
His Unwanted Wife: The Genius Surgeon
Annika Hayes gave up her reputation as a brilliant neurosurgery resident to become the quiet, perfect wife to aviation mogul Ethan Clark. For three years, she hid her excellence, playing the role of an ordinary flight nurse just to fit into his world.
But her sacrifices ended when she received a cold text message from his housekeeper.
"Mrs. Clark, this is Maureen Dolan. Mr. Clark has instructed me to inform you that your access to the Park Avenue residence has been revoked effective immediately."
Ethan had chosen to protect his dead best friend's pregnant widow, claiming the unborn child as his own responsibility. Within hours, he suspended her joint credit cards and had his PR team paint her to the media as an emotionally volatile and unstable wife.
He demanded she quietly accept his "noble sacrifice," treating her like a disposable accessory. He even knew the widow's baby wasn't biologically his, but he was willing to destroy their marriage anyway to play the hero while dismissing Annika as just a needy nurse.
Three years of marriage, reduced to an eviction text and public humiliation. She had buried her ambition, her talent, and her entire identity, thinking it would make her more lovable. How could he throw her away for a delusion of honor, completely blind to the world-class surgeon she truly was?
Sitting in the back of a black SUV, Annika calmly snapped her heavy titanium joint credit card in half. She pulled out her phone, blocked his number, and sent a text to her old hospital rival. It was time to pick up her scalpel and let them see exactly who she used to be.
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Chapter 2
The Brooklyn brownstone was exactly as Annika remembered from her single visit four years ago-red brick facade, black iron railing, a narrow stoop leading up to a door painted the color of dried blood. Harlow Fleming stood on the top step, arms crossed, wearing a faded Johns Hopkins sweatshirt and the expression of a man who'd been waiting to say I told you so for one thousand four hundred and sixty days.
"You look like hell," he said.
"You look like you still can't afford a haircut." Annika hoisted her bag onto the step. "Are you going to let me in, or do I sleep on the street?"
Harlow stepped aside, but not before she'd seen his eyes drop to her left hand, noting the absence. He said nothing. That was Harlow-brutal when you wanted comfort, silent when you needed words.
The interior was unchanged. Medical journals stacked on every surface. A grand piano in the parlor room covered in sheet music and empty coffee cups. The smell of antiseptic and something baking-Harlow's housekeeper, Mrs. Chen, emerged from the kitchen with a tray of tea and the fierce protective energy of a woman who'd raised three daughters through medical school.
"Dr. Hayes." Mrs. Chen set the tray down with a crack. "You are too thin. I make soup."
"Mrs. Chen, I-"
"Soup." She disappeared, muttering in Mandarin about men who didn't deserve daughters.
Harlow led Annika upstairs to the guest room. It was small, clean, with a view of the garden and a desk already cleared for her laptop. A Johns Hopkins hoodie lay folded on the pillow, her old size, her old colors.
"I kept your stuff," Harlow said, not looking at her. "From when you sublet that place in Canton. Figured you'd come back eventually. Or I'd burn it in a ritual bonfire. Either way."
"Harlow." Annika set her bag on the chair. "Thank you."
"Don't." He turned, and his face was fierce, the sharp bones catching the afternoon light. "Don't thank me. You wasted four years, Annika. Four years of cases, of research, of-" He stopped, jaw working. "Dr. Roy asks about you every Christmas. Every damn Christmas, like you're some prodigal daughter he's waiting to forgive."
"I know."
"Do you?" Harlow stepped closer, close enough that she could smell the hospital soap on his hands, the same brand they'd both used for years. "Because from where I'm standing, you don't know anything. You threw away a career that people would kill for. For what? Some CEO with a helicopter and a God complex?"
"His best friend died in front of him." The words came out before she could stop them, old defenses rising automatically. "In the desert. Ethan carries that. He needed-"
"He needed a therapist. Not a wife." Harlow's voice cracked. "And you needed-" He broke off, shaking his head. "Never mind what you needed. You're here now. That's what matters."
He moved toward the door, then paused. "Your room's across the hall. Bathroom's shared. I get up at five for rounds, so don't expect quiet mornings." He looked back, and something in his expression softened, just barely. "There's a scrub top in the drawer. Blue, size small. If you want to come observe tomorrow. Dr. Voss is doing a transsphenoidal resection. Pituitary adenoma. Boring case, but the exposure's clean."
Annika felt her hands shake, just slightly. The terminology, the routine, the promise of standing in an operating theater again-it hit her like a physical force, knees weakening with the sudden realization of how much she'd missed it. How much she'd buried.
"I'll be there," she said.
Harlow nodded once, sharp, and closed the door behind him.
Annika sat on the edge of the bed. The mattress was firm, medical-grade, the kind that wouldn't develop pressure sores during long hours of reading. She ran her hand over the Johns Hopkins hoodie, the faded crest, the soft cotton worn thin at the cuffs. She'd lived in this sweatshirt through her intern year, through her first solo craniotomy, through the night she'd gotten the call about her mother's stroke.
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number, Manhattan area code.
Annika, we need to talk. This silence is childish. I'm willing to negotiate the terms of our separation, but not through lawyers and hotel rooms. Come home. We'll discuss this like adults.
She read it three times. The tone was pure Ethan-condescension wrapped in reasonableness, the assumption that she was having a tantrum that required management. He still didn't understand. He probably never would.
She typed back: Mr. Clark. All communication regarding the dissolution of our marriage should be directed to my attorney, Carter Whitmore of Whitmore & Associates. Please do not contact me directly again.
She blocked the number. Then, before she could lose her nerve, she changed into a pair of jeans and a clean sweater. She had a meeting to get to. An hour later, she was sitting across from Carter Whitmore in his Midtown office, the city a cold, gray backdrop outside the panoramic window.
"I've reviewed your preliminary documentation," he said, sliding a pen from his breast pocket. He was sixty, silver-haired, with the weathered face of a man who'd heard every possible version of marital disaster. "The financial disclosure is straightforward. Mr. Clark's assets are substantial but not complex. The prenuptial agreement you signed-" he paused, adjusting his reading glasses, "-is surprisingly favorable to you. Three years of marriage entitles you to the Soho apartment, the vehicle, and a lump sum that would keep most people comfortable for life."
"I don't want it." The words came out flat, certain.
Whitmore looked up, one eyebrow raised. "Ms. Hayes?"
"The apartment, the money, the car. I don't want any of it." Annika sat forward, her hands folded on the desk. "I want a clean separation. My personal accounts, my personal property, my professional credentials. Nothing that connects me to the Clark family. Nothing that he can claim he gave me."
"That's... unusual." Whitmore removed his glasses, polishing them on his tie. "May I ask why?"
"Because he thinks I'll fail without him." Annika heard the edge in her own voice, the old anger stirring beneath the numbness. "He thinks in thirty days I'll be begging to come back. I want him to watch me walk away with nothing and build something he can't touch, can't claim, can't even understand."
Whitmore studied her for a long moment. Then he smiled, a thin, satisfied expression. "I see. In that case, we have options. The prenup has a no-contest clause-if you waive your claims, he can't fight the divorce. We could have papers served by Friday. But I have to warn you, Ms. Hayes. New York is expensive. Your employment as a flight nurse-"
"My employment is changing." Annika kept her voice even. "I have a background in specialized medical care. I'm in the process of recertification and have already been in contact with a potential employer here in the city. A former mentor is providing a strong recommendation."
Whitmore's expression shifted, a flicker of professional curiosity. "A strong recommendation can certainly open doors. Very well. We'll proceed on your terms. I'll have the waiver drafted this afternoon." He stood, extending his hand. "Ms. Hayes. I think we're going to get along very well."
Annika left the office feeling lighter, the first concrete step taken. She began the credentialing paperwork for New York-Presbyterian that evening, her fingers flying over the keys, filling in dates and references and board certifications she'd let lapse. There would be exams, reviews, the humbling process of proving herself again to committees who'd wonder why a surgeon had spent three years as a flight nurse.
She didn't care. For the first time since she'd watched Ethan carry Haven Franks off that helicopter, she felt something other than grief or rage. She felt hungry.
Mrs. Chen's soup was waiting downstairs, steaming and fragrant with ginger and star anise. Harlow was gone-his coat missing from the hook, his keys absent from the bowl. Annika ate alone at the kitchen table, scrolling through neurosurgery journals on her tablet, catching up on four years of advances she'd deliberately ignored.
Deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's. Optogenetics in glioma research. Minimally invasive approaches to skull base tumors. The field had moved forward without her, and she had to sprint now to catch up, to prove she deserved re-entry.
Her phone buzzed again. This time, an email notification.
From: Eleanor Clark
Subject: Dinner
Annika, my dear. I know you're angry. I know you have reason. But before you burn every bridge, come to the house on Saturday. Just us. No Meredith, no Ethan. I have something to tell you, and I'd prefer not to do it through lawyers.
With affection,
Eleanor
Annika stared at the screen. Eleanor Clark was the only member of that family who'd ever looked at her with something other than calculation or contempt. The grandmother had welcomed her, taught her which fork to use at state dinners, defended her when Meredith's comments grew too pointed. In three years, Eleanor had become the closest thing to family Annika had in New York.
She typed a careful reply: Saturday. Six o'clock. I'll come alone.
The response was immediate: I'll have the good scotch waiting.
Annika finished her soup, washed the bowl, and climbed the stairs to her new room. The bed was narrow, the blankets thin, the radiator clanking with the effort of heating a hundred-year-old house. It was nothing like the climate-controlled luxury of Tribeca, the thousand-thread-count sheets, the silent elevators.
She fell asleep in minutes, dreamless and deep, and woke to the sound of Harlow's shower running at 4:47 AM, exactly as promised.
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8.7
I make my living binding monsters to their promises. But Silas Malphas is the one monster I never should have touched.
As a Thread-Binder, I can see the glowing, invisible strings of loyalty, debt, and lies connecting everyone in the city's supernatural underworld. It makes me the ultimate contract lawyer-and the perfect infiltrator.
My mission is simple: secure a job in the inner circle of the House of Malphas, the city's most ruthless monster syndicate, and steal the Primal Ledger from their lethal heir.
Silas Malphas commands the shadows themselves. He is arrogant, dominant, and terrifyingly elegant. But the most dangerous thing about him isn't his power-it's that when I look at him, I see *nothing*. He is a void in the magical spectrum. No debts. No loyalties. He is completely unreadable.
I was supposed to betray him. But as I am dragged deeper into his golden cage of high-stakes negotiations and blood-soaked boardroom politics, the lines between my mission and my dark attraction to the Beast begin to blur.
When a rival faction launches a deadly coup and my cover is blown, I am left with a terrifying choice. To survive the night, I must forge a blood-oath contract with the very monster I was sent to destroy.
I'm no longer just his lawyer. I'm bound to the Beast.

9.7
My Chanel suit was ruined, stained with road dirt and torn at the sleeve, while the hospital bodyguards stood like stone walls to keep me away from my husband’s room.
Inside that room, Ashely Berger was being treated for "multiple fractures" after allegedly lunging into the path of my car—a car I know she threw herself into on purpose.
The press swarmed me, flashing cameras in my face and hurling accusations of attempted murder, while my husband, Corbin, marched past me without a single glance, his eyes filled with nothing but cold, lethal disgust.
He didn't ask if I was hurt; he didn't care about the truth. He only cared about the woman behind the door, whispering gentle promises to her while treating me like a piece of filth that had somehow contaminated his life.
I stood there, hollowed out, as he demanded a divorce and threatened to strip me of everything, branding me a monster in front of the entire world to protect his precious reputation and his mistress.
The injustice burned, but as he turned his back on me to comfort her, I realized the game had changed. I wasn't going to let him ruin me for a crime I didn't commit, and I certainly wouldn't let her steal my life without a fight.
I walked into the room, locked the door, and looked at the woman playing the victim. She wanted to play the role of the tragic, broken angel? Fine. I was ready to show her exactly how a real Mcgowan fights back.

8.6
Four years ago, I melted my skin into the asphalt to pull Julian Moretti from a burning wreckage. I spent years in the shadows, nursing him back to health, hiding my scars while he reclaimed his title as the Underboss of New York.
But on the way to our wedding, everything shattered.
Estelle Russo, the woman who caused the crash that ruined me, complained of a stomach ache in the limousine. Julian didn't hesitate.
He ordered the driver to stop on the shoulder of the highway.
"Get out," he barked at me, his eyes cold.
He forced me out of the car in my wedding gown, leaving me stranded in the dust and exhaust fumes just so Estelle could lie down on the seat.
"Take a cab to the church," he sneered before speeding away.
He didn't just leave me on the road; he abandoned me at the altar to hold the hand of the woman who had once tried to kill him. He called our relationship a "debt" he was tired of paying.
I stood there, the lace of my dress heavy with humiliation, realizing I was never his Queen—I was just his collateral damage.
I didn't call a taxi. Instead, I pulled a burner phone from my bodice and dialed the one number that would end his reign.
"The deal is live," I whispered. "He chose her."
I stripped off the wedding dress, climbed over the guardrail, and stepped into the black sedan waiting to take me to his greatest enemy.

7.3
e didn't come to stop my wedding to Daniel. He came to claim me for himself.
One moment I was walking toward "I do" - toward Daniel, my safe, predictable future. Next, his men stormed the church, and I was dragged from the altar in my lace dress, veil torn, dreams shattered. I became the prize of the most dangerous man in the city.
Eric Moretti. The Mafia King. Cold eyes. Sinful mouth. Hands that have ended lives... and now own mine.
"Daniel can't protect you," he growled against my ear that first night, locking me in his penthouse. "He never could. But me, Seraphina? I'll owe you. Cherish you. Destroy anyone who looks at you twice. You're mine now."
I fought him. I screamed. I clawed.
He pinned my wrists above my head and showed me exactly what resistance costs.
But somewhere between the silk sheets and the dangerous midnight confessions, hate began to blur with something far more terrifying-need. His touch sets my skin on fire. His voice commands my pulse. And when he looks at me like I'm the only light in his dark world, I forget Daniel's name. I forget I was ever meant to be someone else's bride.
"I should let you go," he admits one night, lips trailing down my throat. "Send you back to your safe little life with Daniel. But I'm a selfish bastard. And you... You've gotten under my skin, Bella."
But in his world, love is a death sentence. Enemies circle. Betrayal festers. And when they come for him, they'll have to go through me-the bride who stopped being a captive the moment I chose to stay.
They say the Mafia King has no heart. They're wrong. He gave it to me-and I'll burn this city down before I let anyone take it from him.me to add more tension between Eric and Daniel, or make Daniel a bigger threat?

8.4
A single night with her powerful CEO changes Olivia Carter's life forever.
What begins as a reckless mistake turns into an unexpected pregnancy-and a shocking proposal. Instead of walking away, billionaire CEO Alexander Kane offers Olivia a contract, one designed to protect his empire and secure an heir.
As boundaries blur and emotions deepen, Olivia must survive office politics, public scrutiny, and a man who controls everything except his heart.
In a world where love is negotiated on paper, can a contract lead to something real or will it cost them everything?

8.6
As the eldest daughter of the Sharp family, I was treated worse than a stray dog, while my younger sister Seraphina was their precious princess.
When the family needed someone to marry a dying billionaire heir, they naturally chose me to take her place.
To force my consent, my brothers held a peanut butter sandwich to my face—knowing it was a lethal allergy—while dangling my EpiPen just out of reach.
On speakerphone, my own mother sighed in annoyance.
"Let her die. It might be for the best."
I choked out an agreement just as my throat closed up. But the forced engagement broke my sacred mystical vow, causing me to violently cough up my own lifeblood.
Seeing the blood, Seraphina dramatically fainted. My brothers instantly carried her to the hospital, stepping over my dying body and leaving me to bleed out on the cold marble floor.
I had to use a forbidden blood rune, draining my last ounce of strength, just to survive the night.
Even the mystical Order I served offered no comfort, calling only to demand I secure ten billion dollars for them or forfeit my soul for eternity.
Abandoned by my blood family and my spiritual master, I was completely alone, left with nothing but a broken body and a ticking clock.
But they made one fatal mistake: they let me live.
I turned to the dying heir they forced me to marry, a man plagued by a dark curse only I could cure.
"I will be your wife, and I will save your life," I told him.
In exchange, I would use his unimaginable wealth and power to make everyone who threw me away pay the ultimate price.