Chapter 3

Left to Freeze: The Billionaire's Fatal Choice

The heavy wooden door of the trauma ward clicked shut behind the surgeon, but the sound of it echoing in the small room felt like a gunshot.

For a long, agonizing minute, neither woman spoke. The only sound was the rhythmic, indifferent beep of their heart monitors and the low hum of the hospital’s HVAC system pushing warm, dry air into a room that felt like a crypt.

Harper stared at the manila folder sitting on her bedside table. The amputation consent forms. The stark black text on the white paper seemed to vibrate under the harsh fluorescent lights. Her bandaged hands—swathed in thick, pristine gauze and elevated on blue medical foam—trembled violently.

"My hands," Harper whispered, her voice a hollow, reedy sound that didn't belong to the fierce, sharp-tongued woman Nora had known for a decade. "Nora, they’re going to take my hands."

Nora pushed back the layers of heated blankets. Her muscles screamed in protest, her joints stiff and aching with a phantom, biting cold that she knew would never truly leave her bones. Her flat, empty stomach cramped, a vicious reminder of the life that had been extinguished in the dark. She ignored the pain. She swung her legs over the edge of the mattress, her bare feet hitting the cold linoleum floor.

She walked over to Harper’s bed, her hospital gown swishing softly. She didn't offer empty platitudes. She didn't tell her best friend that it was going to be okay, because it wasn't. They had been butchered tonight.

"I’m here," Nora said, her voice steady, though it still held the raspy scrape of the freezing wind. "I am right here, Harper."

Harper turned her head, her dark eyes wide and shining with unshed tears of pure terror. "I’ve played the piano since I was four years old. It’s all I am. It’s all I know how to do. Julian… Julian knew how much this concerto meant to me. He knew."

"Julian is a coward," Nora said flatly, pulling up a plastic guest chair and sitting beside the bed. "He is a sycophantic coward who left you to freeze so he could fetch Silas’s slippers. And Silas let him."

Harper squeezed her eyes shut, a jagged sob tearing through her chest. "They were laughing, Nora. On the phone just now. They were annoyed with us. While my fingers were dying, while your… while your baby…" She choked on the words, unable to finish the sentence.

Nora felt the strange, terrifying numbness spreading through her chest again. The hysterical, weeping girl who had begged her husband for salvation in Gondola 4 was gone. She had bled out on the floor of that icebox.

"Harper," Nora said, leaning closer. "Look at me."

Harper opened her eyes.

"We are going to survive this," Nora promised, her tone devoid of warmth but vibrating with an iron-clad certainty. "But first, I need you to breathe."

"I want to see what they’re doing," Harper demanded suddenly, a spark of her innate fierceness attempting to ignite through the heavy blanket of her trauma. "I want to see where Julian is right now. Get your phone, Nora. Check their location. Check their social media. I need to know what they are doing while I wait for a surgeon to cut off my fingers."

Nora hesitated for only a fraction of a second before walking back to her bedside table. She picked up her phone. The battery was at twenty percent. Her lock screen was a picture of her and Silas from last Christmas—Silas smiling his handsome, practiced billionaire smile, his arm wrapped possessively around her waist.

Nora stared at the photo. She felt absolutely nothing for the man in the picture. The realization was liberating.

She unlocked the phone and opened Instagram. She didn't need to check Julian’s page. She knew exactly who would be documenting the night’s 'tragedy.'

She typed Evelyn Vance’s name into the search bar.

Evelyn’s profile loaded instantly. Her story had a glowing purple ring around it, indicating a new post from less than twenty minutes ago. Nora tapped it.

The screen filled with a softly lit video taken inside the East Wing VIP suite of the Thorne Resort hospital. The room looked like a five-star hotel, complete with a roaring electric fireplace and plush velvet chairs. Evelyn was sitting in the center of the frame, wrapped in a designer cashmere throw blanket, holding a steaming mug of tea. She looked perfectly flushed, her hair elegantly tousled to give the illusion of distress without sacrificing her beauty.

To her left sat Julian Croft, looking attentive and dutiful, handing her a fresh napkin. To her right sat Silas Thorne.

Silas was leaning in, his hand resting gently on Evelyn’s knee, his face etched with a look of profound, protective concern.

Evelyn turned the camera slightly, her voice a breathy, fragile whisper. *"It’s been such a terrifying night. The blizzard was so loud, and the power went out in my gondola. I thought I was going to die up there. But my heroes came for me. Silas braved the storm to get me out. I’m so blessed to have a guardian angel."*

Nora stared at the screen. Evelyn wasn't even shivering.

"What is it?" Harper asked from the bed, straining her neck to see. "What are they doing?"

"They're playing house," Nora said, her voice dropping to a dangerous register. She stepped back over to Harper, holding the phone out so her friend could see the video looping on the screen.

Harper let out a vicious, breathy laugh. "Look at Julian. He looks like a lapdog begging for a scrap. He abandoned me for *that*."

Nora was about to close the app, sickened by the display of pure narcissism, when the video looped again. Evelyn raised her hand to brush a stray lock of hair behind her ear. As she did, the light from the electric fireplace caught something massive and glittering on her right ring finger.

Nora froze. Her breath hitched, stalling in her throat.

"Nora?" Harper asked, noticing the sudden, statue-like stillness in her friend. "What’s wrong?"

"Hold on," Nora whispered. She backed out of the video story and went to Evelyn’s main feed. There was a photo posted right beneath the story, a still shot of Evelyn’s hand resting delicately on Silas’s forearm, clutching the cashmere blanket. The caption read: *Safe and warm. Some bonds can survive any storm.*

Nora zoomed in on the photo. She zoomed in until the pixels of Evelyn’s hand filled the entire screen.

There, resting perfectly on Evelyn’s slender finger, was a ring. But it wasn't just any ring. It was a massive, deep-sea blue sapphire, cut into an antique oval and surrounded by a halo of intricate, Victorian-era diamonds. The gold band was etched with a distinctive, sprawling ivy pattern.

Nora’s left hand slowly lifted. She looked down at her own ring finger.

Resting there was a massive, deep-sea blue stone, cut into an antique oval, surrounded by a halo of intricate, Victorian-era diamonds. The platinum band was etched with a sprawling ivy pattern.

"Oh my god," Harper breathed, her eyes darting between the phone screen and Nora’s hand. "Nora. Is that…?"

"The Thorne Family Sapphire," Nora said, her voice sounding like it was coming from the bottom of a very deep well.

"But Silas said it was destroyed," Harper said, her brow furrowing in confusion. "I remember the engagement party. He gave a whole speech about it."

Nora’s mind violently rewound to the night Silas had proposed in Paris two years ago. He had opened the velvet box, revealing the stunning blue stone. He had looked her dead in the eye, his face a mask of earnest devotion.

*“The original Thorne Sapphire was lost in the Aspen estate fire of 2015, Nora,”* Silas had told her, slipping the ring onto her finger. *“It broke my heart that I couldn't give you the true heirloom. So, I spent six months having the world’s best jewelers craft this flawless, lab-created replica. I wanted you to have it, so you would always know you are a true Thorne. The history doesn't matter. The sentiment does.”*

Nora stared at the glowing screen of her phone. The ring on Evelyn’s finger wasn't a replica. The way the light refracted through the natural inclusions of the stone—a slight, milky star-pattern deep within the blue—was undeniable. It was the legendary, un-replicable flaw of the original Thorne Sapphire. A flaw Nora’s perfect, lab-created stone did not have.

"He lied," Nora whispered, the sheer magnitude of the deception washing over her like a second avalanche.

"He didn't just lie," Harper said, her voice trembling with rising fury. "He gave the real family heirloom to Evelyn. He gave his childhood sweetheart the legacy, and he gave his wife the fake."

The pieces fell into place with a sickening, audible click in Nora’s mind.

Evelyn wasn't just the fragile friend Silas felt obligated to protect. Evelyn was the queen he worshipped. But Evelyn, with her deep-seated narcissism and terror of true commitment, likely didn't want the restrictive, highly scrutinized life of a billionaire’s wife. She wanted the devotion, the money, the protection, and the heirloom—without the vows.

And Silas, desperate to maintain the optics of a stable, successful CEO, had found Nora. A working-class ski instructor. Someone grateful. Someone he could mold. Someone who would bear his heirs and smile for the cameras while he quietly poured his true devotion into Evelyn Vance.

Nora and Harper were never partners. They were placeholders.

"Julian knew," Harper said, her voice cracking. "Julian is the Head of Security. He manages the vault manifests. If Silas pulled the real Sapphire out to give to Evelyn, Julian had to sign off on the insurance transfer. My fiancé knew my best friend’s marriage was a sham, and he helped cover it up to secure his own promotion."

Nora lowered the phone. She looked at the flawless, worthless piece of lab-created glass on her left hand.

For two years, she had worn this ring like a badge of honor. She had defended Silas when the media called him controlling. She had tolerated Evelyn’s passive-aggressive insults at dinner parties, believing Silas’s excuses that Evelyn was just 'lonely and fragile.' She had carried Silas’s child, believing they were building a real family.

She had bled out in a freezing metal box, screaming his name, believing he was coming for her.

"Nora," Harper said softly, watching the terrifyingly blank expression settle over Nora’s face. "Nora, talk to me."

Nora didn't say a word. She reached across her body with her right hand and gripped the replica ring. She twisted it, pulling it over her knuckle. It slid off easily, the metal cold against her skin.

She turned away from Harper’s bed and walked toward the corner of the hospital room. Sitting against the wall was a bright red plastic bin with a biological hazard sticker slapped across the front. It was where the nurses had discarded the blood-soaked clothes they had cut off her body when she arrived.

Nora held the ring over the open chute of the bin.

She didn't cry. She didn't scream. The grief that had been suffocating her only moments ago crystallized, hardening into something sharp, jagged, and infinitely cold.

She opened her fingers.

The fake sapphire dropped into the biohazard bin, landing among the bloody, ruined remnants of her past with a dull, pathetic *thud*.

Nora turned back to face the room. Her eyes were completely dry, her posture rigid, her expression locked into a terrifying, dead-eyed calm.

"They are going to pay, Harper," Nora said quietly. It wasn't a threat. It was a prophecy. "They are going to lose everything they have ever loved, and I am going to make them watch it burn."

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Chapter 4

An hour passed in suffocating silence.

Nora had refused to get back into the hospital bed. Instead, she had methodically searched the small wardrobe in the corner of the room, finding a pair of oversized, gray hospital sweatpants and a thin cotton sweatshirt left behind by a previous patient, like

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Chapter 5

The piece of paper lay on the floor between them, the bold black ink screaming the truth into the suffocating silence of the trauma ward.

Silas stared at Nora, his chest rising and falling in rapid, shallow jerks. He looked like a man who had just stepped off a cliff in the dark, only now realizin

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