She Saved Her Mother With A Kidney. Then Paris Exposed The Truth-Lian

The marble floor under my cheek was the first thing I remember clearly.

Not my mother’s voice.

Not the fever.

Image

Not even the pain burning through the right side of my body where my only remaining kidney kept trying to work.

The floor was cold enough to feel wet, and my skin was so hot that the contrast made me shiver harder.

Outside the windows of my Manhattan penthouse, the city was still awake in the strange half-life it has after midnight.

Sirens rose and faded somewhere below.

Elevator cables groaned inside the walls.

Rain tapped against the glass in thin, impatient lines.

At 3:07 a.m., I rolled onto my side and nearly blacked out from the pain.

My phone was on the rug a few inches from my hand.

It took three tries to reach it.

By the time I unlocked it, my fingers were shaking so hard the screen kept blurring under my thumb.

The thermometer on the coffee table read 104.2.

I knew enough about my own body to understand that number was not a suggestion.

Five years earlier, I had given my left kidney to my mother.

The scar along my waist had faded from angry red to a thin silver line, but it still pulled sometimes when the weather changed or when I moved too fast.

I used to think of it as proof of love.

Then I learned proof only matters to people interested in the truth.

I called Margaret Sterling at 3:12 a.m.

She answered on the fourth ring.

For a moment, I could not speak because the airport noise behind her came through so clearly.

Rolling suitcases.

A boarding announcement.

My sister Sophie laughing somewhere close enough that I could hear champagne glasses touch.

“Mom,” I whispered. “I need help.”

Margaret exhaled like I had interrupted something expensive.

“Elena, why are you calling me at this hour?”

“I think it’s my kidney. I have a fever.”

There was a pause.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *