The silence in the Salinas estate was not peaceful; it was heavy, suffocating, like the air in a room moments before a bomb detonates.
I sat rigid in the corner of the drawing room, my knuckles white as I clutched the leather-bound book in my lap. I had salvaged it from the pile of "trash" my aunt had ordered the maids to incinerate. It was Alessia's prison diary, and it burned against my palms like a live coal.
Dr. Rossi descended the grand staircase, removing his spectacles to wipe them with a handkerchief. His movements were slow, deliberate, and radiating frustration. My aunt Isabella and uncle Marco rushed to the foot of the stairs to meet him.
"How is she?" Aunt Isabella asked, her fingers twisting the pearls at her throat. "Is it her heart? The leukemia returning?"
Dr. Rossi sighed, snapping his medical bag shut. He looked less like a healer and more like a judge. "Mrs. Salinas, I have run every conceivable test. EKG, blood panels, full-body MRI. Chiara is not just stable; she is physiologically flawless."
The room seemed to stop breathing.
"What?" Uncle Marco blinked, his face slack. "But she's... she's frail. She fainted."
"She is an actress," Dr. Rossi said, his voice cutting through the air like a scalpel. "Her heart is strong. Her blood counts are perfect. Frankly, she is healthier than I am."
"That's impossible," Isabella stammered, shaking her head in frantic denial. "The transplant... the rejection risks..."
"There are no rejection risks because there is nothing to reject. She is perfectly healthy," the doctor snapped, losing his patience. "She is playing you for fools."
With that, he turned and walked out. The front door clicked shut, the sound echoing like a gunshot in the cavernous hall.
Isabella sank onto the velvet sofa, her face ashen. "He's wrong. He must be wrong."
"He's not," I said.
My voice shook, but the truth clawing at my throat wouldn't let me stay silent. I stood up, my legs trembling, and walked to the marble coffee table. I slammed the leather book down. The thud made them both jump.
"What is that?" Marco asked, eyeing the book warily.
"Alessia's journal," I said, my voice hardening. "From Danbury."
Isabella waved a dismissive hand, looking away. "Burn it. I don't want to hear about that girl."
"You will listen!"
The command tore from my throat, a scream that shattered the decorum of the room. They both froze, staring at me in shock. I had never raised my voice to the heads of the family. Not once.
I opened the book to the page I had dog-eared. The handwriting was jagged, frantic.
"October 14th, three years ago," I read aloud.
"'They came for me at midnight. Transported to the clinic in Jersey. No anesthesia because the doctor was in a rush. They drilled into my hip. It hurt worse than the beatings in the yard. But it's for Dante. They said Dante is dying. They said he needs my marrow. So I gave it. I would give him my bones if it kept him alive.'"
I looked up. My aunt's face had turned a sickly shade of gray.
"You told her it was for Dante," I whispered, the horror of it making me nauseous. "You lied to her. You used her love for him to harvest her marrow for Chiara."
"We had to," Marco said, his voice hollow, trying to find a footing on the moral high ground that didn't exist. "Chiara needed a match. Alessia... Alessia was in prison. She didn't need her strength."
"She understood," I said, flipping to another page, my anger cold and precise. "She learned Spanish inside. She understood every insult you threw at her at dinner. Every single word."
"She knew?" Isabella covered her mouth, her eyes widening.
"She knew you hated her," I said. "And she left. She didn't run away in a childish tantrum. She escaped hostile territory."
I looked up at the ceiling, toward the master suite where Dante had just carried Chiara.
"And God help us all when the Don finds out," I said.