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Curse Reverses on Sterling Novel Cover

Curse Reverses on Sterling

The fluorescent lights of Seattle General Hospital buzzed overhead like angry wasps, casting everyone beneath them in a sickly, unforgiving glow. I stared at Mr. Harrison's perfectly knotted tie, unable to meet his eyes as his words crashed over me like icy water. "I'm afraid we need a payment of $150,000 within the week, Ms. Brooks," he said, his voice clinically detached. "Otherwise, we'll have to cancel your mother's surgery." My throat constricted. "There must be something—" "We've already extended every possible courtesy." He adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses, glancing at his tablet. "Your insurance coverage is exhausted, and the payment plans you've proposed don't meet our minimum requirements." I wanted to scream, to grab him by his starched collar and demand how he could reduce my mother's life to a dollar amount. Instead, I swallowed hard, nodding mechanically as he continued detailing the administrative process of canceling life-saving procedures. When he finally walked away, his leather shoes clicking efficiently down the corridor, I slumped against the wall.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights of Seattle General Hospital buzzed overhead like angry wasps, casting everyone beneath them in a sickly, unforgiving glow. I stared at Mr. Harrison's perfectly knotted tie, unable to meet his eyes as his words crashed over me like icy water.

"I'm afraid we need a payment of $150,000 within the week, Ms. Brooks," he said, his voice clinically detached. "Otherwise, we'll have to cancel your mother's surgery."

My throat constricted. "There must be something—"

"We've already extended every possible courtesy." He adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses, glancing at his tablet. "Your insurance coverage is exhausted, and the payment plans you've proposed don't meet our minimum requirements."

I wanted to scream, to grab him by his starched collar and demand how he could reduce my mother's life to a dollar amount. Instead, I swallowed hard, nodding mechanically as he continued detailing the administrative process of canceling life-saving procedures.

When he finally walked away, his leather shoes clicking efficiently down the corridor, I slumped against the wall. One week. Seven days to produce a sum that would take me years to earn.

I pushed open the door to my mother's room, forcing my face into something resembling calm. She lay there, skin nearly translucent against the white sheets, dark circles beneath her eyes like bruises. Once vibrant and full of life, Eleanor Brooks had been reduced to a collection of fragile bones and failing organs.

"Natalie," she whispered, her cracked lips attempting a smile. "You look tired, sweetheart."

Even now, dying, she worried about me. I crossed the room and took her hand, so thin I could feel each delicate bone beneath the skin.

"I'm fine, Mom," I lied, squeezing gently. "Just working a lot."

"You work too hard." Her fingers tightened weakly around mine. "You should be painting, living your life..."

"I'll have plenty of time for that," I said, the words sticking in my throat. "After you get better."

She didn't argue, but something in her eyes told me she knew better. We both pretended, though—me that I could somehow find the money, her that she had time to wait.

* * *

Three nights later, exhaustion hit me like a physical blow. I'd been working double shifts at the Magnolia Grand Hotel, picking up every available hour while applying for emergency loans that were swiftly denied. Each rejection pushed me closer to despair.

I was crossing the lobby with a stack of fresh towels when the room suddenly tilted. The marble floor rushed up to meet me, but instead of the hard impact I expected, something caught me—someone.

"Careful," a voice murmured, low and cultured.

I blinked, disoriented, and found myself looking into the most unsettling eyes I'd ever seen. Pale gray, almost silver, they assessed me with clinical interest. The man supporting me was impeccably dressed in a charcoal suit that probably cost more than six months of my rent.

"I'm so sorry, sir," I stammered, mortified as I regained my footing. The towels lay scattered across the polished floor.

"You're exhausted," he stated, not a question but an observation. "And desperate."

I stared at him, unnerved. "Excuse me?"

"Alexander Sterling." He extended his hand, ignoring my confusion. "I'd like to speak with you privately, Ms. Brooks."

My blood ran cold. "How do you know my name?"

A smile touched his lips but never reached those strange eyes. "I make it my business to know things. Particularly about people who interest me."

Every instinct screamed danger, but when he mentioned a proposition that could solve my financial problems, hope—treacherous, foolish hope—flared to life.

Twenty minutes later, we sat in the hotel's empty executive lounge. Between us on the table lay a contract bound in crimson leather.

"It's quite simple," Alexander said, his long fingers tracing the embossed cover. "You become my wife. I provide the full sum for your mother's treatment, plus ongoing care."

"Why would you—"

"My reasons are my own." He cut me off smoothly. "The arrangement is temporary, of course. One year, perhaps less."

I stared at the contract, heart pounding. "This can't be legal."

"It's binding in ways beyond mere law." Something flickered in his expression—hunger, perhaps, or anticipation. "All it requires is your signature... in blood."

I should have run. Instead, thinking of my mother's wasting form in that hospital bed, I took the ornate silver pin he offered and pricked my finger. As the drop of blood touched the paper, a searing pain shot through my wrist.

Alexander smiled, truly smiled, for the first time. "Welcome to the family, Mrs. Sterling."

* * *

The following morning, a sleek black car waited outside my apartment building. The uniformed chauffeur nodded respectfully, holding the door as though I were someone important instead of a desperate woman who had just sold herself.

The Sterling mansion loomed against the Seattle skyline, all stone and glass and old money. In the soaring marble foyer, a thin woman in a housekeeper's uniform watched me with knowing, pitying eyes.

"Mrs. Davies will show you to your suite," Alexander said, already turning away. "Rest. You'll need your strength."

My new quarters were larger than my entire apartment, decorated in shades of cream and gold. I caught my reflection in a gilded mirror and barely recognized myself—pale, hollow-eyed, with a strange red mark on my wrist that hadn't been there before.

I looked closer, heart stuttering. It wasn't a mark. It was a tattoo of a perfect red rose, its edges impossibly detailed, as though it had grown beneath my skin while I slept.

As I stared, transfixed with horror, the rose pulsed once, like a second heartbeat.

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