She Saved Her Mother’s Life, Then Froze the Money in Paris-Tien3004

The marble under my cheek was cold enough to feel wet.

For several minutes, I kept telling myself that was why I could not stop shaking.

It had to be the floor.

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It had to be the winter air pressing against the glass walls of my Manhattan penthouse.

It had to be anything except the truth that my body was burning from the inside, and the only kidney I had left felt like someone had wrapped it in wire.

The city outside was still awake in that strange way New York never quite sleeps.

Headlights moved below me.

A siren cried somewhere far away.

The refrigerator hummed in the open kitchen, steady and indifferent.

I was thirty-two years old, lying on the floor of an apartment people told me looked like a magazine spread, trying to keep my hand steady enough to call my mother.

My fever was 104.2.

I knew that number because the smart thermometer had said it twice, once in my ear and once under my tongue, as if the second reading might make it kinder.

It did not.

My throat felt lined with broken glass.

My right side pulsed with a deep, hot pain that made my vision white at the edges.

That was the side that mattered.

That was where my remaining kidney lived.

Five years earlier, I had signed my name on a donor consent form because Margaret Sterling needed a kidney, and I was her daughter.

That was how everyone said it.

Her daughter.

As if the word itself should have ended every conversation.

As if daughters were born with spare parts already labeled for family use.

I remember the hospital room before the surgery.

Margaret was propped against white pillows, one hand resting dramatically across her forehead while Sophie sat beside her scrolling through her phone.

Sophie had brought tulips.

Not for me.

For Margaret.

I had brought my test results, my fear, and the kind of hope that embarrasses me now.

I thought saving my mother’s life would change something between us.

I thought the scar would be proof.

I thought maybe, after the blood work and the surgical consent and the pain that came afterward, Margaret would finally look at me without measuring what else she could take.

For a while, she performed gratitude well enough that other people believed it.

At charity lunches, she touched my arm and said, “My Elena gave me life twice.”

At dinners, she told strangers I was her miracle.

In private, she called me sensitive when I asked why Sophie had charged another vacation to an account I funded.

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