
Betrayed for First Love's Life
Chapter 1
The moment I heard the front door slam, I knew something was wrong. Nathan never came home before eight, and the clock on my nightstand read 5:43 PM. My fingers froze over my laptop keyboard, where I'd been drafting an email to my grandmother—another carefully constructed lie about how wonderful my life was in New York.
His footsteps were heavy, urgent. Not the measured pace of my husband returning from a successful day, but the thunderous approach of a storm.
"Victoria!" His voice echoed through our Manhattan penthouse, cold and demanding.
I closed my laptop and took a deep breath, pressing my palm against my side where the dull ache had become my constant companion. The pain medication was wearing off, but I forced myself to stand, smoothing down my silk blouse to hide how much weight I'd lost in the past months.
"In the bedroom," I called back, my voice steadier than I felt.
Nathan burst through the door, his tailored suit impeccable as always, but his face flushed with an intensity that made my stomach clench. I'd seen that look before—the single-minded determination that had built his tech empire and crushed his competitors. Never had it been directed at me with such force.
"Isabella's back," he announced without preamble, his eyes bright with an emotion I'd never been able to inspire. "She's at Mount Sinai. Her liver is failing."
Isabella Hayes. The name that had haunted our marriage from the beginning—his childhood sweetheart, his first love, the woman who had left him for London years ago. The woman whose ghost lived between us in our king-sized bed.
"I'm sorry to hear that," I said carefully, watching his face. "Is there anything they can do?"
"She needs a transplant. Immediately." He was pacing now, running his fingers through his dark hair. "They're looking for compatible donors, but it could take too long. I told them I'd bring you in for testing."
The room seemed to tilt slightly. "Testing?"
"For compatibility," he said impatiently, as if I were being deliberately obtuse. "You're going to be tested as a potential donor. We leave in an hour."
Not a request. A command.
My throat tightened. "Nathan, I can't—"
"This isn't a discussion, Victoria." He cut me off, already pulling out his phone. "This is Isabella. I'm not letting her die when there's something we can do."
We. As if my body were a joint asset, a resource to be allocated at his discretion.
"Nathan." I said his name more firmly this time, forcing him to look at me. "I can't donate part of my liver. I have cancer."
The words hung in the air between us. The secret I'd carried alone for months, through silent doctor's appointments and hidden medication bottles.
He froze, his expression shifting from shock to disbelief to something darker. "What?"
"I have liver cancer," I repeated, my voice barely above a whisper. "Stage three. I found out four months ago. If I donate any part of my liver, I'll die."
For a moment, just a moment, I thought I saw concern flicker across his face. Then his eyes hardened.
"Bullshit," he spat, advancing toward me. "You're lying."
"I'm not lying, Nathan. I can show you my medical records—"
"You're making this up because you're jealous of Isabella." His voice rose, echoing off the high ceilings of our bedroom. "You've always been jealous of her."
The accusation struck like a physical blow. After years of silently accepting that I was second choice, after supporting his career while hiding my illness to spare him any inconvenience—this was his response. Not concern for my life, but anger that I might not sacrifice it for hers.
"I'm dying, Nathan," I said quietly, a tear sliding down my cheek. "I didn't tell you because I didn't want to burden you, but I can't give Isabella my liver. It would kill me immediately."
He stared at me, his handsome face contorted with rage and disbelief. Then he pulled out his phone again.
"If you won't do this willingly, I'll make you," he said, his voice deadly calm. "I'm calling my lawyer. We'll take this to court if we have to. I won't let Isabella die because of your pathetic lies and jealousy."
In that moment, I saw with perfect clarity what I had always refused to see: the man I had loved for years would rather see me dead than lose his chance to save Isabella Hayes.
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