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替身小叔:代替殘疾哥哥安慰寂寞嫂子

替身小叔:代替殘疾哥哥安慰寂寞嫂子

By:  金順子Completed
Language: Traditional_chinese
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「不可以,我是你的嫂子啊...」 老公因為意外不能人道後,我常常在深夜痛哭。 老公的兄弟很心疼深夜爬上了我的床,「嫂子,你老用那些玩具會傷身體的,我來幫你。」 說著直接粗暴地扛起了我的雙腿……

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Chapter 1

第1章

For Lily, the atmosphere felt suffocating. The air was thick with the scent of wet asphalt and exhaust, a smell that usually meant the end of a long workday, but today, it felt like the beginning of an ending.

She hurried down the narrow, cracked sidewalk of the district, her old canvas shoes soaking up the cold puddles left behind by the downpour. She didn’t care about the dampness seeping into her socks. Her mind was a frantic loop of numbers, medicine names, and the pale, ghostly image of her younger sister’s face.

When she pushed open the heavy glass doors of the San Jose Community Clinic, the shift in atmosphere was jarring. Outside was the chaos of the city; inside was the sterile, unforgiving silence of a place where people came to bargain with fate. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead, flickering with a rhythmic click-buzz that made Lily’s head throb. The air was heavy with the sharp, biting scent of rubbing alcohol and cheap floor wax.

"Ate Lily?"

The voice was barely a whisper. Lily hurried to the small cot in the corner of the crowded ward, separated from the other patients by nothing more than a thin, yellowing curtain.

Mia looked smaller than she had that morning. Her skin, usually the color of toasted honey, was now the shade of parchment. Dark circles sat beneath her eyes like shadows, and thin plastic tubes snaked from a metal pole into the crook of her tiny arm. Despite the pain, the ten-year-old managed to crack a smile that didn't quite reach her tired eyes.

"Don’t worry, Ate," Mia breathed, her chest rising and falling in shallow, jagged movements. "I’ll be okay. The nurse gave me crackers earlier. They were good."

Lily felt a sharp, stabbing pain in her chest. She reached out, taking Mia’s hand in hers. It was terrifyingly light, like the wing of a bird. "Of course you will, Mia. You’re the toughest girl I know. Remember when you climbed that mango tree last summer? A little surgery is nothing compared to that."

She forced a playful wink, but as she leaned down to kiss Mia’s forehead, her eyes burned.

Earlier that afternoon, the doctor had pulled her aside into a cramped office overflowing with charts. His words had been a death sentence wrapped in professional courtesy.

“It’s a congenital heart defect, Lily. We’ve managed it with medication so far, but the valve is failing. She needs the operation within the week. If we wait… well, the heart can only work this hard for so long.”

Then came the number. The cost of the surgery, the hospital stay, and the post-operative care. It was a figure with too many zeros—a sum that a girl working a morning shift at a bakery and an evening shift at a laundry shop could never hope to see in a lifetime.

"I'll find the money, Mia," Lily whispered, more to herself than the sleeping girl. "I promise. I’ll do whatever it takes."

The walk to the outskirts of the slums felt longer than usual. The heavy humidity of the Philippine evening clung to her skin like a second layer of clothing. Lily’s heart hammered against her ribs as she approached the leaning wooden structure she was forced to call home.

The house was a skeletal thing, held together by rusted iron sheets and rotting timber. As she pushed the door open, the familiar, sour stench of lambanog and stale cigarette smoke hit her like a physical blow.

Ramon was there, slumped in a plastic chair at the center of the room. A single, naked lightbulb dangled from the ceiling, casting long, ugly shadows across his weathered face. He was staring at a hand of cards, his eyes bloodshot and unfocused.

"You're late," he grunted, not looking up. "Where's the food?"

"There isn't any, Ramon," Lily said, her voice trembling with a mix of exhaustion and fury. "I spent the last of my wages on Mia’s down payment for the ward. She’s dying. She needs surgery."

Ramon finally looked up, letting out a dry, hacking laugh that made Lily’s skin crawl. "Surgery? With what money? You think I’m a bank?"

"She’s your stepdaughter!" Lily shouted, her composure finally snapping. "You took her in! You’re the only 'father' she’s ever known. Help me. Please. You have connections... you have people you gamble with. Borrow it. I’ll work three jobs, I’ll pay every cent back with interest."

Ramon set his bottle down with a deliberate thud. He stood up slowly, his tall, gaunt frame casting a shadow over her. For a moment, his expression softened into something that looked like pity, but it quickly twisted into something far more sinister.

"You're right, Lily," he said, his voice dropping to a low, oily murmur. "Family is expensive. And I do have debts. Large ones. Men are coming for my head because of what I owe."

He walked in a slow circle around her, his eyes scanning her from her messy ponytail down to her worn-out shoes. "I can't give you money. But... I found a way to settle my debts and get you the 'help' you need. It’s a trade."

A cold chill that had nothing to do with the rain washed over Lily. "What are you talking about?"

"A businessman," Ramon said, waving a hand dismissively. "He looks for certain... types. Young, clean, hardworking. He saw your picture. He’s willing to pay enough to cover Mia’s surgery and wipe my slate clean."

Lily felt the air leave her lungs. The room seemed to tilt on its axis. "You... you sold me? Like a piece of meat?"

"Don't be ungrateful!" Ramon snapped, his face reddening. "This is your chance to live in a mansion instead of this dump! You save the kid, I save my life. It’s a win-win."

Lily turned to bolt for the door, but it swung open before she could reach it.

Three men stepped into the cramped room. They were giants in charcoal-colored suits, looking entirely out of place in the rotting shack. The leader, a man with a jagged scar running through his eyebrow, looked at Lily with the clinical coldness of a butcher.

"Is this the one?" the man asked.

"That's her," Ramon said, his voice eager. "Fresh. Never been in trouble. A real beauty once you scrub the dirt off."

"No! Let me go!" Lily screamed, lashing out as the man reached for her. She managed to kick one of them in the shin, but it was like kicking a stone wall. A large, gloved hand clamped over her mouth, muffling her cries, while another man grabbed her waist, lifting her off the floor as if she weighed nothing.

They dragged her out of the house. She caught a final glimpse of Ramon; he was already reaching for his bottle, not even looking her way as his own stepdaughter was carried off into the night.

The car was a black abyss on wheels—a luxury sedan with tinted windows that blocked out the world. Lily sat huddled in the back seat between two of the silent giants. She tried to memorize the turns, the street signs, anything, but the city was a blur of neon and rain.

They eventually pulled up to the rear entrance of a building that looked like a fortress of glass and steel. This wasn't a dungeon; it was a high-end club called The Gilded Cage.

Inside, the transition was surreal. They led her through a labyrinth of gold-trimmed hallways and plush crimson carpets. The muffled thump of bass vibrated through the floorboards. She was pushed into a dressing room where a woman with hair pulled back so tightly it looked painful waited for her.

"Clean her up," the woman commanded two assistants. "The auction starts in thirty minutes. She’s the centerpiece."

For the next half hour, Lily was a doll. They scrubbed her skin until it turned pink, brushed her hair until it shone like silk, and painted her face with colors that made her look older, more fragile, and hauntingly beautiful. Finally, they forced her into a dress of white lace—so delicate it looked like it was made of seafoam.

"Look at yourself," one of the assistants whispered, turning her toward a full-length mirror.

Lily stared at the stranger in the glass. The girl in the mirror looked like a princess, but her eyes—wide, dark, and filled with a flickering spark of defiance—belonged to a captive.

"It’s time," a voice boomed.

Lily was led to a set of heavy velvet curtains. Beyond them, she could hear the clinking of crystal glasses and the low, predatory hum of men’s voices.

"Tonight’s final offering," an announcer’s voice rang out, amplified by a microphone. "A rare find. Pure, untouched, and utterly exquisite. Let us welcome... the White Lily."

The curtains parted.

The spotlight was blinding. Lily stepped out onto the stage, her heart hammering so hard she thought it might burst. Below her, seated at tables draped in black silk, were dozens of men in expensive suits. They didn't look like monsters; they looked like bankers, lawyers, and CEOs. But the way they looked at her—as if she were a vintage wine or a rare painting—made her stomach turn.

The bidding started.

"Fifty thousand!"

"Eighty!"

"One hundred thousand!"

The numbers climbed higher and higher. Each shout was a hammer blow to her dignity. She felt her knees shaking, her breath coming in short, panicked gasps. She looked up at the ceiling, trying to find a way to escape into her own mind.

She thought of Mia. She thought of the hospital bed, the flickering lights, and the little girl's weak smile.

I am doing this for her, she told herself. Let them buy me. Let them take my freedom. As long as she lives, I can endure anything.

She lowered her gaze and looked directly into the crowd. Her eyes were no longer wet with tears. They were cold, hard, and determined. She stood tall, her chin lifted, refusing to let them see her break.

"Five hundred thousand!" a man in the front row shouted, his face twisted in a hungry grin.

The announcer smiled, raising his gavel. "Five hundred thousand going once... going twice..."

Suddenly, the heavy doors at the back of the hall swung open with a thunderous bang. The room went silent. A man stepped into the light, his presence so commanding that even the music seemed to die down. He didn't look at the crowd; his eyes were locked onto Lily on the stage.

He didn't shout a number. He simply walked toward the stage, the crowd parting like the sea before him.

Lily didn't know who he was, but as their eyes met, she felt a strange, electric jolt of electricity. This was the moment her old life died completely. She was no longer just a girl from the slums; she was the prize in a game she didn't yet understand.

The auction was about to end, but for Lily, the real story was just beginning.

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