The Mafia’s Scapegoat Bride: A Stolen Life Chapter 08
I hovered just below the ceiling, gazing down attÂ
the body lying on the operating table.Â
Pale. Gaunt. Lifeless.Â
A white sheet covered her up to the chin, revealingÂ
a face crisscrossed with scars.Â
Once this had been Olivia Lucchese.Â
Now it was nothing but a copy of GraceÂ
Lucchese’s features.Â
A bitter smile tugged at my lips.Â
In the end, I’d never managed to save enough.Â
money for the plot next to my foster fatherÂ
Jonathan.Â
The hospital hallway in the small hours was asÂ
silent as a tomb.Â
I tried to drift through the window and escape, yet some invisible force held me fast. I could only drift back and forth above the room.Â
I was trapped here by the family’s unspoken. chains–unable to leave, yet never truly belonging.Â
Then I saw Matthew.Â
He strode forward, his shirt rumpled, eyesÂ
bloodshot, a fresh streak of dried blood cuttingÂ
across his cheekbone.Â
Gone was his usual unhurried poise. He only woreÂ
this look when Grace was involved.Â
He paused at the doorway for a heartbeat, then.Â
walked straight toward me.Â
He passed right through my form.Â
He froze. Whirling around to stare at the empty air,Â
he lifted his palm, still stained with blood fromÂ
smashing the wall.Â
His lips moved.Â
“Impossible.”Â
He kicked the door open hard.Â
Mark stood beside my bed, clutching a neatlyÂ
folded piece of paper.Â
At the sight of my face beneath the sheet, hisÂ
hands shook, and the paper fluttered to the floor.Â
It was a test paper, marked with a bright A+.Â
Evan had arrived too. Trembling, he pulled backÂ
the sheet.Â
At the sight of the disfigured face, his legs gave way and he collapsed to the ground.Â
His lips quivered. He had never looked upon death before.Â
“Dad… why isn’t she moving? We were supposedÂ
to… go home.”Â
Matthew struck Evan across the face, hisÂ
expression hollow.Â
The sharp crack echoed down the hallway.Â
It was not mere punishment.Â
It was a harsh lesson–one he would have to learnÂ
to survive.Â
In the mafia world, tears were worthless.Â
I drifted over to Mark and reached out to stroke hisÂ
head.Â
My fingers slipped straight through his hair.Â
I could touch nothing at all.Â
“My sweet boy. I saw everything. I’m so sorry…Â
you’ve suffered too much.”Â
The click of high heels sounded from the doorway.Â
Grace stepped inside. The tip of her nose was red,Â
not from crying, but from the cold.Â
Spotting her, Mark shot to his feet and threw aÂ
punch straight at her.Â
“You murderer! You locked her away in prison, andÂ
now you’ve killed her on this operating table!”Â
Grace crumpled to the floor on cue.Â
Tears streamed down her cheeks as she buriedÂ
her face in her hands, putting on that practicedÂ
sobbing she’d perfected over ten years within theÂ
family.Â
“It’s not like that… Every surgery carries risks.Â
Cosmetic procedures only have a 0.01 percentÂ
chance of going wrong. Sister was just unlucky.Â
Who could have known it would happen to her?”Â
I lingered above, watching her performance.Â
I laughed softly to myself.Â
Unlucky.Â
Yes. I was always the unlucky one.Â
Forced to wear another woman’s face.Â
Locked in prison in her place.Â
My foster father driven to his death.Â
Slaughtered on an operating table.Â
All of it, just bad luck.Â
Grace lifted her tear–streaked face and lookedÂ
toward the silent man in the doorway.Â
“Matthew, you understand, don’t you?”Â
Her voice held the soft confidence of someoneÂ
who already knew she would get away scot–free.Â
She knew a few tears would make everything fadeÂ
away. It had worked every single time for five longÂ
years.Â
I drifted beside Matthew, eager to see his reaction.Â
I froze.Â
His gaze was fixed on the body beneath the sheet,Â
locked on that scarred face without moving anÂ
inch.Â
In his hand, he gripped a scalpel so tight hisÂ
knuckles blanched white. It was the blade fromÂ
Grace’s operating table.Â
When had he taken it?Â
He walked to the table and stared down at myÂ
face.Â
He studied the cigarette burns on my forehead,Â
the scratches along my cheekbones, the jagged stitches lining my jaw:Â
He stood there for a long time.Â
Then he turned and walked toward Grace.Â
She was still on the floor, tilting her head up toÂ
meet his eyes.Â
Matthew crouched before her, his gaze pinning herÂ
in place.Â
Then he raised the scalpel and sliced it hardÂ
across her face.Â
The blade cut from her cheekbone down to herÂ
jaw. Skin split open, and fresh blood welled up.Â
The wound was shallow yet deliberate, an exactÂ
match for the scars on Olivia’s face.Â
Grace’s scream was shrill enough to shake theÂ
ceiling.Â
“Matthew! You’ve cut the wrong person!”Â
Matthew seized her wrist, dragged her to her feet and shoved her against the wall. He grabbed theÂ
stack of documents from the floor–the organÂ
donation records, prison files, screenshots from the surveillance footage–and hurled them straightÂ
into her face.Â
“Read them for yourself.”Â
Grace’s face drained of color, paler even than herÂ
newly wounded flesh.Â
Matthew stepped back, his voice trembling, justÂ
as it had been the day he’d proposed to Olivia.Â
“You drove Jonathan to take his own life. He wasÂ
your birth father.”Â
“You used my name to bribe the prison guards,Â
making Olivia’s days pure agony.”Â
“You lied and claimed you were the one whoÂ
donated your kidney to save me, stealing herÂ
gratitude.”Â
“And you were the one who put her on thatÂ
operating table. You killed her.”Â
He lifted the bloodied scalpel once more. His voice dropped to a whisper, soft as the vowsÂ
spoken inside a church.Â
“Tell me… how am I supposed to thank you?”

