
The Don's Regret: She Saved His Life
Chapter 10
(Dante Vitiello POV)
The hospital morgue was an abyss of stainless steel and fluorescent light—sterile, blindingly white, and deafeningly quiet.
Elena lay on the steel table. They had cleaned the mud off her face, leaving her skin pale and translucent. She looked small. Impossibly fragile.
"We should cremate her," Sofia said.
She was hovering by the door, refusing to step past the threshold. "Dante, listen to me. Let's just cremate her tonight. We can scatter the ashes and be done with this chapter. It’s what she would have wanted."
"How do you know what she wanted?" I asked, my voice sounding like it was coming from miles underwater. I couldn't look away from Elena’s hands. The nails were broken. The skin was scarred from where Sofia had crushed them beneath her heel.
"I just know," Sofia said, checking the diamond watch on her wrist. "The crematorium closes in an hour. I already called them. They can squeeze us in."
I turned slowly to look at her. "You called them?"
"To help you," she said quickly, her eyes widening in feigned innocence. "To handle the logistics. You're grieving the... the loss of your revenge. I understand."
"Wait," the medical examiner said.
It was Dr. Aris, an old man who had served the Vitiello family for thirty years. He was carefully cutting through Elena’s shirt to remove the medical devices attached to her torso.
He paused, his scalpel hovering in mid-air.
"What is it?" I asked, the air suddenly thin in my lungs.
"Boss," Dr. Aris said, frowning. He pointed to the scar on Elena's chest. It was a long, jagged zipper line running down her sternum. "This scar is old. Three years, maybe more."
"She had heart failure," I said impatiently, my patience fraying. "She needed a transplant but never got one."
"No," Dr. Aris said. He gently peeled back the skin to reveal the truth.
I flinched.
"She didn't need a transplant," Dr. Aris said, his voice trembling slightly. "She *had* a transplant. But not to receive a heart."
He pointed to the cavity. "She had an LVAD implanted because her heart was damaged. But look at the scarring on the kidneys."
"Kidneys?" I stepped closer, the cold of the room seeping into my bones.
"She has only one kidney," Dr. Aris said. "And the scar tissue... it matches the timeline of your surgery, Dante."
The room stopped spinning. It didn't just stop; it solidified into a terrifying clarity.
Three years ago. I was shot. My kidneys failed. I needed a transplant immediately. I was in a coma. When I woke up, Sofia was there. She told me she gave me her kidney. She showed me a faint scar on her side.
"Check Sofia," I said, my voice dead calm.
"What?" Sofia shrieked. "Dante, are you crazy? My heart! I'm feeling faint!"
She clutched her chest and slumped against the doorframe, a performance I had seen a thousand times. "It's happening again! My heart is failing!"
Dr. Aris walked over to her. He didn't offer comfort. He grabbed her wrist with clinical detachment. He put a stethoscope to her chest.
Sofia wailed, "I need a doctor! Get away from me!"
Dr. Aris listened for ten seconds. Then he straightened up, removing the earpieces. He looked at me with a grave expression.
"Her heart is strong as a horse, Dante," Dr. Aris said. "And I see no surgical scars on her flank consistent with a nephrectomy. Her skin is flawless."
I looked at Sofia. She stopped wailing instantly. Her face went pale, not from sickness, but from primal terror.
I looked back at the body on the table. The woman with one kidney. The woman who had ruined her own heart to survive the surgery to save me. The woman I had tortured for weeks. The woman I had called a traitor.
The woman who had saved my life.
"Check the DNA," I whispered, my voice breaking under the weight of the truth. "Match the kidney inside me to the body on the table."
"I can do it right now," Dr. Aris said quietly. "But Dante... I don't need a test to tell you what you already know."
I walked over to Elena. I touched the cold scar on her chest. Tracing the map of her sacrifice.
The realization was a physical agony. It felt like someone had reached into my chest and ripped out the organ she had saved.
I had killed her.
I had spent five years hating the only person who had ever truly loved me. And I had spent five years worshipping the rat who stole her credit.
I turned to Sofia.
She was backing toward the door, her hands trembling. "Dante, wait. Let me explain. It's complicated..."
"Lock the door," I said to the guards outside.
The lock clicked with the finality of a gunshot.
I walked toward Sofia. I didn't run. I walked with slow, heavy steps. The steps of a man walking into hell.
"You wanted a heart, Sofia?" I asked softly.
"Dante, please!" She fell to her knees, clawing at the floor tiles.
"You wanted to be the victim?" I reached down and grabbed her by the throat, feeling her pulse flutter against my palm. "Congratulations. You got the role."
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