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Taming The Sinner: The Doctor’s Cold Game Novel Cover

Taming The Sinner: The Doctor’s Cold Game

I stood before the double doors of the master suite, my hand hovering inches from the polished brass. As a surgeon, I was trained to steady my heart before a cut, but the silence in the Alexander estate felt like the heavy, oppressive pause that always preceded a scream. I pushed the mahogany door open to find my fiancé, Authur, tangled in Egyptian cotton sheets with a woman named Jasmine. The air was thick with the scent of expensive cigars and a floral perfume that wasn't mine—a brutal reality check just twenty-four hours before the merger meant to save my family from total ruin. Authur didn't look guilty; he looked amused, coldly telling me to close the door because I was letting in a draft. When his parents unexpectedly arrived, I was forced to hide his mistress and pretend our "intensity" had ruined the room, donning his discarded shirt to look disheveled just to protect the Lawrence family stock price. The humiliation only deepened on our wedding morning when Authur issued a sadistic ultimatum over the phone. "Wear your scrubs to the altar—the ones covered in blood—or I'll watch your father's company go belly up by lunch." He wanted to turn our wedding at St. Patrick’s Cathedral into a public execution of my dignity. I walked down the aisle in shapeless navy cotton and crimson stains, enduring the horrified gasps of the elite who labeled me an "insane gold digger." Authur stood at the altar, reeking of whiskey and malice, certain he had finally broken me and turned my professional oath into a circus act. But as the priest began the vows, I looked at the man who thought he owned me and realized I wasn't his victim—I was his surgeon. I had the footage of his debauchery ready to play for the world, and as we shared a punishing, hateful kiss for the cameras, I knew the real war had only just begun.
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Chapter 11

Bonnie Le's heels clicked rapidly down the hallway, fading into the ambient hum of the hospital.

Authur didn't leave. He watched the direction Helena had gone, a thoughtful, irritated expression on his face, before pushing off the doorframe and following her. He caught up to her at the main nurses' station, where she was reviewing a chart with a junior resident. He leaned against the counter, deliberately invading her professional space.

He pulled a silver lighter and a cigarette from his pocket. He didn't light it. Instead, he flicked the lighter open, the flame dancing hypnotically an inch from the tip. It was a silent, arrogant threat in a place filled with 'No Smoking' signs. The flame reflected in his dark eyes.

Before the head nurse could even react, Helena's head snapped up. "Are you insane?" she hissed, her voice low and sharp. "Put that out. Now."

"Mr. Alexander!" The head nurse, a formidable woman named Mrs. Higgins, marched over from the station, alerted by Helena's tone. "This is a hospital. There are oxygen tanks on this floor. That is a fire hazard of the highest order. Put that out immediately."

Authur didn't look at her. He looked at Helena. He snapped the lighter shut and slid the unlit cigarette behind his ear, a petty, childish act of dominance.

Helena didn't flinch. She waved her hand once, as if dispersing an imaginary cloud, her expression flat.

"If you want lung cancer, do it outside," she said, her voice devoid of warmth. "Keep your toxins out of my ward."

Authur pushed off the counter and walked toward her. He stopped inches away, invading her personal space. He looked down at her white coat, which smelled of antiseptic and long hours.

"Is this the real you?" he asked, his voice low and mocking. "The Ice Queen of St. Luke's? You play the victim at home, but here you act like you own the place."

He flicked a piece of lint off her shoulder. The gesture was intimate and insulting at the same time.

A group of interns and nurses had stopped their work. They were watching. Helena could feel their eyes on her back. They were whispering. That's her husband. The billionaire. Why is he treating her like that?

Helena felt a spike of irritation in her gut. She hated mixing her private hell with her professional sanctuary. This was the only place she made sense.

She snapped the metal cover of the medical chart shut with a loud clack.

"If you aren't a patient, leave," she said, meeting his gaze. "I have actual lives to save. People who matter."

Authur's eyes narrowed. He reached out, his index finger tracing the bottom edge of her ID badge clipped to her chest pocket. His touch was light, but it sent a jolt of warning through her nerves.

"Trauma Surgeon," he read the title slowly. "Sounds bloody."

He leaned in closer, his lips brushing her ear. His voice was a low murmur, but the malice was sharp enough for the interns straining to hear at the nearby desk to catch the tone, if not the words. "No wonder you're such an Ice Queen. I bet even your patients feel like they're being touched by a corpse."

The interns at the desk heard enough. A collective intake of breath sucked the air out of the corridor. Someone dropped a pen.

Helena went rigid. The humiliation was a physical blow, a hot flush that started at her neck and crawled up her cheeks. He was attacking her womanhood in front of her subordinates.

She took a slow breath, forcing her heart rate to steady. She wouldn't give him the satisfaction of a reaction. She wouldn't cry. She wouldn't scream.

She stepped into him, closing the gap until their bodies were almost touching. She looked up, her face a mask of polite concern.

"Considering your performance the other night..." she whispered, her voice pitched perfectly so only he could hear the venomous words, though the surrounding staff saw only an intimate, hushed exchange. "Or rather, the lack thereof..."

She paused, letting his eyes widen slightly.

"It's hard for any woman to generate a physiological response when there is nothing to work with," she whispered, her words a clinical, devastating strike. "I'm a doctor, Authur, not a magician. I can't raise the dead."

Authur's face darkened instantly. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle feathered in his cheek. The male ego was a fragile thing, and she had just taken a scalpel to it.

He grabbed her wrist. His grip was hard, bruising.

"You're playing with fire, Helena," he growled.

Helena didn't pull away. She looked pointedly at the security camera blinking red in the corner of the ceiling.

"There are cameras everywhere," she said calmly. "And three security guards around the corner. Do you want to be the headline on TMZ tomorrow? 'Billionaire Assaults Wife in Hospital'?"

Authur stared at her. The rage in his eyes battled with self-preservation. He released her wrist with a violent shove.

"You're not worth the jail time," he spat.

He turned on his heel and stormed down the hallway. He didn't look where he was going. His shoulder clipped a metal dressing cart parked against the wall.

The cart tipped.

Metal trays, kidney dishes, and bottles of saline crashed to the floor with a deafening clatter. The noise echoed down the corridor like a gunshot. A patient in a wheelchair nearby jumped, clutching her chest.

Authur didn't stop. He didn't look back. He kept walking, his stride long and angry, disappearing into the elevator.

Helena stood amidst the wreckage of her dignity. She crouched down immediately, picking up a bottle of iodine that was rolling toward her shoe.

"Dr. Lawrence, leave it," a young nurse said, rushing over. "We'll get it. He's... he's a jerk."

Helena gave a tight, practiced smile. "It's fine, Sarah. He's just... stressed."

Her phone buzzed in her pocket. It was a vibrating pulse against her thigh. She pulled it out. A message from Charles, the butler.

The Elders have arrived at the penthouse. Unexpectedly. Please return immediately.

Helena closed her eyes. One disaster ended, another began.

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