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I don't know when I fell asleep. A phone ring woke me, 3 AM on the screen.

"Ms. Bruce, your sister's condition has deteriorated." The nurse sounded panicked. "She's in a deep coma. Her numbers are crashing. The doctor suggests you come immediately."

My brain went blank. My heart felt crushed in a giant fist.

I threw on clothes, overpaid for a taxi, and urged the driver to speed the whole way. When I reached the hospital, I was soaked through, hair dripping. I didn't care. I ran straight to the ICU. I stood before those heavy automatic doors, hands shaking as I signed a stack of critical condition notices under the nurse's prompting.

Then I was led to a changing room—blue protective suit, mask digging into my face, goggles. Only then was I allowed into the room.

Maya was covered in tubes. The monitors flashed wild numbers.

My eyes nearly fell out. The goggles fogged with tears.

This was my fault.

If I hadn't brought her away from Manhattan, she could've lasted longer in that top-tier sanatorium.

If I hadn't hemorrhaged, Maya wouldn't have gotten worse from shock and fear.

"Maya, please wake up," I whispered against the glass, tears soaking my mask. I remembered graduation day—coming home with my acceptance letter to find my sister collapsed on the kitchen floor, face blue-purple.

I couldn't imagine her gone. How shattered my life would become.

"Ella."

Someone called my name. I turned. Lucas stood there.

"What are you doing here?" I froze completely, forgot to breathe.

"The hospital notified me." He looked at me with complicated tenderness I couldn't read. "Remember? Your sister's my sister too. When I updated Saint Heart Sanatorium's records, I added myself to Maya's emergency contacts."

I stared into Lucas's bloodshot eyes, feeling something like fate.

"Don't worry. Even if it takes everything I have, I'll make sure Maya gets better." Lucas gripped my hand hard. "I'm always here."

Tears spilled over again.

Why.

No matter how far I ran, my life would always be tangled with Lucas.

Maya was. The child in my belly was, too.

He'd brought me despair before. And when I sank into new despair, he was the one offering company and help.

What was I supposed to do with him?

Chapter Twenty

Lucas

I grew up under Grandfather's tutelage in business, and the most important rule I ever learned was this: never let your competitors see your cards.

But in this nephrology hospital, every second I felt transparent. Everyone could tell my real agenda—winning Ella back.

Last week, after a terrifying emergency intervention, Maya finally pulled through. After endless pleading—enlisting doctors, nurses, and hiring three VIP caregivers for round-the-clock shifts—I finally convinced Ella to leave the hospital and rest at her apartment.

I'd realized one of Ella's greatest flaws: she put everyone else before herself.