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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 3

The ICU's artificial twilight cast everything in shades of blue and gray, but Liliana's tears caught the light like diamonds. I watched from my invisible corner as she pressed Sean's hand to her cheek, her voice trembling with practiced vulnerability.

"I searched everywhere for you after the accident," she whispered, each word carefully weighted with pain. "The hospitals, the rehabilitation centers. I called every facility in three states, Sean. But you'd just... vanished."

Sean's thumb traced her cheekbone, wiping away tears that seemed to flow on command. "I was there the whole time. At Mercy General, then the rehab center on Fifth Street. How could you not find me?"

"I did find you." Her voice broke beautifully, and I felt sick watching Sean lean closer, hanging on every syllable. "Three months after your accident. I finally tracked you down, and I was so excited, so relieved. I ran to the hospital with flowers and this ridiculous teddy bear I'd bought, and then—" She covered her face with her free hand. "Then I saw her. Gracie. Sitting beside your bed like she belonged there, holding your hand, calling herself your fiancée."

The lie slipped from her lips so smoothly I almost believed it myself. But I remembered those early days in the hospital. I remembered every visitor, every face. Liliana had never come. Never called. Never sent so much as a card.

"The nurses told me you didn't remember me at all," she continued, her performance flawless. "That you'd been engaged to this Gracie person for months. That you were... happy. I didn't understand how that was possible. How could you forget three years of us? How could you just... replace me?"

Sean's jaw clenched, and I saw the familiar fire of resentment kindle in his eyes. "Because she took those memories from me. She hypnotized me, Lily. Made me forget you existed so she could have me for herself."

"I wanted to fight for you." Liliana's tears flowed faster now, and she pressed his hand harder against her face. "But what could I do? You looked at me like a stranger. Like I was nobody. And she was there, playing the devoted fiancée, acting like she'd saved you. I couldn't bear to see you looking at her the way you used to look at me."

I wanted to scream. Wanted to tear through the veil between life and death and shake them both until the truth rattled loose. But I could only watch as Sean gathered her closer, his voice rough with emotion.

"I should have known. Should have fought harder to remember. If I hadn't been so weak—"

"Don't." Liliana pressed her fingers to his lips again. "She's a psychologist, Sean. She knew exactly how to manipulate your mind when you were vulnerable. This isn't your fault."

The ICU doors burst open with enough force to rattle the walls. Sean's mother stormed in, her silver hair disheveled and her face flushed with fury. She moved like a woman half her age, all righteous anger and maternal protection.

"Sean Michael Williamson, what the hell is wrong with you?"

Sean straightened, his hand still clasping Liliana's, but his expression shifted to wary defensiveness. "Mom, this isn't the time—"

"When is the time?" Eleanor Williamson's voice could have cut glass. "When Gracie's been missing for three days and you haven't even filed a police report? When she was supposed to come to dinner Tuesday night to discuss wedding flowers and never showed up? When her clinic is calling me because they can't reach either of you?"

My heart would have stopped if it were still beating. She'd been expecting me for dinner. We'd planned to look at centerpiece options, to talk about the ceremony I'd foolishly believed might still happen.

"She probably ran," Sean said, his tone flat and dismissive. "Finally realized I was getting my memory back and decided to cut her losses."

Eleanor's face went white, then red. "Ran? That girl sold her house to pay for your medical bills. Worked herself into exhaustion to afford your therapy. She's been planning your wedding for months, Sean, talking about children and your future together, and you think she just ran?"

"She was never really part of my life, Mom." Sean's voice turned cold, clinical. "She was a placeholder. A mistake I couldn't remember making."

The slap echoed through the ICU like a gunshot. Eleanor's hand trembled as she lowered it, her eyes bright with unshed tears.

"That woman loved you more than you deserved," she whispered. "And if something's happened to her while you've been playing house with your old girlfriend, I will never forgive you."

She turned and walked out, leaving Sean touching his reddened cheek and Liliana watching with calculating eyes.

Miles away, I felt the pull of something else. Something that demanded my attention. I found myself standing beside a rain-soaked highway outside Seattle, watching police cars circle the twisted wreckage of my Honda Civic like vultures.

Detective Rachel Morrison crouched beside the driver's side, her flashlight illuminating the spider web of cracks across the windshield. "Victim was thrown clear on impact," she called to her partner. "But look at this damage pattern. This wasn't an accident."

She pointed to the rear bumper, crumpled and scraped with paint that didn't match my car's blue finish. "Someone rammed her from behind. Hard enough to send her into the guardrail at sixty miles per hour."

My phone lay shattered on the passenger seat, its screen dark. But I could see the last number I'd tried to call, still visible in the cracked display: Sean's cell phone. I'd been trying to reach him when the truck hit me. Trying to tell him about the baby. About the future I'd imagined for us.

Instead, I'd died alone on a dark highway, and he'd never even noticed I was gone.

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