The heavy blackness slowly gave way to a warm, golden light. A faint scent of fresh freesias drifted into Aurora's nose.
She slowly opened her eyes.
This wasn't the freezing, sterile ICU. She was staring at a vaulted ceiling with soft, recessed lighting. The room looked like a suite at a five-star hotel, draped in rich creams and soft grays.
She instinctively tried to move her legs. The fatal, tearing agony in her lower back was completely gone. In its place was only a dull, tight pulling sensation across her abdomen.
The state-of-the-art medical monitors next to the bed hummed a quiet, rhythmic tune. Her vitals were perfectly stable.
A private nurse in a tailored, high-end uniform pushed the door open. She was carrying a glass of room-temperature lemon water.
Seeing Aurora awake, the nurse flashed a perfectly trained, comforting smile and walked quickly to the bedside.
"Ms. Valdez, you're finally awake," the nurse said softly. "The surgery by the Swiss team was a complete success."
Aurora's throat was raw. She stared at the woman in disbelief. "I... I'm alive? Where am I?"
The nurse placed a straw near Aurora's lips, helping her take a small sip. "You are in a private rehabilitation center on the Upper East Side. You received a flawless kidney transplant."
Aurora's eyes widened. Her mind instantly flashed to the pathetic balance in her joint bank account before she passed out.
She knew exactly how much this level of medical care cost. It was a number normal people couldn't even dream of. "Who... who arranged all this?"
She reached out and grabbed the nurse's wrist. Her grip was weak but desperate.
The nurse, whose nametag read Brenda, didn't flinch. "I'm Brenda, your primary care nurse," she said softly, before she gently but firmly pulled her wrist free. "A gentleman who cares very deeply for your well-being."
The first absurd thought that popped into Aurora's head was Conrad. But the memory of that cold, heartless phone call instantly killed the idea.
"Was it Conrad Huffman?" she asked. Her voice was flat, laced with self-mockery.
Brenda's professional smile didn't waver for a second. Her expression remained perfectly neutral as she shook her head slightly. "I apologize, Ms. Valdez. I have signed an extremely strict Non-Disclosure Agreement."
Aurora frowned. Her mind spun in circles. Aside from her ex-husband, she didn't know a single person with this kind of terrifying wealth and power.
Brenda smoothly changed the subject. She pulled back the edge of the blanket to check the healing incision on Aurora's side.
Aurora stared at the ceiling. She dug into her memory, trying to pull up the angry, violent voice she had heard right before her heart stopped.
"There was a man," Aurora said, looking at Brenda. "He kicked the doors in at the hospital. He threatened the doctors. Do you know who that was?"
Brenda kept her flawless smile in place. Her answer was airtight. "My duties are strictly confined to your post-operative care. I have no information regarding the events prior to your arrival here."
Aurora caught the rehearsed tone in the nurse's voice. She realized she wasn't going to get a single clue out of this woman. She stopped asking.
With Brenda's help, Aurora swung her legs over the edge of the bed. Her bare feet touched the warm hardwood floor. She stood up.
She walked slowly to the massive floor-to-ceiling windows. Below her, the vibrant, sprawling green canopy of Central Park stretched out for miles. A rush of pure, raw life force pumped through her veins.
The old Aurora-the woman who swallowed her pride, who begged for scraps of attention from a husband and a son who didn't want her-had died on that operating table.
She looked at her pale, sharp reflection in the glass. Her eyes were completely cold.
She turned back to Brenda. "I need a pen and some paper," she said evenly.
Aurora sat down on the velvet sofa. She placed the paper on the glass coffee table and began to write a list of things she needed to do the second she was discharged.
Item number one. End the toxic marriage that had drained every ounce of her dignity.
She pressed the tip of the pen hard against the paper. She wrote the word Divorce. She pressed so hard the metal tip tore straight through the thick paper, leaving a permanent scar on the desk beneath.
One month later.
Aurora stood on the corner of a busy street on the Upper East Side, directly across from an elite private kindergarten. Her body was fully healed.
She wore oversized black sunglasses and a sharp, tailored khaki trench coat. She stood in the shadow of a building, blending into the crowd like a ghost.
At exactly three o'clock, the school bell rang. A stream of children in pristine, expensive uniforms poured out of the front doors.
She spotted her son, Leo, immediately. He was running with his backpack bouncing against his shoulders, throwing himself directly into a woman's arms.
It was Jessica. She was wearing the latest season's Chanel tweed suit. She laughed and pinched Leo's cheek affectionately.
A second later, Conrad stepped out of a black Maybach parked at the curb. He walked over and naturally wrapped his arm around Jessica's waist.
Conrad bent down and lifted Leo high into the air. The sound of their perfect, happy family laughter drifted across the street and hit Aurora's ears.
A few wealthy mothers standing nearby smiled at Jessica, praising her for raising such a polite boy.
Aurora stood in the shadows. She watched the flawless performance. She waited for the familiar ache in her chest, the tears, the heartbreak.
Nothing came.
Instead, a thick wave of nausea rolled through her stomach. She felt physically sick at the thought of the five years she had wasted on these people.
She didn't step forward. She didn't scream. She simply turned on her heel and walked toward the taxi stand.
Aurora took a cab back to the Manhattan penthouse she used to share with Conrad.
She pressed her thumb against the biometric lock. The heavy door clicked open. The entryway smelled like expensive, unfamiliar floral perfume. Jessica had clearly already moved her things in.
Aurora walked past the foyer, her face completely blank. She went straight into the master bedroom and opened the back of the walk-in closet. She pulled out the scuffed, old suitcase she had brought with her before they got married.
She only packed her old college textbooks, her pre-marriage clothes, and a few basic necessities.
She didn't touch a single Hermes bag. She didn't look at the diamond jewelry Conrad had bought her to apologize for his late nights.
She zipped the suitcase shut. She reached into her leather tote bag and pulled out a thick document. She had a legal aid lawyer draft it weeks ago.
She walked into the living room and placed the Divorce Agreement dead center on the black marble coffee table.
She turned off the overhead lights, leaving only a single, dim floor lamp burning in the corner. She sat down on the sofa and waited.
The clock on the wall slowly ticked to midnight. The biometric lock on the front door finally beeped.
Conrad stumbled inside. He was yanking his tie loose. The heavy stench of whiskey and women's perfume rolled off his clothes.
He slapped the wall switch, flooding the room with harsh light. He flinched when he saw Aurora sitting in the shadows. His eyebrows instantly pulled together in a tight, angry knot.
"Where the hell have you been for the past month?" he snapped, his voice loud and accusatory. "You didn't even show up for Leo's birthday, and now you just appear?"
Aurora didn't explain the ICU. She didn't mention the surgery. She just looked at him with the cold, detached eyes of a stranger.
She lifted her hand and tapped her index finger against the cover of the document on the table. "Sign it."
Conrad narrowed his bloodshot eyes. He squinted at the bold black letters on the cover page: Divorce Agreement.
A harsh, mocking laugh ripped out of his throat. He roughly unbuttoned the top three buttons of his shirt and walked straight past her toward the wet bar.
"Is this your new trick?" he sneered, pouring himself a glass of water. "You want my attention so badly you actually paid a lawyer to print this garbage? Your drama is getting boring, Aurora."
Aurora stood up. She walked up behind him. Her voice was completely flat. "I'm serious, Conrad."
Conrad didn't even turn around. He chugged the water, slammed the glass down, and pushed past her toward the bedroom. "I'm tired. I'll listen to you act crazy tomorrow."
He walked into the bedroom and slammed the door shut.
The next morning, harsh, bright sunlight poured through the panoramic floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse.
Aurora woke up on the narrow bed in the guest room. Her eyes were clear. There was no hesitation in her chest.
She washed her face, changed into a crisp, professional blazer, and pulled her long hair back into a tight, neat ponytail.
The master bedroom door yanked open. Conrad walked out wearing a silk robe, aggressively rubbing his temples to fight off a hangover.
He walked toward the kitchen island to get coffee. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw the Divorce Agreement still sitting untouched on the coffee table.
His movements stopped. A deep crease formed between his brows.
He walked over, picked up the thick stack of papers, and flipped through the first two pages. The corner of his mouth curled up in a condescending smirk.
"You're really taking this all the way, huh?" he said, his tone dripping with arrogant pity. "You think this little stunt is going to make me kick Jessica out?"
Aurora stood behind the kitchen island, holding a mug of black coffee. She watched him like she was watching a bad actor on a stage.
"Look at the last page," she said calmly. "I've already signed it."
Conrad flipped to the back. His eyes locked onto Aurora's neat, firm signature on the dotted line. His pupils shrank.
His ego took a direct, violent hit. The smirk vanished from his face, replaced by a dark, ugly scowl. He slammed the document back onto the marble table.
"Stop dreaming," he threatened, his voice dropping into a vicious growl. "If you leave me, you won't even be able to pay your credit card bills next month."
He took two steps toward the island, looming over her. "You think the real world is easy? You've been a housewife for five years. Who the hell is going to hire you?"
Right at that moment, Conrad's phone, sitting on the bar counter, started vibrating violently.
The screen lit up. The caller ID read Jessica. The background photo was a selfie of the two of them kissing on a beach in Cabo.
Aurora glanced at the screen. A slow, razor-sharp smile spread across her face.
Conrad felt a sudden, irritating spike of panic. He quickly reached over and hit the reject button.
The second the call ended, a text message from Jessica popped up on the lock screen. It was impossible to miss: Baby, what time are you picking me and Leo up to go look at engagement rings?
Aurora set her coffee mug down. The ceramic clinked sharply against the marble.
"Don't keep your new family waiting," she said. Her tone was light, almost cheerful. "Hurry up and sign it. It's better for everyone."
Her complete lack of jealousy hit Conrad's nerves like a live wire. He felt his absolute authority crumbling.
He spun around, grabbed the divorce agreement off the table, and gripped it with both hands. The veins in his forearms bulged.
With a loud, violent tearing sound, he ripped the thick stack of papers in half.
Then he ripped it again. And again. He tore the document into dozens of jagged pieces, his chest heaving with misplaced rage.
He raised his hands and threw the shredded paper right at Aurora's feet. The pieces fluttered down onto the expensive Persian rug like snow.
"You think you can force my hand like this?" he spat, lifting his chin to look down at her. "You're incredibly naive."
Aurora looked at the mess on the floor. She didn't yell. She didn't cry. She just let out a soft sigh, like a mother dealing with a toddler throwing a tantrum.
She unzipped her leather briefcase. She reached inside and pulled out another perfectly bound, identical copy of the agreement. She slid it across the marble island toward him.
"I printed ten copies," she said, her voice cutting through the air like a blade of ice. "You can take your time tearing them. Just remember to sign the last one."