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Chapter 5 - Chapter 5

Sophia's POV

Two years ago...

The hospital waiting room smelled like disinfectant and despair. I'd been sitting in the same plastic chair for eighteen hours, watching doctors come and go with grave expressions, listening to machines beep ominously from behind closed doors.

Alfonso was dying.

The words kept echoing in my head, senseless and impossible. My baby brother, who'd called me just three days earlier to excitedly show me his new dorm room, was lying unconscious with traumatic brain injuries from a fall that shouldn't have happened.

"Miss Cohen?" The neurosurgeon's voice was gentle but clinical. "I need to speak with you about your brother's condition."

More words. More medical terminology. More percentages and probabilities that meant nothing because Alfonso was supposed to wake up tomorrow and complain about the hospital food and ask me to bring him his favorite books.

But the doctor's face told me that tomorrow might never come.

I don't remember leaving the hospital. I don't remember walking six blocks to that dimly lit hotel bar, don't remember ordering wine after wine until the world blurred around the edges. I just remember sitting there, drowning in grief so profound it felt like dying.

"Rough day?"

The voice was deep, warm, with just a hint of an accent I couldn't place. I looked up to find a man settling onto the barstender next to me. Even in my grief-stricken haze, I could appreciate the sharp cut of his jaw, the way his expensive suit molded to broad shoulders.

"You could say that," I whispered.

"You look like you could use a friend."

The voice was warm, concerned, coming from the shadows beside me. The bar was deliberately kept almost pitch black - one of those exclusive hotel lounges where privacy was the main attraction. Between the darkness, my grief-induced intoxication, and the way he positioned himself just outside the minimal lighting, I never got a clear look at his face.

"My brother..." I tried to explain, but the words dissolved into sobs.

He didn't ask questions. Didn't push for details. Just sat beside me in comfortable silence, occasionally signaling the bartender when my glass emptied. When I finally stopped crying long enough to speak, he listened without judgment as I poured out my terror and helplessness.

"The doctors don't know if he'll ever wake up," I whispered. "And I can't... I can't lose him. He's all I have."

"You won't lose him," he said quietly. His voice had a slight accent I couldn't place, and something about its certainty made me believe him. "Some people are fighters. They come back when you least expect it."

We talked for an hour. Or rather, I talked and he listened, his presence more felt than seen in the overwhelming darkness. I couldn't make out his features - just the outline of broad shoulders, the glint of expensive cufflinks when he moved, the way shadows seemed to embrace him like he belonged to them. He never told me his name. I never asked. In that cocoon of darkness and despair, we were just two strangers offering each other comfort.

When he suggested we go upstairs, I should have said no. Should have remembered I was a good girl, a medical student, someone who didn't do things like this.

Instead, I nodded.

His hotel room was just as dark as the bar below. Heavy blackout curtains blocked any light from the city outside, and he never turned on the lamps. In the absolute darkness, every sensation was heightened - the warmth of his skin, the sound of his breathing, the way his hands mapped my body like he was memorizing it through touch alone.

I felt him more than saw him. Strong shoulders, muscular chest, the way he moved with controlled power even in the darkness. But his face remained a mystery, hidden in shadows that seemed to be his natural habitat.

"Are you sure?" he asked against my lips, his hands already working at the ties of my scrub top.

"Yes," I breathed, and meant it.

What followed was unlike anything I'd ever experienced. He undressed me slowly, reverently, his hands mapping every curve of my body like he was memorizing it. When he laid me back on the king-sized bed, I was already trembling with need.

"So beautiful," he murmured, his mouth trailing down my throat to my breasts. When he took my nipple between his teeth, I arched off the bed with a cry that seemed to come from someone else's throat.

He worshipped my body with a patience that bordered on torture, his tongue and fingers finding places that made me gasp and writhe beneath him. By the time he finally settled between my thighs, I was begging.

"Please," I whispered, my hands fisting in hishair.

"Tell me what you want," he commanded, his voice rough with control.

"You. I want you inside me."

When he finally entered me, I cried out at the exquisite fullness, the way he seemed to touch something deep inside me that had never been touched before. He moved with controlled power, each thrust deliberate and devastating, pushing me higher and higher until I shattered around him with a violence that left me sobbing.

He held me as I came apart, whispering words in what sounded like Italian, his own release following mine with a groan that vibrated through his chest into mine.

Afterwards, we lay tangled in sweat-dampened sheets, his fingers tracing lazy patterns on my bare shoulder. For the first time in days, the crushing weight of Alfonso's accident lifted from my chest.

When I woke up before dawn, the shame hit me like a physical blow. I'd given myself to a complete stranger. I dressed quickly in the gray morning light and fled, too ashamed to even look back at the sleeping figure in the bed.I was so flustered that I didn't realize I had forgotten something. When I got home, I realized I had lost a ring.

I never told anyone. Never spoke of it again. Buried it so deep I almost convinced myself it hadn't happened.

Almost.

-

"How dare you."

The words exploded out of me, cutting through Michael and Isabella's stammered excuses.

"How dare you judge me for one night of grief when you've been lying and cheating for an entire year!"

Michael pulled the sheet higher, his face flushed with embarrassment and anger. "That's completely different—"

"Is it?" I stepped into the room, my voice gaining strength with each word. "You want to talk about being disgusting? You want to talk about being morally bankrupt? Let's talk about a man who proposed to one woman while fucking her sister. Let's talk about someone so pathetic he can't even be honest about who he wants."

Isabella clutched the pillow tighter against her chest, her face pale. "Sophie, you don't understand—"

"I understand perfectly." I turned my rage on her, years of second-place treatment and casual cruelty finally finding their voice. "I understand that you're so selfish you couldn't even let me have one thing. One person who chose me instead of you."

"He never chose you! You were just the backup plan, the safe option with the family money. You think he actually wanted to marry the damaged goods when he could have me?"

"Damaged goods?" I laughed, the sound sharp and bitter. "Isabella, you're literally naked in another woman's fiancé's bed. You've been carrying on an affair for a year behind my back. And you think I'm the damaged one?"

Michael's jaw tightened. "At least she's honest about what she wants. You've been playing the innocent virgin this whole time, pretending to be something you're not—"

"I never pretended anything!" The words came out as a roar. "I made one mistake, in the worst moment of my life, and I've regretted it every day since. But you?" I pointed at both of them. "You've been making calculated choices to deceive and humiliate me for months. There's no comparison."

"Sophie, listen—"

"No, YOU listen." I moved closer, my voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "I lost my virginity to a stranger who showed me more kindness in one night than either of you have in two years. A man who held me while I cried, who comforted me when I thought my brother was dying, who treated me like I was worth something. And you know what? Even drunk and grieving and making the biggest mistake of my life, I was still a better person than either of you are right now."

The silence that followed was deafening.

"Well, since we're being honest..." She smiled, "You should know that Daddy already knows about Michael and me."

The words hit me like a physical blow. "What?"

"He's known for months," Isabella continued, clearly enjoying my shock. "Why do you think he let me elope with Mike? Because I'm already carrying Mike's child. Our father chose to fulfill my happiness."

My knees nearly buckled. "That's not... he wouldn't..."

"He would. And he did." Isabella's smile widened. "He was perfectly fine with Michael and me being together, as long as the family got what it needed from the marriage. One daughter's as good as another, right? At least until I decided I wanted something better."

The betrayal was so complete, so absolute, that for a moment I couldn't breathe. My father. My sister. My fiancé. All of them, conspiring against me, using me, planning my life like I was a chess piece instead of a person.

How long have I been the only one who didn't know?

"You're all monsters," I whispered.

Michael finally found his voice. "Sophie, it's not that simple—"

"Don't." I held up a hand, my voice deadly calm. "Don't say another word. Just... stay away from me. Both of you."

I turned and walked out of that bedroom, out of that apartment, out of the life I'd thought I was building. Each step felt like walking through quicksand, but I kept moving until I reached my car.

I sat there for a long moment, staring at my reflection in the rearview mirror. My face was pale, my eyes red-rimmed, my carefully constructed world in ruins around me.

What am I supposed to do now?

The ringing of my phone cut through the silence.

"Miss Cohen?" The voice was professional, clinical. "This is Dr. Martinez from New York Presbyterian. I'm calling about your brother Alfonso."

My heart stopped. "Is he okay? Did something happen?"

"No, there's been no change in his condition. But I'm calling because we've received instructions from your father to discontinue treatment. He's requested that we begin the process of—"

"No!" The word came out as a scream. "No, you can't do that. Alfonso is going to wake up. He just needs more time—"

"Miss Cohen, I understand this is difficult, but without payment authorization—"

"Please." I was crying now, ugly, desperate sobs. "Please don't give up on him. I'm coming to the hospital right now. Just... please wait. Don't do anything until I get there."

I hung up before he could respond and gunned the engine, my hands shaking so badly I could barely grip the steering wheel.

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