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I Gave Him My Kidney, He Gave Her The Credit Novel Cover

I Gave Him My Kidney, He Gave Her The Credit

Catherine Moore spent seven years being the perfect wife to Alexander Edwards—supporting his startup, managing his household, enduring his cold indifference. When his company faced bankruptcy, she made the ultimate sacrifice: sold her kidney to a black-market buyer and signed a contract with a dying billionaire that would cost her life within three months—all to secure a ten-billion-dollar investment that would save Alexander's empire. She asked for nothing in return. Not even credit. But her stepsister Vanessa saw an opportunity. She forged documents, fabricated evidence, and convinced Alexander that she was the one who saved him. On the day Catherine was scheduled for the surgery that would end her life, Alexander appeared at her hospital bed—not with gratitude, but with divorce papers. "You're nothing but a parasite," he said. "Sign this and get out of my life." Catherine signed. Three days later, her heart stopped on the operating table. But death wasn't the end. A mysterious organization saved her life—and revealed a truth that changed everything: she wasn't Catherine Moore, a nobody. She was the lost heiress to one of the world's most powerful families. Two years later, she returned as Catherine Sinclair—CEO of Sinclair Global, the corporation that had just acquired 51% of Edwards Enterprises. Alexander wanted her back the moment he saw her. Vanessa's lies began to unravel. And the truth of what Catherine sacrificed started to surface. But Catherine didn't come back for love. She came back for justice.
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Chapter 2

Three months earlier, the world had felt like it was crumbling beneath my feet.

I stared at the stack of foreclosure notices scattered across Alexander's mahogany desk, each one a death sentence for everything we'd built together. The afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of his office, casting long shadows that seemed to mirror the darkness creeping into our lives.

"How bad is it?" I whispered, though I already knew the answer from the hollow look in Alexander's eyes.

"We have two weeks," he said, his voice barely audible. "Two weeks before the banks seize everything. The house, the company, all of it."

I watched him bury his face in his hands, his shoulders shaking with the weight of three generations of family legacy about to disappear. The Blackwood empire, built by his grandfather's blood and sweat, reduced to nothing more than unpaid debts and broken dreams.

That night, while Alexander drowned his sorrows in whiskey, I made my first call.

The phone felt slick with sweat in my palm as I dialed the number I'd found buried in the darkest corners of the internet. Places decent people never ventured, where desperate souls traded pieces of themselves for cold, hard cash.

"You have something to sell?" The voice on the other end was gravelly, businesslike.

"A kidney," I whispered, my throat tight with fear and determination. "Type O negative. Healthy donor."

The silence stretched between us like a chasm. "Five hundred thousand. Cash. No questions asked."

My hand trembled as I gripped the phone tighter. Five hundred thousand wouldn't be enough to save the company, but it would buy us time. Time to find another solution.

"When?" I asked.

Two days later, I stood in a sterile room that smelled of disinfectant and desperation. The surgeon's mask hid his face, but his eyes were kind as he explained the procedure.

"Are you sure about this?" he asked, his gloved hands gentle as he prepared the IV. "There are risks. Your remaining kidney will have to work twice as hard. It could affect your health long-term."

I thought of Alexander's broken expression, of the family photos lining the walls of our home that would soon belong to strangers. "I'm sure."

The anesthesia pulled me under like a dark tide, and when I woke, five hundred thousand dollars richer and one organ poorer, I told Alexander I'd liquidated some old investments. He was too grateful to question the details, too relieved to notice the way I winced when I moved too quickly.

But even with the temporary reprieve, it wasn't enough. The company hemorrhaged money faster than we could plug the holes. Suppliers demanded payment, employees threatened to quit, and the banks circled like vultures.

That's when I heard about Sinclair.

Old money. Older than the Blackwoods, with connections that reached into every corner of the city's power structure. But Edmund Sinclair was dying, had been for months, and his business empire was fracturing without a clear heir.

I found him in his penthouse office on the forty-second floor, the city sprawling beneath us like a glittering web. He was smaller than I'd expected, his once-powerful frame reduced to skin and bones, but his eyes still burned with an intelligence that made my skin crawl.

"Mrs. Blackwood," he wheezed, gesturing for me to sit in the leather chair across from his desk. "I've been expecting you."

"You have?" I tried to keep the surprise out of my voice.

"Desperate times call for desperate measures," he said, his smile revealing teeth stained yellow with age and medication. "Your husband's company is drowning, and you've already sold pieces of yourself to keep it afloat. Admirable, really."

My blood ran cold. He knew about the kidney. Somehow, this dying old man knew my darkest secret.

"What do you want?" I asked, abandoning any pretense of negotiation.

Sinclair leaned back in his chair, his breathing labored but his gaze sharp. "I'm dying, Mrs. Blackwood. Heart failure. The doctors give me weeks, maybe days. But I have resources, connections, money that could save your husband's company ten times over."

"And in exchange?"

His laugh was more of a rattle. "I want what you can't give me. Time. Youth. A future."

I stared at him, confusion mixing with growing dread. "I don't understand."

"My heart is failing," he repeated slowly, as if speaking to a child. "But yours... yours is young, strong, healthy. For now."

The room seemed to tilt around me. "You're asking me to—"

"Die for your husband's legacy? Yes." His voice was matter-of-fact, as if we were discussing the weather. "Think of it as an investment. Your life for his future. A fair trade, wouldn't you say?"

I should have run. Should have grabbed my purse and fled from that office, from that monster wearing human skin. But all I could think about was Alexander's face when he'd signed those foreclosure notices, the way his hands had shaken as our world collapsed around us.

"How long would I have?" The words slipped out before I could stop them.

Sinclair's eyes gleamed with triumph. "The procedure would need to happen within six months. My condition is... deteriorating rapidly. But until then, you'd live normally. No one would know."

"And the money?"

"Fifty million dollars, transferred to an account of your choosing the moment you sign the contract. Enough to save Blackwood Industries and secure your husband's future for generations."

Fifty million. More money than I'd ever dreamed of, enough to not just save the company but make it stronger than ever. Alexander would never have to worry about money again, never have to watch his family's legacy crumble.

My hand trembled as I reached for the pen he offered. "There's no other way?"

Sinclair's expression softened slightly, and for a moment, I saw something almost paternal in his eyes. "You remind me of someone," he said quietly. "My daughter. She would have been about your age now, if..." He trailed off, shaking his head. "Perhaps fate is giving me a chance to make amends."

"What happened to her?"

"She was taken from me twenty years ago. Kidnapped. We never found her body, but..." He studied my face with an intensity that made my skin crawl. "You have her eyes. Her stubborn chin. Sometimes I wonder if the universe has a sense of irony."

I signed the contract with shaking hands, sealing my fate with blue ink and desperate love. The money appeared in our accounts the next day, and Alexander wept with relief as we paid off every debt, every threat to our future.

He never asked where the money came from. He was too grateful, too overwhelmed with relief to question this miracle that had saved everything he held dear.

But as I watched him celebrate, as I smiled and pretended to share his joy, I couldn't shake Sinclair's words. The way he'd looked at me, as if seeing a ghost. The strange comment about fate and second chances.

Now, three months later, lying in this hospital bed with divorce papers scattered around me like fallen leaves, I wondered if Edmund Sinclair was still alive. If he was waiting for me to fulfill my end of our devil's bargain.

Somewhere in the city, in offices I'd never seen, people were asking questions about a woman who looked exactly like a little girl who'd vanished twenty years ago. A little girl whose father was about to claim his final prize.

The heart monitor beside my bed beeped steadily, counting down the moments until my debt came due.

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