said, his smile revealing teeth stained yellow with age and medication. "Your husband's company is drowning, and you've already sold pieces of yourself to keep it afloat. Admirable, really."
My blood ran cold. He knew about the kidney. Somehow, this dying old man knew my darkest secret.
"What do you want?" I asked, abandoning any pretense of negotiation.
Sinclair leaned back in his chair, his breathing labored but his gaze sharp. "I'm dying, Mrs. Blackwood. Heart failure. The doctors give me weeks, maybe days. But I have resources, connections, money that could save your husband's company ten times over."
"And in exchange?"
His laugh was more of a rattle. "I want what you can't give me. Time. Youth. A future."
I stared at him, confusion mixing with growing dread. "I don't understand."
"My heart is failing," he repeated slowly, as if speaking to a child. "But yours... yours is young, strong, healthy. For now."
The room seemed to tilt around me. "You're asking me to—"
"Die for your husband's legacy? Yes." His voice was matter-of-fact, as if we were discussing the weather. "Think of it as an investment. Your life for his future. A fair trade, wouldn't you say?"
I should have run. Should have grabbed my purse and fled from that office, from that monster wearing human skin. But all I could think about was Alexander's face when he'd signed those foreclosure notices, the way his hands had shaken as our world collapsed around us.
"How long would I have?" The words slipped out before I could stop them.
Sinclair's eyes gleamed with triumph. "The procedure would need to happen within six months. My condition is... deteriorating rapidly. But until then, you'd live normally. No one would know."
"And the money?"
"Fifty million dollars, transferred to an account of your choosing the moment you sign the contract. Enough to save Blackwood Industries and secure your husband's future for generations."
Fifty million. More money than I'd ever dreamed of, enough to not just save the company but make it stronger than ever. Alexander would never have to worry about money again, never have to watch his family's legacy crumble.
My hand trembled as I reached for the pen he offered. "There's no other way?"
Sinclair's expression softened slightly, and for a moment, I saw something almost paternal in his eyes. "You remind me of someone," he said quietly. "My daughter. She would have been about your age now, if..." He trailed off, shaking his head. "Perhaps fate is giving me a chance to make amends."
"What happened to her?"
"She was taken from me twenty years ago. Kidnapped. We never found her body, but..." He studied my face with an intensity that made my skin crawl. "You have her eyes. Her stubborn chin. Sometimes I wonder if the universe has a sense of irony."
I signed the contract with shaking hands, sealing my fate with blue ink and desperate love. The money appeared in our accounts the next day, and Alexander wept with relief as we paid off every debt, every threat to our future.
He never asked where the money came from. He was too grateful, too overwhelmed with relief to question this miracle that had saved everything he held dear.
But as I watched him celebrate, as I smiled and pretended to share his joy, I couldn't shake Sinclair's words. The way he'd looked at me, as if seeing a ghost. The strange comment about fate and second chances.
Now, three months later, lying in this hospital bed with divorce papers scattered around me like fallen leaves, I wondered if Edmund Sinclair was still alive. If he was waiting for me to fulfill my end of our devil's bargain.
Somewhere in the city, in offices I'd never seen, people were asking questions about a woman who looked exactly like a little girl who'd vanished twenty years ago. A little girl whose father was about to claim his final prize.
The heart monitor beside my bed beeped steadily, counting down the moments until my debt came due.
The champagne bubbles caught the light from the crystal chandeliers, casting tiny rainbows across the marble floor of the Grand Ballroom. I stood at the edge of the celebration, watching Alexander raise his glass to toast the woman who had supposedly saved everything we'd built together.
"To Vanessa," his voice carried across the room, rich with gratitude and something else I couldn't quite name. "Without your sacrifice, Blackwood Industries would have been nothing more than a memory."
The crowd erupted in applause, and I felt each clap like a physical blow. From my hospital bed, I watched the live stream on my phone, my IV line tugging at my arm as my hands trembled with rage and heartbreak.
Vanessa stepped forward, her designer gown flowing like liquid silk. She placed a delicate hand on Alexander's arm, her smile perfectly crafted to appear humble yet radiant. "Please, Alexander. I only did what anyone would do for someone they care about."
The camera zoomed in on her face, capturing the way her eyes glistened with unshed tears. Such a masterful performance. She'd always been good at playing the victim, the savior, whatever role the moment required.
"I know Catherine couldn't be here tonight," Vanessa continued, her voice carrying just the right note of concern. "I hope she's feeling better soon. These health issues... they can be so draining."
The subtle implication hung in the air like poison. Health issues that prevented me from supporting my own husband. Health issues that made me unreliable, weak, useless. She didn't need to say the words outright; the message was clear to everyone in that room.
Alexander's expression softened as he looked at her, and I saw something in his eyes that he'd never shown me – not even in our earliest days together. Pure adoration. Complete trust. The kind of love I'd spent five years trying to earn.
"Vanessa liquidated her entire trust fund," he announced to the crowd. "Sold properties that had been in her family for generations. All to save a company that wasn't even hers to save."
My phone screen blurred as tears spilled down my cheeks. In that ballroom, surrounded by the city's elite, Alexander was rewriting our history. Erasing every sacrifice I'd made, every piece of myself I'd sold to keep his dream alive.
The reporter interviewing them leaned in closer. "Mr. Blackwood, this must have been such a difficult time for your family."
Alexander's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "It was. When everything was falling apart, I learned who I could really count on. Sometimes crisis reveals people's true character."
His words hit me like shards of glass. True character. He thought my absence from this celebration, my inability to match Vanessa's grand gestures, revealed some fundamental flaw in who I was. He had no idea that my "true character" had cost me a kidney and would soon cost me my life.
Vanessa squeezed his hand, her diamond bracelet catching the light. "I just want Alexander to know he's not alone. That someone believes in him, in what he's built. Some people give up when things get tough, but I'll always fight for what matters."
The camera panned across the crowd, capturing faces I recognized – board members, investors, society wives who had once smiled at me with polite interest. Now they nodded approvingly at Vanessa's words, their expressions making it clear they'd already chosen sides.
I turned off the phone and let it fall onto the hospital blanket. The silence of my room felt suffocating after the noise and celebration I'd just witnessed. Outside my window, the city sparkled with life, but in here, surrounded by beeping machines and the smell of antiseptic, I felt like I was already dead.
My fingers found the pen on my bedside table, and I pulled out a piece of hospital stationary. My handwriting looked shaky, foreign, but I pressed on.
*Alexander,*
*By the time you read this, you'll know the truth about everything. About the kidney I sold to give you those first crucial months. About the deal I made with Edmund Sinclair to secure the fifty million that really saved your company. About the heart surgery I'm scheduled for tomorrow – not to save my life, but to end it, so that a dying man can live a few more years.*
*I know you'll never believe me. Vanessa has been too thorough in her deception, too careful in covering my tracks. But I need you to know that every choice I made, every sacrifice, was because I loved you more than my own life.*
*Don't blame yourself. You couldn't have known what I was hiding from you. I wanted to tell you so many times, but I was afraid you'd try to stop me. Afraid you'd choose our marriage over your family's legacy.*
*I was right to be afraid, wasn't I?*
*Take care of yourself, Alexander. Be happy with Vanessa. Build the life you deserve with someone who can stand beside you in the light, instead of hiding in the shadows like I did.*
*All my love,*
*Catherine*
I folded the letter carefully, my hands steadier now that the words were finally out of my head and onto paper. The old nurse, Margaret, knocked softly before entering with my evening medications.
"How are we feeling tonight, dear?" Her voice was warm, grandmotherly, the kind of comfort I'd been craving for months.
"Margaret," I said, holding out the letter. "Could you do something for me? After... after tomorrow's surgery. Could you make sure this gets to my husband?"
She took the letter with gentle hands, her eyes studying my face with the wisdom of someone who'd seen too many final goodbyes. "Of course, sweetheart. But you're going to be fine. The doctors are very optimistic about tomorrow."
I smiled, not having the heart to tell her that tomorrow's surgery wasn't meant to save me. "Thank you. For everything."
As Margaret left with my letter tucked safely in her pocket, I closed my eyes and tried to imagine what Alexander would think when he read my words. Would he finally understand? Or would Vanessa find a way to twist even my death into another lie?
Somewhere across the city, in a penthouse office I'd visited only once, a phone was ringing. Edmund Sinclair's voice, weaker now but still commanding, gave orders to someone named Ethan.
"Not yet," he wheezed into the receiver. "She's not ready to die. Not until I'm certain she's the one. Do whatever it takes to keep her alive. I don't care what it costs."
But I knew nothing of that conversation. I only knew that tomorrow, one way or another, my suffering would finally end.