Parents Chose Their Son In Surgery—Then The Hospital Owner Arrived-Teptep

After my brother and I were rushed into surgery from the same crash, my parents pointed at my bed and ordered, “Save him first. She’s always been expendable.”

My mother even whispered, “Take whatever he needs from her.”

They thought I was unconscious—but I heard everything.

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Then a mysterious woman stormed in, revealed I was the hospital owner’s missing daughter, and by sunrise, my parents were arrested, disinherited, and begging me for mercy.

The first thing I remember after the crash was not pain.

It was the smell of rain on hospital coats, antiseptic on the air, and my mother deciding whether I was worth saving.

I could not open my eyes.

Something was taped across my face.

A ventilator pushed breath into my lungs, each one arriving as a rough, mechanical command.

Somewhere close by, wheels rattled over the floor.

A nurse called out numbers.

A curtain scraped along its rail.

Then my mother spoke.

“Save Walker first,” she said.

There was no panic in her voice.

There was urgency, yes, but not the kind that belonged to a mother with two injured children.

It was the brisk certainty she used when returning a faulty kettle or correcting a bill at the counter.

“She’s always been expendable.”

For a second, I thought I had misheard her.

The machine filled my lungs again.

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