The harsh fluorescent lights stabbed through Ava's retinas the second she forced her heavy eyelids open.
A sharp, radiating pain shot through her bruised ribs, forcing a wet gasp from her dry lips.
The heart monitor beside her bed beeped in a steady, agonizing rhythm. She turned her head, her neck stiff and aching. The sterile, white hospital room was completely empty.
Bryant wasn't here. Her husband of three years was nowhere to be seen.
The heavy wooden door pushed open. Nurse Sullivan walked in, her rubber-soled shoes squeaking against the linoleum. She carried a clipboard and a clear plastic bag filled with Ava's personal items.
"Oh, thank God. You're awake," Nurse Sullivan breathed, rushing over to check the IV drip taped to the back of Ava's bruised hand. "You've been unconscious for twelve hours since the paramedics pulled you from that sedan."
Ava tried to swallow, her throat feeling like sandpaper. "My husband?"
"We called his office multiple times," Nurse Sullivan avoided her eyes, focusing entirely on the IV bag, her voice laced with uncomfortable pity. "They said he was in back-to-back meetings and couldn't be disturbed."
A cold knot formed in the pit of Ava's stomach. She had almost died, and Bryant was in a meeting.
The nurse placed the plastic bag on the edge of the mattress. "They recovered this from the wreckage. I'll leave you to rest. Press the red button if you need anything."
As the door clicked shut, Ava reached into the bag. Her fingers brushed past her shattered smartphone, the glass cutting slightly into her skin. Beneath it lay a slightly crumpled, water-stained but still sealed envelope from a premier New York DNA lab. The edges of the thick paper were warped from the dampness of the wreckage, yet the seal remained stubbornly intact, holding the truth she had bled to uncover.
She had mailed the samples weeks ago, driven by a nagging suspicion that the Ford family's constant mockery of her "orphan" status was built on a lie.
Her hands trembled violently as she tore the thick paper open. She pulled out the official genetic testing report, her eyes scanning past the dense medical jargon.
She stopped breathing.
Her gaze locked onto the conclusive summary at the bottom of the page.
99.9 percent genetic match with Richard and Anona Beaumont.
The paper slipped from her fingers, landing softly on the white blanket.
The Beaumonts. The patriarch and matriarch of New York's wealthiest, most ruthless old-money dynasty.
The reality of it hit her chest like a physical blow. For three years, Bryant and his mother had gaslit her, treating her like a penniless charity case they had saved from the gutter.
She gripped the bedsheets. The confusion evaporating, replaced instantly by a hot, suffocating wave of pure anger.
She needed to look Bryant in the eye. She needed to see his face when she asked him why he left her alone in a hospital bed.
Ava pushed the thin blanket off her legs. The cold air hit her bare skin. She swung her feet over the edge, her toes touching the freezing floor tiles.
She grabbed the cold metal of the IV pole. Her knuckles turned stark white as she pulled her body weight up.
Intense dizziness washed over her, making the room spin, but she bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted copper, forcing herself to stay upright.
She shuffled slowly toward the partially open room door. The thin fabric of her hospital gown brushed against her bruised, purple knees with every agonizing step.
She stepped out into the quiet corridor. The low hum of the ventilation system masked the soft padding of her bare feet.
A familiar, hushed laugh echoed from the vending machine alcove twenty feet down the hall.
Ava froze. The sound paralyzed her lungs.
She inched forward, pressing her spine flat against the cool plaster of the hallway wall. She slowly peeked around the corner.
Bryant Ford stood there in his signature tailored navy suit. He had a woman pinned against the glass of the snack machine.
The woman turned her head slightly. The delicate, perfectly contoured features of Kadence Fischer came into view. The socialite Bryant always claimed was just a "crucial business associate."
Bryant leaned in, pressing his mouth hard against Kadence's lips. His right hand slid down her waist, resting protectively over the slight, undeniable curve of Kadence's stomach.
"I hate the smell of hospitals," Kadence whined, pulling back slightly to pout. "Our baby deserves a better environment, Bryant. Not this depressing place."
Bryant smirked, his thumb tracing Kadence's jawline. "Just be patient, baby. As soon as Ford Innovations IPOs next month, I'm dumping my useless wife. You'll have the ring you deserve."
Ava pressed her palm hard over her mouth. Her stomach violently heaved. The ultimate betrayal struck her with the force of a physical blow to the spine.
"She's so pathetic," Bryant continued, his voice dripping with disgust. "No background, no money. She'd be living on the streets if it wasn't for my charity."
A tear didn't fall. Instead, a cold, calculating calmness washed over Ava's brain, freezing the pain in her ribs.
She pulled her cracked smartphone from her pocket. The screen flickered, but the camera application opened.
She zoomed in, her hands suddenly perfectly steady. She hit record.
Ten seconds of irrefutable, high-definition footage. Bryant kissing his pregnant mistress in the hospital where his wife was recovering from a near-fatal crash.
Ava stopped the recording and immediately uploaded the file to a secure, encrypted cloud folder.
She stepped back into the shadows. She didn't scream. She didn't confront them.
She retreated down the corridor, her bare feet making absolutely no sound, leaving the cheating couple completely unaware of the executioner they had just awakened.
Ava walked back into her hospital room and locked the heavy door behind her.
She sat on the edge of the bed, her eyes dark and hollow, and dialed a private Wall Street number she hadn't used in three years.