
Betrayed by My Fiancé's Love
Chapter 3
The routine check-up was supposed to be simple—just another assessment of my healing progress, another step closer to walking without these damned crutches. I'd been looking forward to it for days, counting down the hours until Dr. Chen could tell me when I might finally have my surgery.
But as I waited in the examination room, adjusting my position on the cold metal table for the hundredth time, voices drifted through the thin walls from the hallway outside. One voice I recognized immediately—Colson's smooth baritone, the same tone he used when closing business deals.
"Dr. Chen, I need you to understand something," he was saying, his voice low but carrying clearly through the door. "Jade's emotional state is very fragile right now. Any major medical procedures might be too overwhelming."
I froze, my hands gripping the edge of the examination table. What was he talking about? I'd been begging for the surgery, desperate to fix my legs so I could start rebuilding my life.
"Mr. Grant, I have to respectfully disagree," Dr. Chen replied, her professional tone strained with barely concealed irritation. "Ms. Miller's bones aren't healing properly. The longer we delay the corrective surgery, the more complicated the procedure becomes. We're already looking at potential permanent damage."
"I understand your medical concerns, but I know my fiancée better than anyone." The possessive way he said 'my fiancée' made my stomach turn. We weren't even engaged anymore—I'd canceled our wedding registration myself. "She needs stability right now, not more trauma. Can't we wait a few more weeks? Maybe a month?"
"A month?" Dr. Chen's voice rose slightly. "Mr. Grant, are you asking me to compromise my patient's long-term mobility for your convenience?"
The silence that followed felt like an eternity. My heart hammered against my ribs as the full implications of what I was hearing sank in. Colson wasn't protecting me—he was sabotaging my recovery. He wanted me dependent, helpless, unable to leave.
"I'm asking you to consider the whole patient," Colson said finally, his voice taking on that manipulative edge I was learning to recognize. "Jade has been through tremendous trauma. She needs emotional support more than she needs to rush into surgery. I'll take full responsibility for this decision."
"You'll take responsibility?" Dr. Chen's professional composure was cracking. "Mr. Grant, this is medical malpractice. I cannot and will not delay necessary treatment because you think your fiancée is too fragile to handle it."
"Then perhaps we need to find a doctor who's more... flexible in their approach."
The threat hung in the air like poison. I pressed my hand over my mouth to keep from crying out, bile rising in my throat. This was the man I'd protected with my body, the man I'd loved enough to endure one hundred hours of hell for. And he was deliberately keeping me crippled to maintain control over me.
Footsteps approached the door, and I quickly lay back down, closing my eyes and trying to control my breathing. When Dr. Chen entered, her face was flushed with anger, but she managed a professional smile.
"How are we feeling today, Jade?"
"Ready for surgery," I said, watching her face carefully. "When can we schedule it?"
She glanced toward the door, then back at me, conflict written across her features. "We're... still evaluating the best timing. Your recovery has been progressing well, but we want to make sure you're completely ready."
Liar. The word screamed in my head, but I knew it wasn't her fault. She was being pressured, threatened, manipulated just like I was.
"Dr. Chen," I said quietly, "what would happen if I waited another month for surgery?"
Her professional mask slipped for just a moment, revealing genuine concern. "Honestly? The longer we wait, the more complex the procedure becomes. There's already some irregular healing that we'll need to re-break and reset. Another month could mean permanent complications."
"And if I wanted to transfer to another facility?"
Something shifted in her expression—hope, maybe, or relief. "That would be entirely your right as a patient. I could provide all your medical records and my recommendations."
After she left, I lay in the dim room, staring at the ceiling tiles I'd memorized weeks ago. The betrayal cut deeper than any knife the kidnappers had used. They had tortured my body, but Colson was destroying my future, piece by calculated piece.
My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number: "Room 314 has a view of the garden. The transfer has been arranged. - A friend."
I stared at the message, my heart racing. Someone was watching, someone cared enough to help. For the first time in weeks, I felt a spark of something I'd almost forgotten.
Hope.
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