Eda Roman clutched her father's diagnostic report, its sharp edge cutting her finger. His cancer had mutated, standard treatment failed, and a fifty thousand dollar deposit for experimental therapy was due by midnight. Fail to pay, and his hospital bed would be cleared. Wife to Axel Foley, a multi-billion dollar CEO, Eda faced an impossible chasm. Her family trust, controlled by Keri Lane, offered a meager three hundred dollars. An emergency fund request met a forty-eight-hour review-a death sentence. Keri's assistant denied expedite and blocked calls. Desperate, Eda called Axel, but his assistant dismissed her with lies, Axel's laughter echoing. Humiliation and betrayal ignited cold fury. Wife to Seattle's wealthiest, yet begging on a hospital floor? Axel's indifference and Keri's games showed her: her father's life couldn't be left in their hands. Wiping tears, the pleading girl vanished; her survival instinct roared. Red lipstick her war paint, Eda Roman marched to Foley Group Headquarters, ready to reclaim what was hers.
Eda Roman clutched her father's diagnostic report, its sharp edge cutting her finger. His cancer had mutated, standard treatment failed, and a fifty thousand dollar deposit for experimental therapy was due by midnight. Fail to pay, and his hospital bed would be cleared.
Wife to Axel Foley, a multi-billion dollar CEO, Eda faced an impossible chasm. Her family trust, controlled by Keri Lane, offered a meager three hundred dollars.
An emergency fund request met a forty-eight-hour review-a death sentence. Keri's assistant denied expedite and blocked calls. Desperate, Eda called Axel, but his assistant dismissed her with lies, Axel's laughter echoing.
Humiliation and betrayal ignited cold fury. Wife to Seattle's wealthiest, yet begging on a hospital floor? Axel's indifference and Keri's games showed her: her father's life couldn't be left in their hands.
Wiping tears, the pleading girl vanished; her survival instinct roared. Red lipstick her war paint, Eda Roman marched to Foley Group Headquarters, ready to reclaim what was hers.
Chapter 1
Eda Roman POV:
I took the paper from Dr. Evans. The diagnostic report was as thin as a cicada's wing, but the sharp edge of the page sliced straight through the pad of my index finger. A bead of dark blood welled up, but I felt absolutely no pain. My entire nervous system was paralyzed by the words printed on the page. Since I was a little girl, it had just been my father and me. The terror of losing my only blood relative crashed through my defenses, leaving me entirely hollow.
Dr. Evans pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose. He looked at me with a clinical detachment that made my stomach churn. He told me the standard chemotherapy had failed. The cancer cells were mutating too fast. He said we had to pivot to an experimental targeted therapy. He shattered the last fragile illusion I had been clinging to.
I snapped my head up. My throat was so dry it felt like I had swallowed broken glass. I forced my vocal cords to work, the words trembling as they left my mouth. I asked him if there was any alternative, any other protocol we could try.
The doctor shook his head slowly. He told me this was the only viable path left. He cut off my retreat with a single, definitive motion.
I took a deep, jagged breath. My fingernails dug so hard into my palms that they left deep, crescent-shaped indentations. I asked him for the exact cost of the new treatment.
Dr. Evans didn't blink. He said the hospital required a fifty thousand dollar upfront deposit. Right at that moment, an orderly pushed a metal supply cart down the corridor. The wheels rattled against the linoleum, a harsh, grating sound that felt like a drill against my skull.
My pupils contracted violently. My heart plummeted into my stomach. Fifty thousand dollars. To the Foley family, that was the cost of a casual dinner or a bottle of vintage wine. To me, it was an insurmountable chasm.
A nurse approached us, her rubber-soled shoes squeaking against the floor, but in my ears, it sounded like the ticking of a death clock. She held a billing notice in her hand.
She extended the paper toward me. As she did, her gaze swept over my faded, slightly pilled trench coat. A flicker of subtle, unmistakable disdain flashed in her eyes. Coming from a working-class background, my skin prickled. I was hyper-aware of that specific look. It was the look reserved for the poor, the desperate, the ones taking up space.
I reached out to take the notice. The nurse didn't let go immediately. She pinched the corner of the paper tightly. We stood there, locked in a silent, humiliating tug-of-war for a full second.
The nurse looked at me coldly. she said that if the deposit wasn't paid by midnight, the bed would be cleared for a paying patient.
I bit down on my lower lip, tasting copper. I yanked the paper out of her grip. The crisp sound of the paper tearing echoed in the quiet corridor.
Dr. Evans sighed, a heavy sound of professional pity, and turned to walk away. He left me standing entirely alone beneath the sickly, pale fluorescent lights of the hospital hallway.
I backed up until my shoulders hit the freezing plaster wall. My legs turned to water. My body slid down the wall in slow motion, devoid of any skeletal support, until I hit the floor.
I closed my eyes. Behind my eyelids, a vivid image flashed. Just last night, I had watched my husband, Axel, on the financial news. He was standing at a podium, looking sharp and invincible, announcing a multi-billion dollar corporate acquisition.
A wave of absolute absurdity washed over me. I was the wife of the CEO of the Foley Group. I was married to one of the wealthiest men in Seattle, yet I was sitting on a dirty hospital floor, unable to scrape together the money to save my father's life.
My hand moved to my coat pocket. My fingers brushed the cold metal casing of my phone. The icy touch made me shiver violently.
I pulled it out and unlocked the screen. My thumb hovered over Axel's name in my contacts. It stayed suspended in the air. I couldn't press it.
The memory of the last time I asked Axel for money crawled up my spine like a venomous snake. He hadn't even looked up from his laptop. He had just coldly told me to go through the trust manager. The humiliation of that moment burned in my chest.
I changed my mind. I swiped past my contacts to the last page of my home screen. I stared at the sleek black app icon embossed with the Foley family crest.
This was the family trust management system. It was also the electronic dog leash Keri Lane used to keep me firmly in my place.
I took a shaky breath and tapped the app. The facial recognition scanned my pale features. The screen unlocked, revealing a sterile, dark gray interface.
At the very top of the screen, my available monthly allowance was displayed in stark white numbers. Three hundred dollars. The number burned my eyes.
I tapped the emergency medical request channel. Instantly, a massive wall of complex legal disclaimers popped up, blocking the screen.
I scrolled frantically, checking the agreement boxes. My hands were shaking so badly that my thumb kept hitting the wrong buttons, forcing me to restart the process twice.
Finally, the document upload page loaded. The system demanded the specific ICD-10 medical codes and the attending physician's signature.
I raised my phone, pointing the camera at the diagnostic report in my lap. The lens blurred. My hand was trembling too violently to focus.
I grabbed my right wrist with my left hand, squeezing the bones together until it hurt. I forced my muscles to lock into place. I hit the shutter button.
The upload progress bar appeared. It crawled across the screen with agonizing slowness. Every passing second felt like a blade slicing thin ribbons off my nerves.
The bar finally hit one hundred percent. A prompt box materialized on the screen. I stared dead at the text, my lungs forgetting how to draw air.
"Your application has been submitted. The system will conduct a preliminary review within forty-eight hours."
She Found Freedom, Not His Love
Falstaff
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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Chapter 21
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Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
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Chapter 24
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Chapter 25
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Chapter 26
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Chapter 27
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Chapter 28
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Chapter 29
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Chapter 30
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Chapter 31
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Chapter 32
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Chapter 33
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Chapter 34
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Chapter 35
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Chapter 36
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Chapter 37
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Chapter 38
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Chapter 39
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Chapter 40
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