
Divorced on the Operating Table
Chapter 2
The pain hit me like a freight train the moment consciousness crept back in. My abdomen felt like it had been torn open and stitched back together with barbed wire. The morphine had worn off, leaving nothing but raw, throbbing agony that made every breath feel like torture.
I tried to shift position on the narrow hospital bed, but even the slightest movement sent lightning bolts of pain shooting through my side. The surgical site burned and ached, a constant reminder of what I'd just given up. What I'd just sacrificed.
For him. For them.
The room was sterile and quiet except for the steady beeping of monitors. Pale afternoon light filtered through the blinds, casting long shadows across the linoleum floor. I'd been unconscious for hours, drifting in and out of a drug-induced haze where Gabriel's face kept appearing—sometimes tender, sometimes cold, always looking past me toward someone else.
The door opened with a soft click, and I turned my head despite the sharp protest from my neck muscles. Gabriel walked in, but he wasn't alone. Dr. Martinez, Chloe's father and the hospital's chief of surgery, followed behind him. Both men wore expressions I couldn't quite read—satisfaction mixed with something that looked almost like guilt.
"You're awake," Gabriel observed, his voice flat and clinical. No warmth. No relief. He might as well have been commenting on the weather.
I tried to speak, but my throat felt like sandpaper. "How... how is she?"
"Chloe's doing well," Dr. Martinez answered before Gabriel could respond. "The surgery was a complete success. Your kidney is functioning perfectly in her system already." He paused, glancing between Gabriel and me. "I'll leave you two alone."
The door closed behind him with a soft thud that seemed to echo in the sudden silence. Gabriel remained standing near the foot of my bed, his hands shoved deep in his pockets. He looked tired—exhausted, really—but there was something else in his expression. Something that made my chest tighten with dread.
"Gabriel?" I whispered, struggling to push myself up on my elbows. The movement sent a fresh wave of agony through my surgical site, and I gasped, falling back against the pillows.
"Don't move," he said, but there was no concern in his voice. Just irritation, as if my pain was an inconvenience to him.
That's when I noticed the manila envelope in his hand. Thick. Official-looking. My heart began to race, setting off a rapid beeping from the heart monitor beside my bed.
"What is that?" I asked, though part of me already knew. Part of me had been expecting this moment for months, maybe years.
Gabriel pulled a chair close to my bed and sat down, placing the envelope on the white hospital blanket covering my legs. His fingers drummed against his knee—a nervous habit I'd learned to recognize over our three years of marriage.
"Divorce papers," he said simply, as if he were discussing lunch plans.
The words hit me harder than the physical pain radiating from my incision. I stared at the envelope, my vision blurring as tears gathered in my eyes.
"Now?" My voice cracked. "You're doing this now? I just—Gabriel, I just gave her my kidney. I just saved her life."
"And I'm grateful for that," he replied, but his tone suggested otherwise. "But this doesn't change anything between us. If anything, it makes things clearer."
He opened the envelope and pulled out a thick stack of papers, already prepared with neat little tabs marking where I needed to sign. How long had he been planning this? How long had he been waiting for the right moment to destroy what was left of our marriage?
"I don't understand," I whispered, my hands trembling as I reached toward the papers. "Why now? Why like this?"
Gabriel's jaw tightened, and for a moment, I saw a flash of something that might have been guilt. But it disappeared as quickly as it came, replaced by that cold, distant expression I'd grown to know so well.
"Chloe's awake," he said, pulling a pen from his jacket pocket. "She's asking questions about who donated the kidney. She's... fragile right now. Emotional. Seeing you, knowing what you did—it would upset her."
"Upset her?" I couldn't keep the bitterness out of my voice. "I saved her life, and it would upset her?"
"She doesn't want to owe you anything," Gabriel said, his words cutting through me like a scalpel. "And frankly, neither do I."
He held out the pen, but I didn't take it. Couldn't take it. My whole body felt numb except for the burning pain in my side.
"Gabriel, please," I tried again, hating how desperate I sounded. "I love you. I've always loved you. Even knowing about her, even knowing you don't feel the same way—I stayed. I gave you everything I had."
"Including your kidney," he said with a bitter laugh. "Yes, I'm aware of your... dedication."
The way he said the word made it sound like a disease. Something pathetic and unwanted.
"But that's exactly the problem," he continued, leaning forward in his chair. "You gave me things I never asked for. Love I never wanted. Devotion I never deserved. And now this—this grand gesture that I'm supposed to be grateful for."
Tears were flowing freely down my cheeks now, hot and shameful. "I thought... I hoped maybe if I saved her, you might see—"
"See what?" Gabriel's voice rose slightly, the first real emotion he'd shown since entering the room. "That you're willing to mutilate yourself for my attention? That you'll sacrifice pieces of your body to buy my love?"
He stood abruptly, the pen clattering to the floor. When he bent to retrieve it, his movements were sharp, angry.
"That's not love, Elena," he said, straightening up. "That's obsession. And it's exactly why this has to end."
He threw the pen onto my chest, and it bounced off my surgical dressing. The slight impact sent a shock of pain through my incision, making me cry out.
"Sign the papers," Gabriel said, his voice returning to that flat, emotionless tone. "Chloe wakes up in a few hours, and I don't want her to see you when I tell her about the donation. She needs to focus on healing, not on feeling guilty about some stranger's sacrifice."
Stranger. The word echoed in my head as I stared at him through my tears. After three years of marriage, countless nights spent waiting for him to come home, endless days of trying to be the wife he wanted—I was a stranger.
"I just saved her life," I whispered, my voice barely audible.
Gabriel's expression didn't change. "That's a kidney I paid for," he said coldly. "The surgery, the hospital stay, the recovery—all of it. Consider us even."
Even. As if our entire marriage could be reduced to a financial transaction. As if the love I'd poured into every day of our relationship meant nothing more than a medical bill.
I picked up the pen with shaking fingers, the weight of it feeling impossibly heavy. The divorce papers lay spread across my lap, official and final. Three years of my life reduced to signatures and legal jargon.
"Where do I sign?" I asked, my voice hollow.
Gabriel pointed to the first tab, then the second, then the third. His finger moved with practiced efficiency, as if he'd rehearsed this moment. As if he'd been planning it long before I'd ever agreed to the surgery.
As I signed my name for the final time, Gabriel gathered the papers with obvious relief. He was already halfway to the door when I found my voice again.
"Gabriel?"
He paused but didn't turn around.
"Was any of it real?" I asked. "Any part of our marriage?"
For a long moment, he stood frozen in the doorway. Then, without looking back, he spoke.
"I needed a wife for appearances. You needed someone to love. It worked until it didn't."
The door closed behind him with a soft click, leaving me alone with the beeping monitors and the crushing weight of my shattered illusions. Outside my window, I could hear the distant sound of traffic, people going about their normal lives while mine fell apart in a sterile hospital room.
I closed my eyes and tried to breathe through the pain—both physical and emotional. Somewhere in this same hospital, Chloe Martinez was waking up with my kidney inside her, probably wondering why she felt so much better. Soon, Gabriel would be at her bedside, holding her hand, whispering words of love and devotion.
And I would be here, alone, with nothing left to give and nowhere left to go.
The morphine pump beside my bed beckoned, promising temporary relief from the agony. But as I reached for the button, I realized that no amount of drugs could numb the pain of knowing that I had just signed away the last three years of my life for a man who saw me as nothing more than a convenient organ donor.
The worst part wasn't that he didn't love me.
The worst part was that I still loved him.
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