Chapter 1
- My mom held her pen against the surgical consent forms, hovering above my name, Ella Millis.
- “Ella, sign it.”
- She didn’t even look up. Her voice is distant, ice-cold.
- “This is what you’re supposed to do, Ella.”
- I cast my eyes down.
- Everything in my sight was a blur.
- I was only nine when my left cornea was transplanted to Grace, my sister. Since then, my world had been cut in half—one side clear. One side completely hazy.
- “Mom.” My throat was so dry that it hurt to speak. “I want… I want to see Grace first.”
- Mom froze mid-signature.
- When she finally looked up at me, there was nothing but impatience on her face.
- “See what? Grace just fell asleep. You want to wake her up?”
- “I swear, I’ll just take one look. I won’t make a sound.”
- My hands twisted around the hem of my shirt, my knuckles almost as white as the fabric.
- I just needed to make sure….
- Make sure that Grace still remembered our promise.
- “What trick are you trying to pull now, Ella?” Her gaze sharpened. “Did you grow a backbone overnight and decided you can defy us now?”
- “It’s not that,” I reasoned out. “I didn’t—“
- “Then shut up and sign the papers!”
- She slammed the consent forms in front of me.
- “You think we sacrificed so much to raise you all these years so you can talk back to us?” She let out a derisive, bitter laugh. “Grace’s life is worth a thousand times more than yours!”
- Her words froze me to the bone.
- The living room door opened. Dad walked in, reeking of cigarette smoke.
- He saw the consent form and me, and his brow creased.
- “Victoria, don’t yell at the kid like that.”
- Hope flickered in me. I looked up at him.
- “You feel sorry for her?” Mom blew up instantly. “Richard, are you forgetting that Grace is still in a critical condition? The doctor said if she doesn’t get a new heart soon, she could die any minute! If you feel so sorry for this charity case we took in, then what about your own daughter’s life?”
- Whatever softness Dad had disappeared in a flash.
- He walked over without a word, his shadow swallowing me up. He looked at Mom and said soothingly, “That’s not what I meant."
- Then, with the same placating tone, he added, "The sooner she signs, the sooner we set the surgery. Stop dragging this out.”
- He lowered his head. His gaze felt like ice on my skin.
- “Ella, be good,” he said. “Do it for Grace. Do it for this family.”
- I stared at him, and suddenly I was eleven again.
- They’d pushed me out of the operating room. The pain from the bone marrow donation had ripped through me so badly that my whole body shook.
- I’d cried for Mom. I’d cried for Dad.
- Mom had rushed over, but the first thing out of her mouth wasn’t asking if I hurt.
- Instead, she had pushed past me, grabbing the doctor’s arm and asking, “Doctor, how was the marrow quality? When can my daughter Grace start the transplant?”
- And Dad had just stood a few steps away, watching in silence.
- And here I was now, knowing that nothing was different.
- Now, Dad’s hand was reaching out, clamping around my cold wrist while he jammed the pen between my fingers.
- “Sign.”
- His voice was low. Final. Leaving no room to argue.
- The pen dug into my palm as he tightened his grip, forcing me to write my name.
- No.
- I couldn’t sign.
- I made a promise to Grace.
- Just when he forced my hand to make the first stroke, I yanked it back with everything I had.
- The tip of the pen carved a harsh black slash across the consent form.
- Mom’s scream almost bust my eardrums.
- “How dare you!”
- She lunged at me, grabbing a fistful of my hair and slamming my head down on the table.
- “You bitch! You think you can fight back now?”