
Betrayed in Love's Shadow
Chapter 3
The hospital room was too bright, too sterile, too loud with the beeping of machines. I sat in the waiting area, my bandaged hands throbbing in time with my pulse as I waited for news about Harry. The car accident had been severe—head-on collision, the nurse had whispered. Critical condition. Massive blood loss.
I shouldn't have come. Every rational part of me knew that. After what he'd done to my hands, after the dinner he'd destroyed, after three years of methodical cruelty—I should have stayed home and let fate take its course.
But I couldn't. Some broken part of me still remembered the man who had once promised to marry me beneath the mountain sky.
"Mrs. Reed?" Dr. Chen's voice pulled me from my thoughts. His face was grim, shadows beneath his eyes. "Harry needs blood. Type AB negative. It's rare, and our supplies are critically low."
I stood immediately, ignoring the protest of my broken ribs. "I'm AB negative."
Dr. Chen's expression shifted to something like pity. "Nyla, in your condition—"
"I'll do it," I said firmly.
Twenty minutes later, I watched my blood flow through the tube. Each drop for the man who had systematically destroyed me. The bandages on my hands had started to spot with fresh blood—the movement of getting onto the donation bed had reopened some of the wounds.
"You're pale," Dr. Chen murmured, checking my vitals. "We should stop."
"No," I whispered. "He needs it."
The door burst open, and Sophia stormed in, her face a perfect mask of concern. Behind her, a small crowd of hospital staff and what looked like reporters hovered.
"Where is he?" she demanded, then her eyes fell on me. Something vicious flashed across her features before she composed herself. "What is *she* doing here?"
"Donating blood," Dr. Chen said tersely. "Harry needs it."
Sophia's laugh was brittle. "Oh, how convenient. The perfect photo opportunity, isn't it, Nyla? The devoted wife rushing to save her husband." She turned to the people behind her. "Don't be fooled. She doesn't care about Harry. She never has. This is all for show."
I closed my eyes as her accusations washed over me. The irony was almost too much to bear—that I, who had sacrificed everything for Harry, was being accused of using him for appearances.
"Get out," Dr. Chen ordered Sophia. "This is a medical procedure, not a press conference."
But the damage was done. As they escorted her out, I heard her stage whisper: "She's the one who crippled him, you know. And now she wants to play the hero."
Three days later, with Harry stabilized but still unconscious, I dragged myself to the parking garage. My body was a map of pain—reopened wounds from the blood donation, still-healing bruises from the livestreamed beating, and the constant agony of my mutilated hands.
I was almost to my car when I heard footsteps behind me. Three sets, heavy and purposeful.
"Nyla Hudson." The voice was familiar—one of Roland's enforcers. "Your brother sends his regards."
I turned slowly, already knowing what was coming. Three men in expensive suits, faces expressionless. The parking garage was deserted, the security cameras conveniently pointed away.
"The Blackwell merger failed," the tallest one said. "And then you couldn't even convince Jessica Chen to invest. Roland is... disappointed."
"Please," I whispered, backing against my car. "I tried. Her father—"
The first blow caught me in the stomach, exactly where my ribs were already cracked. The pain was explosive, driving all air from my lungs. I crumpled, gasping.
They were methodical, professional. Each strike calculated to cause maximum pain with minimum visible damage. Ribs. Kidneys. Solar plexus. Places that would bleed internally, hurt viciously, but not show.
"Next time," the man whispered in my ear as I lay curled on the concrete, "Roland says it'll be your pretty face. And after that..." He made a slicing motion across his throat.
They left me there, bleeding inside, struggling to breathe.
Somehow, I made it to Dr. Chen's private office. He gasped when he saw me, rushing to help me to a chair.
"Internal bleeding," I managed through gritted teeth. "Roland's men."
As he examined me, his face growing darker with each discovery, I reached painfully into my pocket. The flash drive felt impossibly heavy in my damaged hand.
"I need you to keep this safe," I whispered, pressing it into his palm. "It has evidence. Money laundering. Human trafficking. Everything Roland's been doing."
Dr. Chen stared at the tiny device. "Nyla, this is dangerous. If he finds out—"
"He'll kill me anyway," I said simply. "I just need more time. More evidence to make sure he never gets out once he's arrested. Please."
After a long moment, he nodded, tucking the flash drive into his breast pocket.
"I'll keep it safe," he promised. "Now let's see about those ribs."
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