
The Christmas Trip That Broke Us
Chapter 4
I stared at Gavin Warhol, this composed stranger who'd materialized in my hospital room like some corporate angel of mercy. His offer hung in the air between us—full medical coverage, the best rehabilitation center in Switzerland, top specialists from America, a team to help me return to competition in four years.
Four years.
The number felt both impossibly long and cruelly optimistic. Dr. Hermann had made it clear that walking normally again was questionable, let alone returning to Olympic-level skiing. Yet here was Dick's uncle, speaking with the quiet confidence of someone accustomed to making the impossible happen.
"I appreciate what you're trying to do," I said, my fingers clutching the rough hospital blanket until my knuckles went white. "But I won't take charity. This isn't your responsibility—it's not your fault your nephew is a selfish coward with no moral compass."
Gavin's dark eyes studied me with an intensity that made me feel exposed, like he could see straight through to the pride and pain I was trying so hard to contain. "Miss White, this isn't charity. This is accountability. My family—"
The door burst open with such force it slammed against the wall, making me jump. Dick stormed in, his face flushed red with anger, his hair disheveled like he'd been running his hands through it. His eyes immediately locked onto his uncle with an expression of pure outrage.
"What the hell are you doing here, Gavin?" Dick's voice was pitched high with indignation. "You have no right to interfere in my personal life. This is between Elena and me, not some family business deal you can swoop in and fix with your checkbook."
Gavin remained seated, his posture relaxed, but I caught the slight tightening around his eyes. "Dick. How nice of you to join us."
"Don't give me that condescending tone," Dick snapped, stepping further into the room. "I'm a grown man. I don't need my uncle cleaning up after me like I'm some kind of child. My relationships are my own business."
The word 'relationships' hit me like a physical blow. As if what he'd done to me, what he'd done with Scarlett, could be reduced to something so casual and dismissive.
Dick's attention suddenly shifted to me, his expression twisting into something ugly and accusatory. He pointed at me with a trembling finger, his voice rising to nearly a shout. "And you! I should have known this is what you were really after. You're manipulating this whole situation, aren't you? Using your injury to extort money from my family. You've always been calculating, Elena, but this proves just how mercenary you really are."
The words hit me like ice water. Calculating. Mercenary. After everything I'd given him, every sacrifice I'd made, every time I'd put his needs before my own, he was painting me as some kind of gold-digging opportunist.
Rage flooded through me, hot and clean and clarifying. My vision seemed to sharpen, the room coming into crystal focus as something fundamental shifted inside my chest. The hurt and confusion I'd been drowning in suddenly crystallized into something harder, more useful.
I turned to look directly at Gavin, my voice coming out with a cold clarity that surprised even me. "I accept your offer, Mr. Warhol. Every single part of it. The medical coverage, the rehabilitation center, the specialists, the training team. All of it."
Dick's mouth fell open, his face cycling through shock, betrayal, and fury in rapid succession. "Elena, you can't be serious. You're really going to—"
"I'm completely serious," I said, my eyes never leaving Gavin's face. There was something in his expression—approval, maybe, or respect—that made my spine straighten despite the pain. "I want the best care available. I want to return to competition stronger than I was before. And I want your family to pay for every penny of it."
"You manipulative bitch," Dick sputtered, his composure completely shattered now. "This is exactly what I'm talking about. You're using this accident to—"
Gavin stood up.
The movement was slow, deliberate, and somehow more threatening than if he'd jumped to his feet in anger. His full height seemed to fill the small hospital room, and when he turned to face his nephew, the temperature seemed to drop several degrees. His voice, when it came, was barely above a whisper, but it carried more menace than any shout.
"Dick. Leave. Now."
"You can't just—" Dick started, but something in his uncle's expression made him take a step backward.
"Leave this room immediately," Gavin continued in that same dangerously quiet tone, "before I do something we'll both regret. And I suggest you think very carefully about your next words, because I'm finding it increasingly difficult to remember that we're family."
The silence that followed was deafening. Dick's face had gone pale, his earlier bravado evaporating as he seemed to finally grasp that his uncle was not the same indulgent figure from family gatherings. This was someone else entirely—someone with power and the willingness to use it.
"This isn't over," Dick muttered, but his voice lacked conviction. He shot one last venomous look at me before stalking toward the door. "You'll regret this, Elena. Both of you will."
The door slammed behind him with enough force to rattle the small water pitcher on my bedside table.
In the sudden quiet that followed, I became acutely aware of my own heartbeat, of the antiseptic smell of the room, of Gavin's presence as he slowly settled back into his chair. His movements were controlled, precise, but I could see the tension in his shoulders, the slight tick in his jaw that suggested his calm was more performance than reality.
"I apologize for my nephew's behavior," he said finally, his voice returning to its earlier professional tone. "That was inexcusable."
I let out a shaky breath I hadn't realized I'd been holding. "Thank you. For standing up to him, I mean. I don't think anyone's ever done that before."
Gavin's dark eyes met mine, and for a moment, something passed between us—an understanding, maybe, or a recognition of shared purpose. "Someone should have done it a long time ago," he said quietly. "Now, shall we discuss the details of your recovery plan?"
As he pulled out his phone to make the first of what I suspected would be many calls, I felt something I hadn't experienced since waking up in this hospital bed: hope. Not the naive, desperate hope of yesterday, but something harder and more determined.
Dick had called me calculating. Maybe it was time I lived up to that accusation.
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