
Chapter 1 of Betrayed by the Alpha: My Love for the Enemy
The shrill ring of my phone pierced the darkness at exactly 2:17 AM. I fumbled for it on my nightstand, my heart already racing before I'd even answered.
"Hello?" My voice was thick with sleep.
"Ms. Crawford? This is Nurse Patel from Mercy General in Millbrook." The formal tone sent ice through my veins. "Your mother has suffered a severe heart attack. She's been rushed into emergency surgery."
The world tilted sideways. "Is she—will she—"
"The next few hours are critical," the nurse said gently. "You should come as soon as possible."
My fingers trembled as I ended the call. The digital clock on my nightstand glowed accusingly: 2:19 AM. Grey would still be at the hospital—he was on call tonight at Seattle General.
I dialed his number, praying he'd answer despite the hour.
"What is it?" His voice was clipped, irritated. Background noises suggested he was still at work.
"Grey, my mom's had a heart attack. They're operating on her now." My voice cracked. "I need to catch the first flight out in a few hours. Can you—"
"I'm in the middle of something complicated here, Olive." He sighed heavily. "A patient with a rare cardiac condition just came in. I can't just leave."
I gripped the phone tighter. "But my mom—"
"Handle it," he said, his tone dismissive. "You've got this. I'll try to check in later."
The line went dead before I could respond.
* * *
The ICU waiting room smelled of stale coffee and despair. Seven days had passed since Mom's surgery. Seven days of machines breathing for her, of doctors speaking in hushed tones about blockages and procedures. Seven days of me sleeping in a hard plastic chair, jumping every time a nurse appeared.
My phone buzzed with a notification. Facebook. I almost ignored it—what did social media matter when my mother was fighting for her life? But the algorithm had other plans.
There they were, right at the top of my feed: Grey and Annika, smiling in a furniture store. His arm was around her shoulders as they examined a plush sofa. The caption read: "New place, new beginnings! Thanks for helping me choose, Grey!"
The timestamp showed it was posted last night—when I'd called him three times about Mom's fever spiking.
"You're not going to believe this," I whispered to Mom's unconscious form. "But I think I just figured something out."
The next morning, Grey finally called.
"Why didn't you answer my calls last night?" I demanded, stepping into the hospital corridor.
"I told you, I was busy with that complicated case." He sounded defensive. "What's the emergency?"
"Annika's apartment redecorating isn't a medical emergency, Grey." My voice was steady despite the rage building inside me.
"Oh, that." He paused. "Look, she's going through a tough time with her breakup. She needed someone to help her make decisions."
"And that someone had to be you? While my mother was in intensive care?"
"Olive, you're overreacting. Annika needs me right now."
"And I don't?" The words hung between us, heavy with five years of unspoken truth.
* * *
Day fifteen dawned gray and cold. I'd barely left the hospital except for quick trips to change clothes at the nearby motel. Mom had stabilized, then destabilized again. The doctors spoke of additional surgeries, more complications.
"Her heart is just too weak," Dr. Sharma explained gently. "We need to operate again tonight."
I nodded numbly, then reached for my phone. Three missed calls from work. None from Grey.
I tried him again. Straight to voicemail.
"Grey, it's me. Mom's condition has worsened. They're operating again tonight. Please..." My voice broke. "Please call me back."
Hours passed. The surgery began. I paced the waiting room, checking my phone every minute.
Finally, at 9:47 PM, he called back.
"Olive." He sounded distracted. "Sorry I missed your calls. I was at this wine tasting event with Annika—she's networking for that new position at the gallery."
The background noise suggested he was still there, crystal clinking, polite laughter.
"Her networking is more important than my mother's surgery?" I asked quietly.
"Come on, you're being overly dramatic." He sighed. "How is she anyway?"
In that moment, something inside me hardened into resolve. Five years of sacrifices, of putting his needs first, of believing in a future that apparently only I could see—it all crystallized into perfect clarity.
"My mother is dying," I said simply, "and you don't even care enough to pretend otherwise."
The silence on the other end spoke volumes.
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