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After My Husband Donated My Mother's Liver To His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Husband Donated My Mother's Liver To His Mistress

I traced my finger over the sleek screen of Jonathan's phone, my heart hammering against my ribs. He never left his phone unlocked. Never. Six years of marriage, and this was the first time I'd seen it without the protection of his fingerprint or passcode. It sat there on our Italian leather sofa, screen still illuminated, almost like an invitation. Or a test. I glanced toward our marble kitchen where Jonathan was taking a business call, his back to me as he gazed out over the Manhattan skyline. My wheelchair was positioned perfectly beside the sofa—close enough that I could reach the device without making a sound. Just one look, I told myself. Just to quiet the voice that had been whispering in my head for months.
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Chapter 1

I traced my finger over the sleek screen of Jonathan's phone, my heart hammering against my ribs. He never left his phone unlocked. Never. Six years of marriage, and this was the first time I'd seen it without the protection of his fingerprint or passcode. It sat there on our Italian leather sofa, screen still illuminated, almost like an invitation.

Or a test.

I glanced toward our marble kitchen where Jonathan was taking a business call, his back to me as he gazed out over the Manhattan skyline. My wheelchair was positioned perfectly beside the sofa—close enough that I could reach the device without making a sound.

Just one look, I told myself. Just to quiet the voice that had been whispering in my head for months.

The notification that had caught my eye was from Amanda Stevens—his executive assistant. I'd always felt uneasy around her, with her sharp power suits and sharper eyes that seemed to look through me rather than at me.

I opened the message thread, and my world collapsed.

Photos. Dozens of them. Amanda in hotel rooms I didn't recognize, in positions that made my cheeks burn. Texts that spoke of rendezvous at the Mandarin Oriental, the Four Seasons, even in his office after hours. The timestamps showed some messages from just yesterday.

'Missing your hands already. Meeting at 2 was torture sitting across from you.'

'Tonight. Same suite. Wear nothing but that necklace I bought you.'

My fingers trembled as I scrolled back through weeks, months of exchanges. The intimate language, the casual references to their physical relationship—it was like reading about strangers. Except one of those strangers was my husband. The man who had never once, in six years of marriage, made love to me.

Too fragile, he'd always said. Too precious. I needed protection, not passion.

I'd believed him.

The sound of Jonathan's footsteps approaching snapped me back to reality. I quickly placed the phone exactly as I'd found it and wheeled myself a few inches away, grabbing a book from the side table. My pulse was racing so fast I felt lightheaded.

"Sarah." His voice was smooth as always, controlled. "Dinner is ready."

I followed him to our dining room, where our housekeeper had laid out an elegant spread before disappearing for the evening. Crystal glasses caught the light from the chandelier, fracturing it into tiny rainbows across the white tablecloth. Everything beautiful. Everything perfect.

Everything a lie.

I waited until he'd poured the wine, until he'd taken his first bite of the sea bass. My hands were folded in my lap, untouched plate before me.

"I saw your messages with Amanda," I said, my voice surprisingly steady.

Jonathan's fork paused halfway to his mouth. He set it down with deliberate care, dabbed his lips with his napkin, and looked at me with those ice-blue eyes that had once made me feel like the center of his universe.

"I see," he said, as if I'd commented on the weather.

"You're sleeping with her." It wasn't a question.

"Yes." No denial. No shame. Just calm acknowledgment.

The simplicity of his response knocked the air from my lungs. I'd expected denials, excuses, perhaps even remorse.

"How long?" I managed.

"Since before we were married." He took a sip of wine, studying me over the rim of his glass. "Amanda handles my physical needs. You, my angel, are my spiritual companion. The pure center of my life."

The words hit me like physical blows. Six years of marriage built on a foundation of sand. Six years believing I was cherished, when I was merely... categorized.

"You've been lying to me our entire marriage," I whispered.

"No, Sarah." His voice was patient, as if explaining something simple to a child. "I've been protecting you. Your role in my life is far more precious than what Amanda provides. She's a body. You're my soul."

I reached for my phone, desperate to call my mother. She would understand. She would help me make sense of this nightmare.

But when I tried to dial out, a message appeared: 'This number has been blocked by Family Protection App.'

I stared at the screen in disbelief. "You're blocking my calls?"

"Only those that might upset you," Jonathan said calmly. "Your condition requires stability."

I wheeled myself to the landline in the kitchen, but it was dead. Jonathan watched me with the detached interest of a scientist observing a lab specimen.

Panic rising, I remembered Mrs. Abernathy next door—the elderly widow who had always been kind to me. I told Jonathan I needed air and wheeled myself to the hallway, praying he wouldn't follow. To my relief, he remained at the table, sipping his wine.

Mrs. Abernathy answered on the second knock, her wrinkled face creasing with concern at my obvious distress. She let me use her phone, and I called my mother with trembling fingers.

"Mom," I whispered when she answered. "I need help."

"Sarah? What's wrong, honey?" Her voice was thick with worry.

"It's Jonathan. I need to leave. Can you and Dad come get me?"

A pause. "Oh, Sarah... we can't. Your father tried to access our accounts yesterday for the property tax, but everything's frozen. Jonathan's name is on everything now—the house, the cars. We've been trying to call you."

My blood ran cold. "What do you mean, his name is on everything?"

"The financial advisor said it was your idea—that joint ownership would protect us if anything happened to your father. We signed the papers months ago."

Before I could respond, my phone rang—a hospital number. With a quick apology to my mother, I answered.

"Mrs. Pierce? This is Mercy General. Your mother, Eleanor Mitchell, has been admitted in critical condition."

The world tilted on its axis. "What? That's impossible. I just spoke to her."

"She was brought in an hour ago. You're listed as next of kin. You should come immediately."

I arrived at the hospital in Jonathan's private car, my mind racing with terrible possibilities. The nurse at the desk directed me to the surgical floor, where a doctor in scrubs approached me.

"Mrs. Pierce, I'm Dr. Winters. Your mother is in surgery right now."

"What happened to her?" I demanded.

The doctor looked confused. "She's a directed donor for an emergency transplant procedure. We were told you were aware."

"Donor? What are you talking about?"

"For Ms. Stevens—Amanda Stevens. Acute liver failure. Your mother was identified as a compatible donor for a partial liver transplant. The authorization came through your husband's office."

The fluorescent lights above seemed to pulse and dim as the doctor's words sank in. My mother, being cut open without her consent—without my knowledge—to save Amanda.

"Where is she?" My voice sounded distant, even to my own ears.

"In Operating Room 3, but you can't—"

I was already wheeling myself down the hall, pushing harder than I ever had before. Through the small window in the OR door, I could see my mother's unconscious form on the table, surgeons bent over her exposed abdomen.

And there, in the observation area above, stood Jonathan and Amanda, watching the procedure with clinical detachment. Amanda's hand rested possessively on Jonathan's arm, while my mother's life hung in the balance below.

In that moment, the truth hit me with stunning clarity: I wasn't Jonathan's angel. I was his possession. And so was my family—resources to be used at his discretion.

As Jonathan turned and saw me through the glass, his expression didn't change. There was no guilt, no shame—just the same placid control I'd mistaken for love all these years.

I was a bird in a gilded cage, and I had just discovered the bars.

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