
My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress
Chapter 2
The water in the shower block was never warm, but that morning it felt like ice against my skin. Steam curled lazily around the gray tiles, obscuring the corners where shadows liked to linger. I kept one hand on the swell of my stomach—seven months heavy, a secret life growing amidst death and decay—and the other against the wall to steady myself.
I heard the footsteps before I saw them. Heavy, deliberate slaps of rubber sandals on wet concrete.
"Foster." The voice was gravel and smoke. A woman I knew only as 'Brix,' a lifer with knuckles scarred from years of violence.
I didn't turn. "I don't have anything you want, Brix."
"You'd be surprised what people pay for," she muttered.
Before I could brace myself, a hand tangled in my wet hair, yanking my head back until my neck screamed. I scrabbled at the tiles, my feet slipping on the slick soap. Another figure emerged from the steam—faceless, brutal. A fist connected with my ribs, driving the air from my lungs. I crumpled, instinctively curling around my belly, shielding the only thing I had left.
"Please," I gasped, the water mixing with the copper taste of blood in my mouth. "The baby..."
"That's the point," Brix whispered.
A heavy boot slammed into my lower back, then another into my side. Pain, white-hot and blinding, exploded through my pelvis. It wasn't just the bruise of impact; it was a deeper, tearing agony. A gush of fluid, warm and terrifying, washed down my legs, swirling with the shower water and the blood from my split lip.
I screamed, but the sound was swallowed by the hiss of the showers and the retreating laughter of women who had just earned their commissary money.
***
The infirmary smelled of antiseptic and lies. The lights were too bright, searing through my eyelids as contractions ripped through me, unnatural and violent. I was strapped down. Why was I strapped down?
"Dr. Mitchell," I panted, straining against the leather cuffs. "Something's wrong. It's too soon."
Dr. Sarah Mitchell didn't look at me. Her mask hid her expression, but her eyes were cold, darting nervously to the clock on the wall. "You're hemorrhaging, Inmate 8940. Stop fighting."
"Save him," I begged, my voice raw. "Please, just save him."
The agony peaked, a wave of fire that threatened to split me in two. I pushed because my body gave me no choice. I pushed until black spots danced in my vision.
And then, silence. A heavy, suspended silence.
Then—a cry.
It was weak, reedy, but it was there. A sound of life. A boy. I tried to lift my head, straining to see past the surgical drape.
"I heard him," I sobbed, tears tracking hot paths into my ears. "Let me see him. Please."
Dr. Mitchell’s eyes finally met mine. There was no pity there, only a terrifying resolve. She nodded to a nurse I didn't recognize. "Administering sedative."
"No!" I thrashed, the metal of the bed frame rattling. "He's crying! Give him to me!"
The needle pierced my arm. The cold rush of chemicals hit my veins instantly. The cry faded, drifting away like smoke. The last thing I saw was Dr. Mitchell wrapping a small, wriggling bundle in a blue blanket and turning her back on me.
***
When I woke, the world was gray. My stomach was flat, a hollow cavern where my heart used to beat.
Dr. Mitchell stood at the foot of the bed, holding a clipboard like a shield.
"Where is he?" My voice was a ghost.
"There were complications, Emelia," she said, her tone rehearsed. "The trauma... the placenta detached. He was stillborn."
"Liar." The word scraped out of my throat. "I heard him cry."
" hallucinations are common under anesthesia," she said smoothly. "Because you have no next of kin and no funds, the state handled the remains. He has been cremated."
Cremated. burned. Gone.
I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I just turned my face to the wall and let the darkness take me again. There was nothing left to fight for.
***
Three hundred and sixty-five days. That’s how long it took for Zain to decide I had suffered enough. The charges were dropped—"insufficient evidence," the lawyer said, though we both knew it was a puppet show orchestrated from a penthouse in Manhattan.
I walked out of the prison gates with a plastic bag containing my clothes from the day of my father’s death and forty dollars in gate money. The release wasn't freedom. It was just a larger cage.
New York City chewed me up. A convicted felon, even with dropped charges, doesn't get interviews. I slept in shelters where I had to sleep with my shoes on so they wouldn't be stolen. I scrubbed floors off the books. I ate once a day.
Desperation led me to the *Hearth & Home* agency. It was a basement operation in Queens that didn't ask for background checks, only desperation.
"Live-in nanny," the woman behind the desk said, blowing smoke from a slim cigarette. "Wealthy family. Very private. They need someone who doesn't ask questions and doesn't have a social life. You fit the profile."
I didn't care about the terms. I needed a roof. I needed to not be hungry.
The address was in the Hamptons. The train ride took the last of my money. I walked the two miles from the station to the estate, the gravel crunching under my worn soles. The gates were iron monoliths, towering and intricate.
The housekeeper, a stern woman with no smile, buzzed me in. "You're late. The Master hates tardiness."
"I apologize," I murmured, keeping my head down. I had learned to be invisible.
She led me through a foyer that screamed of old money—marble, gold leaf, silence. "Wait here. The Mistress is in the solarium."
I stood in the center of the room, wringing my hands. My reflection in the hallway mirror was a stranger—gaunt, pale, eyes deadened by a year of hell.
"So, this is the new help."
The voice stopped my heart. It wasn't the housekeeper. It was a sound from a nightmare I had lived a thousand times.
I turned slowly.
Standing in the doorway, bathed in the afternoon sun, was Edith. She looked radiant, untouched by time or guilt, holding a glass of wine. And behind her, stepping out of the shadows with a look of bored irritation, was Zain.
He stopped when he saw me. The boredom vanished, replaced by a flicker of something that might have been shock, if he were capable of it.
"Emelia?" he breathed.
Edith smiled, and it was the smile of a predator who had just found a wounded animal in her trap. "Well," she purred. "It seems the agency really does find the desperate ones."
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