
When My Sister Burned My Face, He Saved Hers
Chapter 1
The phone vibrated in my pocket, an unknown Swiss number flashing across the screen. My heart stuttered as I answered, pressing the phone tightly against my ear to block out the ambient noise of Central Park.
"Ms. Mitchell?" The crisp, accented voice of Dr. Alistair Finch came through. "I have excellent news."
My legs suddenly felt weak, and I lowered myself onto a nearby bench. Seven years. Seven years of waiting, of hiding behind scarves and turned faces, of seeing pity in strangers' eyes.
"The reconstructive surgery we've discussed," he continued. "We've had a cancellation. I can schedule you in three weeks."
The world around me blurred as tears filled my eyes. Joggers passed by, children laughed on the playground, but they all seemed to move in slow motion.
"Ms. Mitchell? Are you still there?"
"Yes," I whispered, my voice catching. "Yes, I'm here. Three weeks? You're certain?"
"Absolutely. My assistant will email you the details this afternoon. We'll need you in Zurich for pre-operative consultations by the fifteenth."
When I hung up, I remained frozen on the bench, tears streaming down my scarred cheeks. An elderly woman glanced at me with concern, but I smiled through my tears, probably looking half-mad. I didn't care. For the first time in seven years, I felt something I'd almost forgotten—hope.
Ryan needed to know immediately. My husband had stood by me through everything—the bandages, the nightmares, the days when I couldn't bear to look in a mirror. He deserved to be the first to hear that our long wait was finally over.
* * *
I practically flew up the stairs to our Manhattan apartment, too impatient to wait for the elevator. My key fumbled in the lock, hands trembling with excitement.
"Ryan?" I called out, dropping my purse on the entryway table. The apartment was silent. Of course—he'd mentioned a board meeting at Carter Enterprises that would run late.
I pulled out my phone to call him, then hesitated. This wasn't news for a phone call. This was champagne news. Celebration news. I'd wait until he got home, watch his face when I told him.
A white envelope on the coffee table caught my eye—our mail, which Ryan must have sorted before leaving. A business account statement peeked out, the Carter Enterprises logo visible in the corner. I normally didn't look at Ryan's business correspondence, but something—intuition, perhaps—made me pull out the statement.
My eyes scanned the document, stopping abruptly at a line item: "Wire Transfer - Amanda M. - Medical Expense" followed by a figure that made my blood run cold. The amount matched exactly what Dr. Finch had quoted for my reconstructive surgery.
Amanda. My adoptive sister. The woman who had struck the match that killed my mother. The woman who had left me scarred and broken. The woman Ryan had promised to bring to justice.
My hands shook as I moved to my laptop, powering it on with unsteady fingers. I logged into our shared cloud account where Ryan kept backup files of important documents. There had to be a mistake. There had to be.
I searched for Dr. Finch's name, finding a folder of correspondence. The most recent email confirmed a surgery date for Amanda Mitchell—the exact date Dr. Finch had just offered me. As I scrolled through more files, I found years of monthly transfers to an offshore account in Amanda's name.
Seven years of transfers. Seven years of lies.
The room seemed to tilt around me as realization crashed down like a physical weight. The surgery wasn't suddenly available because of a cancellation. It had been scheduled all along—for her. The reconstructive surgery I had waited seven years for, enduring countless consultations and preliminary procedures, had been given to the woman who had destroyed my face in the first place.
And Ryan—my husband, my protector, the man who had sworn to love me and seek justice for my mother's murder—had arranged it all.
The laptop slipped from my numb fingers as a single, terrible question formed in my mind: What else had he lied about?
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