Follow
Chapters
Share
Rejected by Fiancé, Found Love Novel Cover

Rejected by Fiancé, Found Love

The Grand Ballroom of the Collins mansion glittered like a fairytale, crystal chandeliers casting golden light across the sea of New York's elite. I stood at the center of it all, my white silk gown flowing around me like a river of moonlight. Every eye watched us—me and Oliver Martin, the perfect couple, childhood sweethearts destined for marriage. "Gracie," Oliver whispered, his breath warm against my ear as we waltzed across the polished floor. "You're breathtaking tonight." My heart fluttered beneath the delicate lace of my bodice. This was it—the night everyone had been whispering about for months. My debutante ball, where Oliver would finally make official what we'd both known since childhood. "I've been waiting for this moment forever," I confessed, my voice barely audible over the orchestra. His hand tightened slightly on mine. "So have I." As the music swelled, I caught sight of my father Anthony watching from the sidelines, his expression unreadable.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The train's whistle pierced the morning fog as I stepped onto the wooden platform. My new beginning awaited me in this remote corner of Oregon, far from the glittering ballrooms and cruel whispers of New York. The Blackwell Medical Research Institute stood nestled among towering pines, its stone facade both imposing and promising.

I clutched my mother's medical journals to my chest as Dr. Harrison Blackwell approached. His silver-streaked hair and piercing eyes assessed me with clinical detachment.

"Miss Collins," he said, extending his hand. "Your recommendation letters speak highly of your potential, despite your... unconventional background."

I knew what he meant. A society debutante turned medical apprentice wasn't exactly common.

"Thank you for accepting me, Dr. Blackwell," I replied, straightening my shoulders. "I won't disappoint you."

His expression remained skeptical. "We'll see."

The institute's interior smelled of antiseptic and old books. As Dr. Blackwell led me through corridors lined with anatomical charts, I could feel eyes following us—mostly male, mostly dismissive.

"This is the main laboratory," he announced, pushing open heavy doors. "Where you'll begin your apprenticeship."

The room fell silent as we entered. Six men in white coats turned to stare at me, their expressions ranging from curiosity to open hostility.

"Gentlemen," Dr. Blackwell said, "this is Miss Collins, our new apprentice."

A tall man with wire-rimmed glasses stepped forward. "Dr. Blackwell, surely you're not serious? This is the socialite from New York?"

"Dr. Mercer," Blackwell replied coolly, "Miss Collins has demonstrated sufficient knowledge to warrant a position here."

"Sufficient for what?" another voice called out. "Playing doctor until she gets bored?"

Laughter rippled through the room. I felt heat rising to my cheeks but refused to lower my gaze.

The next morning, I arrived early in a simple brown dress—practical, unlike the gowns I'd left behind in New York. The laboratory was already bustling with activity.

"Well, look who's here," Dr. Mercer drawled, eyeing my attire. "The debutante returns."

"I'm here to learn, Dr. Mercer," I said evenly.

"Those delicate hands were made for piano keys, not scalpels," he replied, smirking. "My money says you'll be gone within a week."

I bit back a retort and instead focused on the task before me—preparing instruments for the day's procedures.

That night, alone in my quarters, I pored over anatomical texts until my eyes burned. My fingers bled from practicing surgical knots for hours. The cadaver's smell from the dissection room lingered in my nose, making me nauseous.

But I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of seeing me quit.

Three days later, during a particularly gruesome dissection, the room began to spin. The cadaver's gray skin and exposed muscles sent my stomach lurching. I gripped the table edge, trying to steady myself.

"Miss Collins?" Dr. Blackwell's voice sounded distant.

I felt my knees buckle before darkness claimed me.

When I came to, I was lying on a cot in the back office. Dr. Mercer stood nearby, arms crossed.

"Just as I predicted," he said with a smirk. "Fainting at the sight of a corpse. Hardly the stuff of physicians."

I pushed myself up, ignoring the throbbing in my head. "I'll be back in the laboratory tomorrow."

And I was. Every day for a week, I forced myself to confront my squeamishness. I memorized every bone, muscle, and organ until I could recite their names in my sleep.

Slowly, something shifted. The men's mockery gave way to grudging respect as they noticed my determination.

One evening, while reviewing patient charts in the charity ward, I came across a case that puzzled the senior physicians—a young laborer with unexplained paralysis in his limbs.

The symptoms reminded me of something I'd read in my mother's journals. I pulled out the worn volume, flipping to a page I'd marked months ago.

"Could it be Guillain-Barré syndrome?" I asked during the next morning's rounds.

Dr. Blackwell paused, raising an eyebrow. "What makes you suggest that?"

I explained the connection between the patient's symptoms and the rare condition my mother had documented.

"That's... actually quite astute, Miss Collins," he admitted, surprise coloring his voice.

From then on, I volunteered for the night shift in the charity ward. The patients there—miners with black lung, loggers with mangled limbs, mothers with malnourished children—had nowhere else to turn.

I developed new techniques for managing pain with limited resources, using willow bark extract and careful positioning to ease suffering. My hands, once soft and manicured, grew calloused but capable.

"Doc Grace," a young miner called me one night as I changed his bandages. "You're an angel."

I smiled, touching the locket containing my mother's portrait. "Just doing what needs to be done."

As months passed, I found my place among these forgotten people. They didn't care about debutante balls or society expectations. They only cared about whether I could ease their pain.

And somehow, in this remote corner of Oregon, far from the glittering world I'd left behind, I began to heal myself.

You may also like

After Her Betrayal, I Won My Freedom Novel Cover
9.3
The flashbulbs at the Met Gala after-party were blinding, a relentless stroboscope that turned the ballroom into a disjointed nightmare. I stood at the periphery of the champagne-soaked crowd, nursing a glass of sparkling water I had no intention of drinking. My Givenchy gown, a shimmering column of silver, felt less like couture and more like armor. "Look at her," a whisper drifted from a cluster of Page Six reporters to my left. "Hanging on for dear life. You’d think she’d have the dignity to leave now that Beau’s stock has tripled without her help." "She’s a lucky charm that ran out of luck," another sneered. "A clinging gold digger." I swirled the water, watching the vortex. If only they knew. The irony sat heavy in my gut, cold and metallic. The billions in Beau’s accounts, the sudden skyrocketing of Lewis Enterprises—it wasn’t market fluctuation.
After My Ex Became CEO, He Wanted Me Back Novel Cover
7.8
The morning sun slanted through the glass tower of Archer Design, casting the interview room in honeyed light that felt too warm, too exposing. I smoothed my navy pencil skirt for the third time and tried to steady my breathing. Four months of unemployment had taught me the taste of desperation, and I wouldn't let it show today. 'Your portfolio is impressive, Ms. Carroll,' said the hiring manager, a woman with kind eyes and a stack of my work spread before her. 'The layout work for Vantage Media was particularly strong.' 'Thank you,' I replied, keeping my voice level. 'I believe in letting the design speak for itself, but not letting it scream.' She smiled, and I felt a flutter of hope. The final round interview had gone better than I'd dared to expect. As I gathered my portfolio, she extended her hand. 'We'll be in touch by tomorrow morning.' Outside, Manhattan bustled with the particular energy of a Tuesday afternoon.
After My Husband Chose the Mistress Novel Cover
8.0
Four years. One thousand four hundred and sixty days of marriage, and here I was, sitting alone at a table meant for two at Le Bernardin. The waiter approached for the third time, his sympathetic smile barely masking his pity. "Would you like to order now, Mrs. Thomas, or wait a bit longer?" I twisted my wedding ring, a nervous habit I'd developed over the years. "Just a few more minutes, please." Around me, other couples clinked champagne flutes, leaned into intimate conversations, and shared bites of exquisite food across candlelit tables. Anniversary celebrations, proposals, birthdays—moments that mattered. I checked my phone again. No calls, no texts, nothing from Garrett for the past two hours. I'd spent three hours getting ready for tonight—the Valentino dress he'd once said brought out the amber flecks in my eyes, the pearl earrings he'd given me on our first anniversary.
Cheated On Me? I Married a Tycoon Novel Cover
8.7
I spent three years building my husband, Axel Farrell, into Silicon Valley's ultimate "family man." As his lead PR strategist, I carefully managed his public image, making sure the world saw him as a perfect, devoted husband while I worked in the shadows of our estate. The illusion shattered when he came home one night smelling of sandalwood and roses, with three deep fingernail scratches carved into his back. When I tried to check his phone, the passcode we had used for years-our wedding anniversary-had been changed. The betrayal got worse the next morning when his mother called me a "defective product" and tried to force me into a fertility clinic. Axel didn't defend me; instead, he shoved me against a marble bar at a public gala to protect his mistress in front of the world's elite. By the time I tried to leave, Axel had frozen my bank accounts and filed a forged legal petition to have me declared mentally incompetent. He planned to have me legally kidnapped and locked in a private psychiatric ward just to stop me from filing for divorce. He even blocked every major law firm in the city from taking my case, leaving me with no money, no identity, and no one to turn to. I couldn't understand how the man who "saved" me from the mud years ago could be the same monster now trying to legally erase my existence. Was our entire marriage just a grooming process to exploit my genius for his billion-dollar empire? As the deadline for my forced commitment approached, I stopped crying and opened my laptop. I leaked the video of his affair to every tech journalist in the country, watching his stock price crash in real-time. "Axel thinks starving me out will make me crawl back to him," I whispered as I walked into the headquarters of his biggest rival. "But he forgot that the most valuable part of his company is in my head." I was no longer the abandoned wife; I was the one who was going to take his throne and burn it to the ground.
Divorce my prentened poor Billionaire husband Novel Cover
9.1
For three years, Annika Price believed she was married to a struggling man who had lost everything. She worked herself to exhaustion to support him—taking multiple jobs, giving up her dreams, and loving him with a devotion he never returned. Then she discovers the truth. “Everest Kennedy” was never poor. Never powerless. Never even truly her husband. Behind the fake marriage certificate hides one of the wealthiest and most ruthless billionaires in the country—a man who approached her under a false identity for reasons far crueler than she could have imagined. While Annika sacrificed everything for love, Everest and his elite circle watched her suffer like it was part of a game. Humiliated, heartbroken, and carrying a secret pregnancy he refuses to accept, Annika walks away determined to reclaim her dignity. But Everest, a man used to controlling everything, is suddenly unable to let her go. What begins as revenge spirals into obsession. And when the truth behind their marriage finally unravels, Everest must face the one thing money and power can never buy back: The woman he destroyed with his own hands.
The Dominant Ceo's New Contract : The Ruthless Tycoon's Fifty Shades Contract  Novel Cover
8.1
Nora has just been cleared from two weeks in a hospital after her body gave out from overwork and stress. The morning she is discharged, her doctor tells her she is lucky to have such a devoted boyfriend, someone who came to see her every day without fail. She leaves the hospital feeling genuinely hopeful for the first time in weeks. She decides to surprise Derek at his apartment before going home. When she gets there, the door is slightly open. The apartment is out of order in small ways that feel wrong immediately, because Derek is meticulous about everything. She finds a dress on the floor she recognizes from three days ago when her best friend Sienna came to visit her at the hospital. She walks into the bedroom and finds them together. What follows is not a screaming match. It is worse. Sienna does not apologize. She lays out the facts the way a person delivers news they have been sitting on for too long. Eight months. A wedding in two weeks. An invitation that arrives on Nora's phone before she even makes it out of the building. Derek tries to stop her in the hallway, tries to explain, but the elevator closes between them and she hears Sienna's voice behind her saying she will forgive him because she always does. Nora walks out into rain she does not notice for several minutes. Her phone rings five times with her father's name on the screen. She ignores it. Her father only calls repeatedly when he needs something managed, and she is not available to be managed today. Yuna finds her eventually and picks her up. In the car, Yuna starts to say where she has been and stops herself. Nora tells her Derek is her ex now without looking up. Yuna's phone rings. It is Nora's father, and his voice is different. Quiet in a way she has never heard before. He asks them to come to the mansion immediately. When they arrive, her grandfather is dead. He passed in his sleep, her mother says. The doctor had already been and gone. The paperwork was being handled. Her uncle was in the hallway with his coat on and his phone in his hand, already making calls, already moving. Her father calls her into the study and tells her the company is closer to collapse than anyone outside the family knows. There is one deal that could save it. One man. Callum Voss. The problem is that no one gets a meeting with Callum Voss. His schedule is locked, his gatekeepers are impossible, and he is in the city for a limited time only. Yuna tells her something that changes everything. He is on the guest list for Derek and Sienna's wedding. Nora does not want to go to that wedding. She would rather do almost anything else. But she does not have a choice, and she refuses to walk in alone. She tells Yuna to find her a fake date, someone tall and convincing and immediately impressive. She will handle everything else herself.