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l, my husband Julian has been my rock. Our last hope was a black-market
overheard him promise that
his mistres
; I was just the placeholder. On a hidden security feed, I watched him in my dead parent
cklace he'd bought for my birth
her whisper, "Just a little longe
ng me. He was active
cold, hard stone in my chest. The man whose devotion I
ce. I left my wedding ring and the signed divorce papers on the entryway t
pte
rina
ess and in health just promised my on
at had nothing to do with the room's temperature. It had settled deep in my bones. It wasn't the
wait. The doctors said she has three months left, maybe more. Ava's m
The black-market liver-the one secured through a life-
his mistres
my rock. He'd held my hair back as I retched, spoon-fed me broth when I couldn't keep anything down, and whispere
n's voice, soft and cloying. A
Julian soothed. "
o place with sickening precision. My illness had started three years ago.
y sound of a child's voice through the
Daddy has some
t mask of concern. He was the picture of a rising Capo in the B
bent to kiss my forehead
e home, now felt like a brand.
bit," he said, stroking
e bedside table. An ove
irthday. A cruel, sentimental joke. I ignored the texts and went straight
phone's GPS. His car wasn't at his
at my parent
mer Pakhan, once ruled. A place Julian had forbidden me from visiting sinc
app, the one he'd installed on my phone years ago, was
to life, and with i
l with his dark hair on his knee. There was Ava, handing him a bowl of chowder. A
all box. From it, he drew the delicate diamond necklace, a lim
it around
r love I had left for him didn't just wither and die. I
phone. I dialed the on
la answered on
What's
he surgery is happening there. Julian is not to be involved." I paused, my eyes locked on t

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