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My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress

The ticker tape on the news crawl was still burning behind my eyelids: *Foster Enterprises Declares Insolvency.* The words were a neon slash across my vision, turning the gray Manhattan skyline into a blur of vertigo and rain. My phone had been vibrating against my hip for an hour—lawyers, creditors, panic—but I didn't answer. I only had one destination. Zain. He was the only solid thing left in a world that had liquefied beneath my feet this morning. I bypassed the doorman at the Obsidian Tower, my breath hitching in my throat as the elevator surged toward the penthouse. I needed his voice. I needed him to tell me that money was just paper, that my father wasn't going to prison, that we would survive this. The penthouse door was unlatched. That should have been my first warning.
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Chapter 5

The incision on my flank burned, a sharp, rhythmic reminder that a piece of me had been harvested to save the woman who destroyed my life. I lay in the dim hospital room, staring at the ceiling tiles, counting the cracks to keep from screaming. I was lighter, but the weight in my chest was crushing.

The door opened. It wasn't a nurse.

Zain stood at the foot of the bed. He looked impeccable in his charcoal suit, a stark contrast to the sterile decay of the recovery ward. But his eyes were dull, rimmed with the exhaustion of a man keeping a vigil for a wife he thought was dying.

"The transplant was successful," he said. His voice was devoid of gratitude. "Edith is stable."

"Get out," I rasped. My throat felt like it was filled with glass shards.

He didn't move. Instead, his gaze drifted down to my hands, resting atop the thin hospital blanket. My fingers, long and slender—my only remaining pride, the only part of me that could still speak the language of Chopin and Liszt—twitched under his scrutiny.

"You have such capable hands, Emelia," he murmured. "Pianist's hands. Delicate. Precise."

He signaled to the hallway. Two men stepped in—shadows in suits, their faces blank slates of violence. One carried a heavy canvas bag.

"Zain?" My heart hammered against my ribs.

"You used those hands to mix arsenic into my wife's wine," Zain said, his tone chillingly conversational. "You used them to draft forgery documents about a dead baby. You use them to hurt people."

He nodded to the men. "Fix it."

One man moved to the head of the bed, pinning my shoulders down. The other grabbed my left wrist, forcing my hand onto the metal bedside table.

"No!" I screamed, thrashing against the restraint. The stitches in my side tore, hot wetness spreading across my gown. "Zain, please! Not my hands! Take anything else!"

Zain turned his back, walking to the window to watch the rain.

The man with the bag withdrew a steel mallet. He didn't hesitate.

The first blow shattered the metacarpals. The sound was wet and crunching, like stepping on dry leaves in autumn. Pain, white and absolute, exploded up my arm, blinding me. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't think.

He raised the mallet again. And again.

By the time they finished, my hands were ruin. Swollen, purple, misshapen lumps of flesh and bone splinters. I couldn't feel them anymore. I could only feel the end of my life.

Zain turned back, glancing at the wreckage. "Now you can't hurt anyone."

***

They discharged me three days later with a bottle of painkillers and a warning to stay in the state.

I didn't listen.

I drove my beat-up sedan to the George Washington Bridge at 3:00 AM. The city was a grid of lights behind me, indifferent and cruel. I parked in the emergency lane, leaving the engine idling and the hazard lights blinking a rhythmic farewell.

My hands were encased in thick casts, useless claws. I maneuvered the pen with my teeth and the crook of my elbow to leave the note on the dashboard.

*I can't do this anymore. You win.*

It was the only lie I had left to tell.

I stepped out into the biting wind. Below, the Hudson was a black void, a mouth waiting to swallow the weak. I took off my coat and draped it over the railing. Then, I turned away from the water.

In my pocket was the roll of cash I’d lifted from Edith’s purse in the chaos of the ambulance ride—five thousand dollars she kept for 'emergencies.' It was enough.

I pulled the hood of my sweatshirt up and walked into the darkness, leaving Emelia Foster to drown in the river of her own tragedy.

***

**Five Years Later. Paris.**

The lecture hall at the Sorbonne was silent, save for the scratching of pens. I stood at the podium, adjusting the microphone with hands that were stiff, scarred, and forever aching in the cold damp of the Parisian winter. I wore gloves, always leather, always black.

"Trauma is not a memory," I said, my voice projecting clear and cool across the auditorium. "It is a biological restructuring of the survival instinct. To treat the child, you must first understand the architecture of their fear."

The applause that followed was polite, respectful. I didn't smile. I hadn't smiled in five years.

I gathered my notes. As the students filed out, a man approached the stage. He was tall, with kind eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses and a tweed jacket that smelled of pipe tobacco and old books.

"Brilliant as always, Dr. Vance," Leif Harris said softly. He was the only one who knew the name on my degree was a fabrication, eventually legalized through connections I’d forged in the underground of academia.

"Leif," I acknowledged, stepping down. "You're early."

"I brought coffee." He handed me a cup, careful not to touch my gloved hands. He knew the boundaries. He respected the walls I had built because he understood that without them, the roof would cave in.

"There's a letter for you," he added, his tone cautious. "From New York. The Matthews Foundation."

The name landed like a stone in the quiet room.

I took the envelope. The heavy cream stock, the embossed gold logo. An invitation to the 'Gala for Child Advocacy.' Keynote speaker requested: The renowned Dr. Emelia Vance.

They didn't know. They couldn't know.

I ran a gloved thumb over the seal. Five years of silence. Five years of rebuilding myself from ash into diamond—hard, cold, unbreakable.

"Do you want me to shred it?" Leif asked.

I looked at him, then out the window where the Eiffel Tower pierced the gray sky. The girl who begged for her life in a hospital room was dead. The woman standing here had nothing left to lose.

"No," I said, my voice steady. "Book the flight, Leif. It's time to go home."

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