Let me start with my speculation: the ending that the male protagonist and his ex-girlfriend said were half-truths.
Now to my brainstorm:
The doctor did find that the blood type of the cheating woman matched the blood type of the chief's daughter, which could make a lot of money. He was really grateful at the time, and he didn't want to kill the male lead, and even expressed his intention to help the male lead restore his eyesight.
But the male protagonist can no longer trust the doctor (he said before that the doctor is the most vicious), for him, no matter whether the cheating girl or the doctor is sitting in the car, his life will be threatened. After all, although the doctor expresses gratitude, no one can be sure how long this gratitude will last, and whether he will suddenly realize that the existence of the male protagonist (informer, potential sharer) is a threat to him, so he will kill the male protagonist again.
And the male protagonist was so severely stimulated (and found that no one around him was not completely broken), his first reaction should be to get out of the car, run away, and survive, instead of trusting the doctor to help him.
So my guess is: the male protagonist refuses to share the spoils with the doctor and asks the doctor to let him off the bus. Out of gratitude, the doctor let the male protagonist get out of the car, and then left with the cheating girl. The hero hitches a ride to Mumbai (or wherever) to find friends and family. Finally went to Europe.
So where did the male protagonist get the money for the surgery? It may be borrowed from a friend, and you can make money by playing the piano later (a better idea); it may also be cheating (after all, your brain and acting skills are there), or extortion (after all, you know so many things), or you know Intelligence is fueled and sold to the news media or something. In a word, as long as the other person leaves and guarantees his own safety, with his ability and the information he has, it is not difficult to get the money.
As for whether the doctor successfully sold the cheating woman's organs, and what happened to them in the end is another story.
Why won't the hero tell the truth?
Because he must have violated his conscience in the process, such as cheating or extorting money in order to collect money, or letting the doctor take the cheating girl away and swallowing the truth forever in order to survive, and so on. In short, there is a hurdle in his heart (the male protagonist's conscience value is relatively high), which makes him not want to face that part of himself who has no conscience, so he made up a story of a rabbit to deceive others and deceive himself.
If you just complicit with the doctor and use the cornea of the cheating woman for yourself, I think the male protagonist may be more "tolerable". After all, even his ex-girlfriend who has a good moral level (also a representative of some audiences), They all thought that "you can use her cornea well." After all, it was the cheating woman "owing" him, and returning it to him would be considered complete. So I am inclined that the male protagonist did not simply take the cornea of the cheating woman, but in the process of regaining his vision, he sacrificed some other things, betrayed and hurt some innocent people - and those things , just like his eyesight, he can no longer "see".
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