The Forgotten Past, The Found Self

The Forgotten Past, The Found Self

Gavin

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The sterile smell of antiseptic was the first thing I registered, a dull ache throbbing in my head. I was in a hospital bed, my mind a complete blank. "You're finally awake," a woman with a tired, angry face snapped. "Do you know how much trouble you've caused? Trying to kill yourself over a man. Olivia, you are a disgrace to the Hayes family." More names were thrown at me by a man equally displeased: Liam, Scarlett, Olivia Reynolds-my name. They painted a picture of a pathetic woman, obsessed with her adopted sister Scarlett's fiancé, Liam Sterling. According to them, I had forced Liam into marriage and was now attempting suicide because he wouldn't love me back. My adoptive parents and husband spoke about me as if I wasn' t there, their words cold, cruel, and utterly foreign. Then came the demand: "Scarlett needs a blood transfusion. You have the same rare type. You're going to the operating room now to donate blood to your sister." It wasn't a request. It was an order. I was dragged to the donation room, where Liam-the object of my supposed obsession-followed. "Make sure you take enough," he told the nurse, his eyes burning with contempt. "Don't think this changes anything, Olivia. After this, you'll sign the divorce papers." He even threw a million-dollar check on the bed, a brutal payment for my blood. The old Olivia, who they claimed would have shattered, was gone. The memories, the pain, the love-it felt like a stranger's story. Amnesia had wiped the slate clean, leaving an eerie calm. Lying there, listening to nurses whisper about my pathetic desperation, I realized something profound. The woman they were talking about wasn't me. The past wasn't mine. And my future? It was a blank canvas, finally mine to paint. I took out my phone, found a lawyer's number, and dialed. "I want to file for divorce," I said, my voice steady. "And I want to sever all legal ties with my adoptive parents."

Introduction

The sterile smell of antiseptic was the first thing I registered, a dull ache throbbing in my head.

I was in a hospital bed, my mind a complete blank.

"You're finally awake," a woman with a tired, angry face snapped.

"Do you know how much trouble you've caused? Trying to kill yourself over a man. Olivia, you are a disgrace to the Hayes family."

More names were thrown at me by a man equally displeased: Liam, Scarlett, Olivia Reynolds-my name.

They painted a picture of a pathetic woman, obsessed with her adopted sister Scarlett's fiancé, Liam Sterling.

According to them, I had forced Liam into marriage and was now attempting suicide because he wouldn't love me back.

My adoptive parents and husband spoke about me as if I wasn' t there, their words cold, cruel, and utterly foreign.

Then came the demand: "Scarlett needs a blood transfusion. You have the same rare type. You're going to the operating room now to donate blood to your sister."

It wasn't a request. It was an order.

I was dragged to the donation room, where Liam-the object of my supposed obsession-followed.

"Make sure you take enough," he told the nurse, his eyes burning with contempt.

"Don't think this changes anything, Olivia. After this, you'll sign the divorce papers."

He even threw a million-dollar check on the bed, a brutal payment for my blood.

The old Olivia, who they claimed would have shattered, was gone.

The memories, the pain, the love-it felt like a stranger's story.

Amnesia had wiped the slate clean, leaving an eerie calm.

Lying there, listening to nurses whisper about my pathetic desperation, I realized something profound.

The woman they were talking about wasn't me.

The past wasn't mine.

And my future?

It was a blank canvas, finally mine to paint.

I took out my phone, found a lawyer's number, and dialed.

"I want to file for divorce," I said, my voice steady.

"And I want to sever all legal ties with my adoptive parents."

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