
Betrayed for First Love's Life
Chapter 3
The courtroom felt like a tomb—cold, austere, and filled with an oppressive silence that seemed to press against my skin. I sat beside Marcus, my hands folded in my lap to hide their trembling. Across the aisle, Nathan stood tall and confident, not once looking in my direction. His attorney, Lawrence Blackwell, arranged papers on their table with practiced precision, occasionally leaning over to whisper something that made Nathan nod sharply.
Judge Harrison entered, and everyone rose. His stern face betrayed nothing as he took his seat, but something in his eyes—a flicker of predetermined resolve—made my heart sink before he'd spoken a single word.
"Court is now in session," he announced, his voice echoing through the chamber. "Cross versus Cross, regarding mandated organ donation."
Blackwell rose immediately, buttoning his jacket with a smooth, rehearsed motion.
"Your Honor, this case is quite straightforward," he began, his voice dripping with practiced sincerity. "Miss Isabella Hayes, a beloved member of our community, lies dying at Mount Sinai Hospital. She requires a liver transplant immediately. Mrs. Cross has been identified as a potential match, yet she refuses to undergo testing, let alone the procedure."
He paced before the bench, each step deliberate and theatrical.
"We believe Mrs. Cross's refusal stems not from legitimate medical concerns, but from a well-documented jealousy of Miss Hayes—a childhood friend of Mr. Cross. This petty emotional response is, quite literally, condemning an innocent woman to death."
My fingers dug into my palms. The audacity of his lies made my blood boil, even as weakness from my disease threatened to overwhelm me.
Marcus stood, his posture rigid with controlled anger. "Your Honor, this characterization is not only false but malicious. Mrs. Cross has stage three liver cancer. Donation would kill her instantly."
He lifted my medical file. "I have here complete documentation from Dr. Eliza Chen at Memorial Sloan Kettering—"
"Objection!" Blackwell interrupted. "These supposed 'medical records' were not submitted during discovery."
"Because they were denied by Mr. Cross's team," Marcus countered, his voice tight. "We attempted to submit them three times."
Judge Harrison frowned, looking between the two attorneys. "Mr. Blackwell?"
"Your Honor, we believe these records to be fabricated. Mrs. Cross has shown no symptoms of cancer. She has maintained her regular schedule, appears healthy, and has sought no treatment that Mr. Cross is aware of."
I almost laughed at the bitter irony. My careful concealment of my illness—the makeup to hide my pallor, the loose clothing to disguise my weight loss, the silent suffering through pain so as not to burden Nathan—was now being used as evidence against me.
"Mrs. Cross has been seeing specialists without her husband's knowledge," Blackwell continued. "We believe this is a desperate attempt to avoid helping Miss Hayes, motivated by jealousy and spite."
"Your Honor," Marcus interjected, "I request the court order an independent medical examination to verify Mrs. Cross's condition."
Judge Harrison considered for a moment, then shook his head. "Given the time-sensitive nature of Miss Hayes's condition, we cannot delay for additional testing."
My heart plummeted. The judge had already decided.
"Based on the evidence presented," Judge Harrison continued, "and considering the emergency nature of Miss Hayes's situation, this court finds that the potential benefit to Miss Hayes outweighs Mrs. Cross's objections."
He struck his gavel with finality. "Mrs. Cross is hereby ordered to report to Mount Sinai Hospital immediately for pre-surgical evaluation and preparation. The transplant procedure will proceed as soon as medically viable."
The room spun around me. Marcus's hand gripped my shoulder, his voice distant as he argued futilely against the ruling. Across the aisle, Nathan's face remained impassive, but a slight upward curve of his lips betrayed his satisfaction.
Two hours later, I lay in a hospital bed at Mount Sinai, staring at the ceiling as a nurse named Chloe efficiently prepared me for what would be my execution.
"Just a small pinch," she murmured as she inserted the IV needle into my arm. Her eyes never met mine as she worked, checking monitors and recording vitals with detached professionalism.
As she drew vial after vial of my blood, I wondered if anyone would notice what was wrong with it—the markers of my disease that would prove I hadn't been lying. But it didn't matter now. The court had spoken.
"All done for now," Chloe said, labeling the last sample. "The surgical team will be in shortly to discuss the procedure."
As she turned to leave, I caught her wrist, surprising us both with the sudden contact.
"Do you know," I whispered, "that this will kill me?"
She hesitated, uncomfortable with the personal question. "I'm just following the doctor's orders, Mrs. Cross."
She slipped away, leaving me alone with the steady beep of monitors and the knowledge that in this sterile room, my life had been reduced to a resource—something to be harvested for someone deemed more worthy of survival.
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