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Fiancé's Betrayal: The Kidney Heist Novel Cover

Fiancé's Betrayal: The Kidney Heist

The cold bit through me first—not into skin, because I had none anymore, but into something deeper. Into whatever remained of Gracie Hart after the world had finished with her. I opened eyes that shouldn't open. Found myself standing in a morgue, fluorescent lights buzzing overhead like angry wasps. The air reeked of formaldehyde and something else. Something metallic and wrong. Then I saw the table. My body lay there. Pale. Still.
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Chapter 1

The cold bit through me first—not into skin, because I had none anymore, but into something deeper. Into whatever remained of Gracie Hart after the world had finished with her.

I opened eyes that shouldn't open. Found myself standing in a morgue, fluorescent lights buzzing overhead like angry wasps. The air reeked of formaldehyde and something else. Something metallic and wrong.

Then I saw the table.

My body lay there. Pale. Still. A white sheet pulled back to expose the chest cavity that some efficient hand had already opened with clean, precise cuts. I should have screamed. Should have looked away. But I couldn't move, couldn't breathe—because the dead don't need to breathe—and I couldn't tear my gaze from the surgeon standing over my corpse.

Sean.

My fiancé wore surgical scrubs, a mask pulled down around his neck, his dark hair slightly disheveled from the cap he'd discarded on a nearby tray. His hands—those hands that had once held mine during our first dance, that had gripped his wheelchair handles with white-knuckled determination during rehabilitation—moved with mechanical precision through my open abdomen.

"Kidneys appear viable," he said, his voice flat and clinical. Not a tremor. Not a catch. "Proceeding with extraction."

I wanted to scream his name. Wanted to grab his shoulders and shake him until he recognized me, until those cold eyes warmed with something—anything—other than professional detachment. But my hands passed through him like smoke, like I was nothing. Like I had always been nothing.

He worked efficiently, calling out observations to a nurse who stood nearby with a clipboard. "Female. Approximately twenty-eight years old. No identification. Traffic accident victim. Time of death estimated at forty-eight hours prior."

Forty-eight hours. Two days I'd been dead, and he'd never even noticed I was missing.

His scalpel moved lower, and my spirit recoiled even though I felt no pain. Just horror. Just the sick understanding that the man I'd loved for a decade, the man I'd sacrificed everything for, was harvesting my organs like I was spare parts. Like I was nobody.

"Wait." Sean's hand paused, and for one desperate moment I thought—I hoped—

He reached deeper, his gloved fingers probing. When he withdrew his hand, something small rested in his palm. Tissue. Barely formed. Translucent.

Our baby.

The embryo was tiny, no bigger than a bean, but I could see it clearly. The curve of what would have been a spine. The shadow of a developing heart. The promise of everything I'd wanted to tell him, everything I'd been driving to Seattle to share before—before—

"Fetal tissue," Sean announced, his tone unchanged. Clinical. Bored, even. "Early first trimester. Approximately six weeks gestation."

He turned. Walked three steps to a steel bin marked MEDICAL WASTE. His hand opened.

The embryo dropped.

I screamed then. No sound came out, but I screamed until whatever held me together felt like it would shatter. I lunged for the bin, for that tiny scrap of the future we'd made together, but my hands found only air. Only nothing.

Sean returned to the table like nothing had happened. Like he hadn't just thrown away our child. Like he hadn't just destroyed the last piece of evidence that I'd loved him completely, selflessly, stupidly.

"Proceeding with kidney extraction," he continued, and his hands disappeared back into my body.

I forced myself to watch. Forced myself to see every cut, every precise movement as he removed my kidney—healthy, viable, perfect—and placed it carefully in a container of preservation solution. The care he took with that organ, the gentleness in his hands as he secured it, was more tenderness than he'd shown me in three years.

Three years of cooking his favorite meals and eating alone. Three years of encouraging words met with contempt. Three years of "I love you" answered with "You hypnotized me. You stole my memories. You trapped me."

I'd sold my house to pay for his medical bills. Worked double shifts at the clinic to afford his physical therapy. Held him through nightmares and panic attacks, whispering promises that everything would be okay.

And here was my reward. My body on a table. My baby in the trash. My kidney in a cooler destined for someone else.

"Organ successfully harvested," Sean said, stepping back. He stripped off his gloves with practiced efficiency, tossing them aside. "Prep the transplant suite. Tell Dr. Chen to have the recipient ready."

The nurse nodded. "Ms. Andrews is already prepped and waiting, Dr. Williamson."

Liliana.

The name hit me like a physical blow. Liliana Andrews. Sean's first love. The woman he'd accused me of making him forget. The woman who'd disappeared when Sean had his accident, only to return three months ago with kidney failure and desperate, tear-filled pleas for help.

My kidney was going to Liliana.

Sean walked past my spirit without a glance, already focused on his next task. Saving her. The woman he truly loved. The woman I could never be.

I looked back at the table. At the empty shell that used to be Gracie Hart. At the surgical cavity where my kidney had been. At the waste bin that held my unborn child.

And I understood, finally, terribly: Sean would never know what he'd done. Would never recognize that the unidentified corpse was the woman who'd given him everything. Would never mourn the child he'd discarded like garbage.

Because to Sean Williamson, I had always been nobody.

Just an obstacle. A mistake. A woman he couldn't wait to be free of.

And now, I was.

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