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Blood Doesn't Lie

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When Diana receives a terminal diagnosis, the last people she wants to see are the wealthy Thomas family who abandoned her years ago - especially after they chose their "real" daughter Fiona over her, the biological child accidentally switched at birth. But when her estranged brother Zach corners her at the hospital, demanding she attend their father's birthday, long-buried memories resurface: the brutal bullying Fiona orchestrated, the night her only protector Mathew died saving her, and the damning recording that got her disowned. Now a successful lawyer with nothing left to lose, Diana returns to the mansion that was never home - armed with legal skills and a burning need for justice. But the Thomases won't let their perfect family image be tarnished... even if it means silencing Diana for good.

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Chapter 1: The Diagnosis No One Hears
“Stage four. Inoperable." The words hung like frost between them. Dr. Hartley's voice was gentle, rehearsed. Diana blinked. Once. “You're saying I'm dying." “We can discuss treatment options—" “No," she cut him off. “We can't." He hesitated. “Palliative care, then. There are programs that can—" “I'm not here for a support group brochure." Her smile was tight. Controlled. “I just needed the facts." He studied her face, searching for cracks. “You should consider telling your family. Having support—" “I don't have a family." She stood, shrugging on her blazer like armor. “Not one that counts." “I understand this is a lot to process." Diana opened the door. “Actually, I've had worse news before." Out in the corridor, the fluorescent lights hummed overhead. She moved with measured steps, prescription slips folded crisply in her hand. Each echo of her heels reminded her she was still here—for now. A nurse offered a polite smile as she passed. Diana didn't return it. Emotions were time-consuming. She had a checklist to make, cases to close, a will to finalize. She would go quietly—but on her terms. As she pushed through the glass doors toward the exit, a familiar voice froze her mid-step. “Diana?" She turned. Zach Thomas stood ten feet away, hands in his coat pockets, expression unreadable. Her breath caught for a second. Just a second. “What are you doing here?" he asked, voice flat. She raised an eyebrow. “Since when do you care?" His jaw tightened. “Routine checkup. You?" “Coffee run." He looked down at the empty corridor behind her. “Right." She turned back toward the exit, done with nostalgia. “Wait." He stepped forward. “Dad's birthday is this weekend." Diana laughed—a short, sharp sound. “You still do birthdays?" Zach ignored the jab. “He'd want you there." “Funny. Last time we spoke, you said—and I quote—'never show your face again.'" Zach flinched, barely. “That was five years ago." “Memory's still good," she said. “Some wounds don't heal on cue." “Look, I'm not saying we're proud of how things went down, but—" “But what? You're rebranding history now?" She crossed her arms. “Let me guess: Fiona's still fragile, and I'm still the problem." “That's not fair." “Oh, don't play fair, Zach. You never did." Her voice was low, sharp. “I came back to that house a stranger. You made sure I stayed that way." He exhaled through his nose. “You can't keep carrying this." “I'm not carrying anything," she said. “I dropped it all the day I left." A beat passed. He tried again. “Just come. One hour. For peace." “Peace is what I had when I didn't hear your name for half a decade." “You're still bitter." She smiled, colder than before. “You're still blind." He looked away first. “Do what you want." “I always have." She brushed past him. As the automatic doors slid open, the winter air bit her cheeks. Behind her, Zach didn't call out again. Outside, Diana let the cold burn through the fog in her chest. She stood still for a moment, remembering another corridor. Another night. A hospital morgue. The memory tasted metallic. She swallowed it down. A child screamed somewhere in the ER. A car alarm blared and then silenced. Life, in its noisy indifference, marched on. She pulled out the prescription slips. Folded once, twice. Slipped them into her coat pocket like old receipts. There would be no crying in bathrooms. No calls to people who chose a lie over a daughter. No long-winded confessions to men like Zach who thought regret was the same thing as remorse. Just clean endings. Just control. She walked to her car, turned the key, and whispered into the silence, “It ends how I say it does."

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