The Mafia’s Scapegoat Bride: A Stolen Life Chapter 06
The operating room lights stayed on.Â
Matthew leaned against the hallway wall, his fingers rubbing his sleeve absently. His right hand.Â
-the hand that had signed countless death. warrants–was shaking.Â
His heart raced wildly.Â
“Pull all of Olivia’s medical records. Bring the lead.Â
surgeon who operated on me back then.”Â
Memories flooded his mind.Â
He recalled how she coughed up blood every timeÂ
the seasons changed.Â
He’d never pressed her about it. Each time helÂ
asked, she’d simply say it was just a cold.Â
He remembered bringing up having another child. Olivia would open her mouth, then sigh and turn him down. That quiet refusal had sounded fragile, as if it might break apart.Â
Now he finally understood.Â
She’d wanted to tell him she was the one who’dÂ
saved his life. That she could never have childrenÂ
again. That she was in constant agony.Â
But she’d said nothing.Â
Grace had gotten there first, using falsifiedÂ
documents to play the savior.Â
And he had believed every lie.Â
Footsteps echoed from the end of the hall.Â
Men from the family dragged Dr. Nathan over.Â
She still wore her pajamas under a white lab coat,Â
her face ashen. She knew she’d been dragged intoÂ
the family’s bitter conflict.Â
“Who was the real donor that saved me?”Â
Dr. Nathan froze, then pulled a document from herÂ
coat pocket and handed it over. It was the originalÂ
surgical record she’d kept for five years–the onlyÂ
copy left unaltered.Â
The name on the donor line read: [OliviaÂ
Lucchese.]Â
Matthew’s hands trembled harder.Â
“That can’t be right. Grace showed me herÂ
paperwork.”Â
Dr. Nathan cut him off. She knew she would never leave this building if she hid the truth.Â
“You suffered complete renal failure back then. You had less than forty–eight hours to live. Mrs. Olivia insisted on getting tested for a match. We all warned her of the immense risks, but she said she was your wife.”Â
“The match was perfect. She signed the consent form without hesitation. The surgery saved your life, but it left her with permanent damage. Her lung function never fully recovered. Coughing up blood became a regular thing for her.”Â
Matthew sank slowly to the floor.Â
He buried his face in his hands, his shoulders heaving violently.Â
The Don of the Gambino family, a man who never flinched amid gunfire, who’d sentenced thirteen men to death in a single family tribunal, now huddled in the hallway like a stray dog abandoned by its master.Â
Dr. Nathan let out a long sigh.Â
“After the surgery, she requested to remain anonymous. She didn’t want you burdened with guilt, fearing it would ruin what you two had.”Â
She paused for a moment.Â
“Don Matthew… did you truly never know?”Â
Matthew could not answer. He could barely stand.Â
Everything came crashing back.Â
Half–conscious after the crash, he’d heard GraceÂ
screaming that she would donate her organ. He’dÂ
thought how kind she was.Â
When he woke, Grace sat by his bedside, pale andÂ
weak, holding the falsified report and asking if heÂ
would always remember her.Â
He’d taken her hand and sworn to repay her for theÂ
rest of his life.Â
A lifetime of gratitude.Â
That was why he’d turned a blind eye to Grace’sÂ
schemes and petty tricks.Â
He’d let her grow close to Evan, stoking rifts.Â
between mother and son.Â
He’d had Olivia’s face surgically altered to look likeÂ
Grace’s.Â
He’d sent Olivia to prison to take the fall forÂ
Grace’s crimes.Â
Three long years behind bars, all endured inÂ
another woman’s place.Â
He thought of the look Olivia had given him inÂ
court.Â
That haunted gaze had visited his dreams time.Â
and again, jolting him awake night after night.Â
He’d sheltered Grace, keeping her safe inside aÂ
penthouse safe house on the ninety–ninth floor.Â
And what of Olivia?Â
She’d lost a kidney to save him.Â
And he had been the one to lock her away.Â
Her ribs had been broken, the bone piercing herÂ
lung, leaving her clinging to life.Â
She’d sold hot dogs on the street, scrapingÂ
together pennies to buy a burial plot for her father.Â
He’d thought she was putting on an act. That sheÂ
was greedy, desperate for money.Â
“Treat her kindly, Don Gambino,” Dr. Nathan saidÂ
softly.Â
“She has endured far too much pain.”Â
She hesitated for a moment before speakingÂ
again.Â
“There is one more thing. About her foster father,Â
Jonathan.”Â
Matthew lifted his head slowly.Â
“After the fire, Mr. Jonathan suffered severe burns.Â
He stood a good chance of recovering. His condition even improved the night he woke up.Â
But…”Â
Dr. Nathan frowned deeply.Â
“Someone visited him that afternoon. Not long after the visitor left, he bit through his oxygen tube and ended his own life.”

