My Husband Demanded Five Million for His Own Son's Bone Marrow

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My Husband Demanded Five Million for His Own Son's Bone Marrow

My son was diagnosed with leukemia. The only successful bone marrow match was my husband.

But right before he was supposed to enter the operating room to have his marrow extracted, my mother-in-law grabbed him by the arm and dragged him out the door.

Sign the divorce papers and the asset waiver first. Otherwise, my son is not donating a single drop of marrow!

I stared at them in disbelief.

Five years of marriage. Five years of me working full-time to support the household while my husband studied for his civil service exams and pursued his doctorate.

All because I'd given birth to a son with a hearing disability, my mother-in-law had treated us like cursed omens.

From inside the sterile isolation unit, my son's faint cries drifted through the glass. I signed the papers through a blur of tears, surrendering every property and every penny of savings to my name.

My mother-in-law snatched the agreement with a satisfied look. Only then did my husband change into his sterile gown.

Two hours later, the doctor came rushing out.

"The donor stopped the procedure halfway through. We only collected half the required marrow volume. That amount is nowhere near enough to save the child!"

My whole body was shaking as I ran out of the waiting area.

Audrey Chavez stood blocking the doorway to the ward, chin raised, not a shred of guilt on her face.

"That pathetic little pile of assets you signed over? That only bought half my son's marrow!"

"You want to save that deaf runt? Have your family come up with five million dollars in cash for the rest!"

Inside the sterile unit, my five-year-old son, Cliff Gilbert, seemed to sense something was wrong. His small body curled in on itself, and a whimper escaped him, thin and trembling, like a wounded kitten.

He wore hearing aids. That feeble cry was so quiet most people wouldn't have heard it, but to me it was a poisoned blade driven straight through my heart.

"Cliff..." I pressed myself against the isolation glass, tears flooding my vision until everything dissolved.

"Sarah Fox! What are you standing there for?" Audrey's shrill voice sliced through the air behind me. "Did you not hear me? Five million! Not a cent less! Otherwise your son can lie in there and die!"

I whipped around. My eyes were bloodshot, burning as I fixed them on her, then on the man standing behind her. Dana Gilbert. The man I had loved for five years.

He was still wearing the hospital gown he'd just changed out of. His face was pale, but he wouldn't meet my gaze. His eyes stayed low, darting to the floor.

Just three hours ago, I had walked him to the operating room doors with my own hands, silently grateful that he was willing to donate marrow to save our son.

Now I saw it for what it was. A trap. Every step of it planned by the two of them.

First, use the divorce papers to strip me of everything I owned. Then use the marrow my son needed to survive to bleed my family dry of whatever was left.

My parents died years ago. The only relative I had was a cousin living overseas. They were trying to back me into a corner with no way out.

"Audrey. Dana." My voice was so raw it didn't sound like mine. Every word tasted like blood. "You'll pay for this."

Audrey let out a sharp laugh. The fleshy folds of her face bunched together, smug and vicious. "Pay for it? Pay how? That deaf little son of yours is the real punishment! I told you from the start, deafness is hereditary. You refused to listen. And look what happened. You gave birth to a money pit, and now you want to drag my son down with you!"

Her words were needles, hundreds of them, and not one missed.

Cliff's hearing disability was the deepest wound I carried.

Because of it, Audrey had never shown us a moment of kindness. She called Cliff a "little bastard" and a "deaf runt" to his face.

And Dana had gone from heartbreak in the beginning to impatience, and then to cold indifference.

I used to tell myself it was just the stress of work. Now I understood. Deep down, he was exactly like his mother. Cold-blooded and selfish to the bone.

"Money?" I wiped my tears and looked at them, my gaze flat and dead. "I won't give you another cent. Dana, you chose to stand by and let your own son die. So you and I are done. Completely."

I turned away. I couldn't stand to look at their faces for one more second.

Dr. Rick Lambert, the attending physician, was still waiting for my answer. His expression was grave as he looked at me. "Mrs. Fox, your son's condition is extremely critical. The transplant was interrupted, and his immune system has already been thrown into total disarray. We need to find a new marrow donor as soon as possible, or... convince the original donor to complete the remaining extraction."

I understood exactly what he meant. Either pay up, or watch my son die.

"She doesn't have any money!" Audrey's voice cut through again. "She's been a housewife this whole time. Every bite she's eaten, every stitch she's worn, my son paid for it! Where would she get that kind of money?"

I ignored her shrieking. Instead, I grabbed Dr. Lambert's hand like it was the last lifeline I had left. "Dr. Lambert, is there really no other way? What about the national bone marrow registry? Or maybe an international one..."

He shook his head, his expression heavy with sympathy. "Cliff's tissue type is extremely rare. The chances of finding another match in time are virtually nonexistent."

My heart plummeted.

Cold, absolute despair swallowed me whole.

I stood vigil outside the sterile ward in a daze, motionless as a statue drained of its soul.

My phone buzzed. A message from Dana: "Sarah, Mom just wants what's best for us. As soon as you get the money, I'll go right back in and finish the donation. Cliff is my son too. You think I'd just abandon him?"

The words made my stomach turn.

I didn't reply. I just switched my phone to silent.

My best friend, Sabina Pruitt, a top-tier lawyer, dropped everything and rushed over the moment she heard.

One look at my haggard face and her eyes rimmed red with fury. "Sarah, you are too trusting! You actually believed that woman and her son? You signed away everything in the divorce? Are you out of your mind?"

"What was I supposed to do?" I leaned against her shoulder, and the tears I'd been holding back finally broke free. "I couldn't just stand there and watch Cliff..."

Sabina pulled me close, patting my back gently. "No more crying, Sarah. There's always a way. I'll figure out the money. I'll front it myself for now. But that five million is not going to just land in their hands. Not like this."

Her words gave me a sliver of strength. I lifted my head from her arms and met her steady gaze.

"Sabina, thank you."

"Don't you dare thank me." She smoothed the tangled hair from my face. "What you need to do right now is pull yourself together. If you fall apart, who does Cliff have?"

She was right. I couldn't fall apart.

I was the only person Cliff had left.

Sabina worked fast. In less than half a day, she had five million dollars in cash.

When she appeared at the hospital hauling two enormous suitcases, Audrey and Dana both went wide-eyed.

"Well, well. Turns out your side of the family has money after all." Audrey sauntered over with a thin, plastic smile and reached for one of the suitcases.

Sabina's expression turned to ice. She yanked the cases back. "The money's here. But it's not for you."

She turned to Dr. Lambert. "Doctor, we'd like to set up a dedicated medical trust under the hospital's name with this five million, earmarked exclusively for Cliff Gilbert's ongoing treatment. Every single withdrawal will require both my signature and Sarah's."

The color drained from Audrey's face in an instant. "What is that supposed to mean? My son is donating his bone marrow, and the money goes to the hospital instead of us?"

"Would you prefer the alternative?" Sabina let out a cold laugh. "Hand it to you so you can take the cash and disappear, leaving a child to die? Or are you saying Mr. Gilbert's bone marrow is only worth five million?"

That struck a nerve.

Dana's face cycled between red and white. He leaned in, voice dropping to a furious hiss. "Sabina, don't push it. This is a family matter."

"A family matter?" Sabina arched an eyebrow. "The moment your mother coerced Sarah into signing away every asset she had, the moment you walked out of surgery halfway through, the moment you held your own son's life hostage for five million dollars, this stopped being a family matter. This became a criminal case."

Her voice wasn't loud, but every word landed like a hammer blow. Up and down the corridor, other patients' families turned to stare.

Audrey's expression darkened further. She shoved Dana in front of her. "Son, stop wasting your breath on them! You're not setting foot in that operating room until we have the money in hand!"

Dana looked at his mother, then at me. His eyes were full of conflict and venom.

I knew what he resented. It wasn't his mother's greed. It was the fact that I'd brought Sabina in and derailed their plan.

The standoff played out right there in the hospital corridor.

Audrey had a death grip on Dana's arm, and my heart clenched tighter with every beep of the monitors inside the sterile ward.

"Dr. Lambert," I turned to the doctor standing nearby, his face just as grave, "if we proceed with a second transplant right now, what are Cliff's chances?"

Dr. Lambert let out a sigh. "Mrs. Fox, the situation is complicated. Because the first transplant was interrupted, the child's body has already mounted a stress response. If we force another attempt now, the risks will be significantly higher than the first time. And... we can't guarantee the donor won't back out again midway."

His words sent me plunging into an ice-cold abyss.

I looked at Dana. His mother had him shielded behind her, as if he weren't going in to save a life but to lose one.

"Dana." I spoke slowly, each word deliberate, every trace of emotion stripped from my voice. "I'm asking you one last time. The marrow. Are you donating it or not?"

His gaze wavered. His lips parted, but before he could get a word out, Audrey cut in. "Yes! Of course he's donating! The second that money hits our account, my son walks right in!"

Her greedy stare locked onto the two suitcases at Sabina's feet.

"Fine." Sabina smiled. She crouched down and flipped open one of the cases.

Red bills, stacked tight, blazing like a fire that seared every pair of eyes in the hallway.

Audrey's breathing went ragged.

"You want the money? You can have it." Sabina pulled another document from her bag. "Sign this agreement first."

"What agreement?" Audrey's voice turned wary.

"A donation agreement." Sabina held the document out in front of her, her tone ice-cold. "It states, in clear terms, that this five million dollars is a voluntary gift from Sarah Fox to Dana Gilbert, entirely unrelated to Cliff Gilbert's medical treatment. Mr. Gilbert may choose to accept the gift and then, of his own free will and at no cost, complete the bone marrow donation for his son. Or he may choose not to accept."

Audrey froze. Dana froze.

Neither of them had expected Sabina to pull a move like this.

By reclassifying the transaction as a gift, the entire legal nature of the exchange shifted.

If they took the money, there would be no way, legally, to tie it to the bone marrow donation.

And if Dana took the money and then reneged, he'd be guilty of fraud.

"You... this is extortion!" Audrey was shaking with rage.

"Takes one to know one." Sabina folded her arms and regarded her coolly. "Compared to using your own grandson's life as leverage, I'd say we're being remarkably civilized."

The murmurs around them grew louder. Stares and pointed fingers closed in from every direction, and Dana looked like he wanted the floor to swallow him whole.

He finally snapped. He shoved Audrey aside, stormed up to Sabina, and hissed through clenched teeth, "Enough! What do you people want? Do you have to make this into a public spectacle?"

"A spectacle?" I walked up to him slowly, looking straight into those eyes that had once held me captive. "Dana, the moment you decided to trade your son's life for money, we were past the point of keeping up appearances. Now you have two choices. Sign the paper, take the money, and save Cliff. Or we'll see each other in court."

I saw the shock in his eyes. The fury. And beneath it all, a flicker of something harder to catch.

Panic.

He probably never imagined that I, always so meek and obedient, would turn this hard.

"Fine, fine, fine!" He spat the word three times, the hatred in his eyes almost devouring me whole. "Sarah, you win! I'll sign!"

He snatched the pen from Sabina's hand and scrawled his name across the agreement.

Audrey opened her mouth to protest, but Dana silenced her with a single vicious glare.

Clutching the signed agreement, he turned like a cornered animal and stormed into the surgical prep room.

Dana was wheeled into the operating room.

Audrey was still seething, but the sight of five million dollars in hand brought a smug grin creeping across her face.

She even had the nerve to walk over to me and pat my shoulder, her voice dripping with false warmth. "Sarah, dear, see? Everything worked out just fine. We're family. No need to make things so unpleasant."

I brushed her hand off without a word. She wasn't worth the breath.

Sabina stepped in front of me, shielding me. "Mrs. Chavez, the money has been paid and the agreement signed. We expect Mr. Gilbert to honor his commitment this time. Otherwise, we will not only recover the full amount of the gift but also file criminal fraud charges against both of you."

Audrey's expression shifted, but she forced her composure. "Relax. My son isn't that kind of person."

The moment the words left her mouth, she grabbed the two cash-stuffed cases and hurried out of the hospital. She didn't wait a single extra minute.

I watched her retreating figure and felt nothing but ice spreading through my chest.

This was the woman I had treated like my own mother for five years.

The red light above the operating room flicked on again, and my heart climbed into my throat.

Minutes crawled by. Each second stretched into an eternity.

Dr. Lambert came out briefly to tell me the surgery was going smoothly. Dana hadn't pulled any tricks this time. A full volume of bone marrow had been successfully harvested.

Every taut nerve in my body released at once. My knees buckled, and I nearly collapsed to the floor.

Sabina caught me just in time. "Sarah, hold on. Cliff still needs you."

I nodded. Through the glass, I stared at my son inside the sterile isolation unit, drinking in the sight of him, the little boy about to be filled with new hope.

The transplant went smoothly.

When Dr. Lambert announced the surgery was a success and Cliff's vitals were stable, I wept with joy.

The days that followed were the critical rejection period.

I didn't leave my post outside the isolation unit for a single moment. Every day I spoke into the intercom, singing to Cliff, telling him stories.

Dana and Audrey never showed up. Not once.

As if that five million dollars had severed every last thread of bond between them and Cliff.

I didn't care. I was even grateful they stayed away.

As long as my son got better, I could let go of everything else.

But fate always seemed to enjoy its cruel jokes at my expense.

Just as Cliff's condition was stabilizing and the doctors were preparing to transfer him to a regular ward, someone I never expected appeared before me.

She was a woman who looked about my age, dressed in an expensive Chanel suit, her makeup immaculate. But beneath the polished exterior, a deep, unshakable sorrow lingered in her eyes.

She walked straight up to me, her voice trembling. "Excuse me, are you Cliff Gilbert's mother? Mrs. Sarah Fox?"

I nodded, confused.

Her eyes reddened instantly. She reached into her Birkin bag, pulled out a document, and held it out to me. "Mrs. Fox, please... look at this."

I took the document, bewildered. When I read what was on it, the ground dropped out from under me.

It was a paternity test report.

According to the results, the little boy lying in that sterile isolation unit, my Cliff, shared a 99.99% biological match with the woman standing before me, a woman named Narelle Mason.

The other report showed that Dana Gilbert had no biological relation to my son, Cliff.

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