
After His Mistress Crashed Into Me, He Asked for My Kidney
Chapter 1
My head throbbed with a dull, heavy rhythm. I opened my eyes to a stark white ceiling. The smell of bleach and rubbing alcohol burned my nose. A heart monitor beeped somewhere to my left, the sound piercing my aching skull.
I tried to shift my weight, but a sharp, blinding pain shot through my ribs. I gasped. The memories hit me in a violent rush. The screeching tires. The smell of burning rubber. The silver Porsche crossing the center line and slamming directly into my driver’s side door.
Daniella’s car.
I took a shallow, trembling breath. My lower back ached. Without thinking, my thumb drifted down to press against the faint, hidden scar under my hospital gown. It was a habit I did whenever I was stressed.
Footsteps paused outside my room. Voices drifted through the crack in the heavy privacy curtain.
"Her vitals are stabilizing," a man’s voice said. A doctor. "But Mr. Sullivan, the ethics of this are highly questionable. She just survived a severe trauma."
"I understand the risks, Doctor," another voice replied.
My breath hitched. Kaleb. My boyfriend of eight years. The man I had loved with every fiber of my being.
"Daniella’s kidneys are failing," Kaleb continued. His voice was smooth, calm, and utterly detached. "Olivia is a perfect match. I just need to know if the surgery can be scheduled once she’s cleared."
"She has to consent," the doctor warned.
"She will," Kaleb said confidently. "Leave that to me."
The world stopped spinning. It just froze. My chest tightened, not from the bruised ribs, but from a sudden, suffocating hollow ache. He wanted my kidney. For the woman who had just run me off the road.
The curtain pulled back. Kaleb stepped into the room. He wore his tailored navy suit, looking completely out of place in the sterile room. His dark hair was perfectly styled. He paused to straighten his silver cufflinks before walking to my bed. He didn't look like a man whose girlfriend had almost died. He looked like a CEO about to close a difficult merger.
"You're awake," he said softly. He pulled a plastic chair close and sat down. He reached out and took my hand. I let it lie limp in his warm grip.
"How are you feeling, Liv?"
I stared at his face. The strong jaw, the dark eyes. The face I had kissed a thousand times. The face I had secretly bled for on an operating table years ago. "Like I got hit by a car," I rasped.
He sighed. A practiced, patient sigh. "It was an accident. Daniella lost control of the wheel. She's in bad shape, Olivia. Her kidneys are shutting down."
I said nothing. I just watched him. I watched his eyes. There was no worry for me in them. Only an urgent, restless energy.
He reached into his jacket pocket. He pulled out a small, black velvet box. He flipped it open. A massive diamond caught the harsh fluorescent light, throwing tiny rainbows across the bedsheets.
My heart gave a weak, pathetic flutter, then died completely.
"I know we've waited a long time for this," Kaleb said. His voice dropped to a low, intimate timber. "Eight years. You've been my rock. I want to marry you, Liv. I want you to be my wife."
He paused. He looked into my eyes, searching for the tears of joy I usually would have shed. Searching for the blind devotion he had always relied on.
"But right now, Daniella needs a transplant," he continued, his tone shifting into something almost businesslike. "She saved my life in college. You know that. I owe her my life. And now, you can save hers. We can do this together. Think of it as our first act as an engaged couple."
The monitor next to my bed beeped steadily. The smell of antiseptic was suddenly making me nauseous. I thought about the eight years I had spent standing beside him. The dinners I ate alone while he worked late. The way he always answered Daniella's calls, even on my birthday. I had always rationalized it. I had always told myself he was just a loyal man. But looking at him now, holding a diamond ring like a bribe, I saw the ugly truth.
He pushed the velvet box closer to my hand. It was a trade. A transaction. A piece of my body for a wedding ring.
I looked at the diamond. Then I looked at the man holding it. He was looking at me with total expectation. He was so sure of my devotion. He was so sure I would bleed myself dry for him. After all, I had done it before. He just didn't know it.
A strange, icy calm washed over me. The eight years of waiting, hoping, and loving him just evaporated. It felt like a heavy coat falling off my shoulders. I didn't feel angry. I didn't feel like crying. I didn't feel anything at all.
I pulled my hand out from under his.
"No," I said. My voice was flat and steady.
Kaleb blinked. His confident smile faltered. "Liv, I know it's a lot to ask right after the crash. But she's dying."
"I don't care," I said.
His jaw tightened. His knuckles whitened as he gripped the armrest of his chair. "Don't be vindictive. She saved my life."
*I saved your life,* I thought. *You just never bothered to look at the medical records.*
"Take the ring, Kaleb," I said, my tone surgical and precise. "And get out."
He stared at me like I had spoken in a foreign language. The color drained from his face. "Olivia, be reasonable. This is our future."
"We don't have a future." I reached over with my good arm. My fingers found the red call button on the bed rail. I pressed it hard.
"What are you doing?" he demanded. His voice finally lost its smooth edge, cracking with disbelief.
"Calling security," I replied coldly. "If you aren't out of this room in ten seconds, I will have you removed."
He stood up slowly. He snapped the ring box shut with a sharp click that echoed in the quiet room. "You're in shock. I'll come back when you're thinking clearly."
"Don't bother," I said. I turned my head away and stared at the blank white wall. "We're done."
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