
Husband Chooses Sister Over Me
Chapter 1
The grocery bags felt heavier than usual as I pushed open the front door of our suburban home. I'd cut my shopping trip short when a nagging headache started behind my eyes—a warning sign I'd learned to respect since my heart condition worsened. The doctor had been clear: stress could trigger episodes, and with my transplant scheduled for next week, I needed to stay calm.
The house was quiet as I set the bags on the kitchen counter. Too quiet. Mateo should have been working in his home office, and our son should have been playing in the living room. Instead, the silence felt heavy, almost expectant.
"I'll just put these away and rest for a bit," I whispered to myself, my fingers instinctively pressing against my chest where the familiar ache had begun to throb.
As I reached for a glass of water, I heard Mateo's voice from his study—low, intimate in a way he rarely spoke to me anymore. The words weren't clear, but the tone made me pause. He was on the phone.
I moved quietly toward his study, not intending to eavesdrop but drawn by something in his voice—a warmth I hadn't heard directed at me in years.
"I can't wait either," Mateo murmured, his voice dropping to a whisper that still carried through the partially open door. "Once the problem is solved, we can finally be together properly."
My hand froze on the doorframe. Problem? What problem?
"And Evelyn?" A woman's voice—familiar, silky. My sister Zoey.
"She won't be an issue much longer," Mateo replied, and my heart stuttered painfully in my chest. "The doctors say the transplant is her only option, and we both know that's not going to happen."
A soft laugh from Zoey. "Poor Evelyn. Always the convenient solution, never the priority."
"I love you," Mateo said, his voice thick with emotion I'd never heard when he spoke to me. "I always have. These years with her have been... necessary, but they're almost over."
I backed away from the door, my vision blurring. Necessary. Years. The pieces clicked into place with sickening clarity. I'd known Mateo and Zoey had been close growing up, but they'd always insisted it was just sibling friendship. Now...
"Did you hear that?" I pushed open the door without knocking.
Mateo spun around, his phone still pressed to his ear. For a moment, naked shock flashed across his face before he composed himself.
"I'll call you back," he said tersely into the phone before hanging up.
"Evelyn," he began, his tone shifting to the distant politeness he'd adopted months ago. "You're back early."
"How long?" My voice came out steadier than I expected. "How long have you and Zoey been together?"
His eyes narrowed slightly—calculating, cold. "That's not your concern."
"Our son is asleep upstairs," I said, my fingers digging into my palms. "Your son. The one you've been raising with me."
Something shifted in Mateo's expression—not guilt, but irritation at being caught. "He's not yours, Evelyn."
The world tilted beneath my feet. "What?"
"He's Zoey's," Mateo said flatly. "You were just the surrogate. We needed someone to carry him, and you were... available."
The room seemed to spin around me. "That's not possible. I carried him. I felt him kick. I nursed him."
"And you did a good job," Mateo conceded with a shrug that cut deeper than any knife. "But you were always just a convenient arrangement."
I stumbled backward, knocking into his desk. A folder fell to the floor, papers spilling out—medical forms, transplant schedules, consent documents.
My eyes caught on a name: Zoey Henderson.
With trembling hands, I gathered the papers. There it was in black and white—a heart transplant scheduled for today. My heart transplant. But the recipient wasn't me.
"Why?" I whispered, looking up at Mateo's impassive face.
"Because Zoey needed it," he said simply. "And you don't."
The document in my hands stated clearly: Estimated survival without transplant: 7 days.
Seven days to live, and they'd given my heart to my sister—who didn't even need it.
From the hallway came the sound of the front door opening and closing, followed by Zoey's voice calling out cheerfully: "We're home! Where's my favorite sister?"
I looked up at Mateo, who was already reaching for his phone again, his eyes cold and distant.
"Mom says the surgery went perfectly," Zoey announced as she breezed into the study, her parents following behind her. "I'm all better now!"
They were celebrating. Celebrating while I had seven days left to live.
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