
The Billionaire Doctor's Runaway Patient
Hope worked eighty-hour weeks on Wall Street, enduring daily humiliation from her boss just to be her mother's golden ticket out of poverty.
But when a severe kidney infection left her bleeding and collapsing in the middle of a boardroom presentation, her boss didn't call an ambulance.
He slammed his hand on the table, publicly accused her of popping pills like a junkie, and threw her out of the building.
Dragging her agonizing, feverish body back home, Hope desperately needed a mother's comfort.
Instead, the moment her mother heard she had lost her six-figure job, the woman's face contorted with pure rage.
She didn't care that Hope's kidneys were failing; she grabbed a heavy glass ashtray and hurled it directly at Hope's head.
"You threw away a six-figure job? You threw away our ticket out of this dump?!"
The glass shattered against the wall, slicing Hope's bare leg open.
For twenty-nine years, Hope had sacrificed her health, her dignity, and her sanity to be the perfect daughter.
She didn't understand why her life was only worth the paycheck she brought home, or why her own mother would rather see her dead than unemployed.
Looking at the blood dripping down her calf, the guilt that had chained her for a lifetime suddenly vanished.
She pulled out her phone and hit send on a brutally honest resignation email to her toxic boss.
Then, she opened a text from the intimidating, billionaire doctor who had treated her at the clinic—the only man who had ever told her she was a fighter.
She packed her bags and walked out the door.
This time, she was going to live for herself.
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Chapter 2
Corbin stripped off the latex gloves and tossed them into the biohazard bin. "You have a severe urinary tract infection," he said, turning his back to write on a prescription pad. "I'm prescribing a strong course of antibiotics. Get dressed."
He didn't look back as he walked out of the room, the heavy door clicking shut behind him.
Hope scrambled off the table the second he was gone. Her hands were shaking so badly she could barely manage the zipper on her skirt. She threw her clothes on, buttoning her blouse wrong in her frantic rush. She grabbed her purse and bolted out of the examination room like the building was on fire.
She kept her head down as she hurried through the plush lobby, terrified she might lock eyes with that devastatingly handsome doctor again. She pushed through the glass doors and hit the New York pavement.
The crisp autumn wind hit her flushed face. She let out a long, shaky exhale. She reached into her bag to grab her phone to check the time.
Her fingers met empty space.
Hope stopped walking. She dug frantically through the contents of her purse. No phone. And then it hit her-she hadn't grabbed the prescription slip either. They were both sitting on the metal tray next to the examination table.
A fresh wave of pelvic pain radiated through her lower back, a cruel reminder that she couldn't just walk away. Without that prescription, she couldn't get the medicine.
"No, no, no," Hope groaned aloud, pressing the heels of her hands against her eyes.
She turned around and dragged her feet back toward the clinic entrance. The walk of shame felt ten times longer.
She approached the marble reception desk. "Excuse me," Hope said, keeping her voice low. "I left my phone and my prescription in exam room two. Can someone grab them for me?"
The receptionist was typing rapidly, a phone wedged between her ear and shoulder. She pointed a manicured finger down the hallway. "Wait outside the door. A nurse will bring it out."
Hope swallowed her pride and walked back down the quiet corridor. She stopped a few feet away from the partially open door of room two. She wrung her hands together, her stomach twisting with anxiety.
Through the crack in the door, she heard Corbin's deep, resonant voice. He was speaking rapidly, using complex medical jargon to instruct a nurse about a surgical prep.
Hope peeked through the gap. Corbin was leaning over the counter, signing a chart. The harsh clinic lighting caught the sharp angles of his profile. The sheer authority radiating from him made Hope's breath catch in her throat.
The nurse suddenly turned and walked out, nearly colliding with Hope. The nurse, looking surprised to see her waiting, offered a brief, professional smile and held out the items. "You forgot these, Ms. Spence."
"Thank you," Hope whispered, clutching the items.
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Corbin lift his head, his icy blue eyes shifting toward the doorway.
Hope spun around and practically sprinted down the hallway, fleeing the building before he could say a word.
Once outside, she tapped her phone screen. It lit up with five missed text messages from her mother, Belva.
You better not be late.
Beatrice worked hard to set this up.
He is a doctor. Don't ruin this.
Where are you?
Answer me!
Hope groaned, rubbing her throbbing temples. The blind date. She had completely forgotten. She looked at the address Beatrice had texted her-a high-end French cafe in Midtown.
She hailed another cab. Traffic was a nightmare. As the taxi crawled down Fifth Avenue, Hope pulled out her compact mirror. She looked awful. Her skin was pale, her eyes were red-rimmed, and her hair was a mess. She tried to smooth it down, but she just looked exhausted.
The cab pulled up to the cafe. Hope paid and stepped out, tugging at the hem of her wrinkled skirt. She took a deep breath, pasting a fake, polite smile on her face, and pushed the door open.
Soft jazz floated through the air. The smell of roasted espresso and warm croissants filled the room. Hope looked around, searching for the man Beatrice had described: Wearing a navy suit, reading a medical journal.
The hostess smiled at her. "Table for two? Name?"
"Spence," Hope said. "I'm meeting someone."
"Right this way."
The hostess led her toward a secluded, velvet-lined booth by the window. Hope walked behind her, her eyes landing on the broad, imposing shoulders of a man sitting in the booth. The navy suit he wore looked incredibly expensive, the fabric stretching perfectly across his back.
Hope mentally rehearsed the polite, generic greeting her mother had drilled into her head. Her feet felt heavy as she approached the table.
Hearing her footsteps, the man closed the medical journal on the table and slowly turned his head.
Hope's fake smile froze. Her lungs stopped working. The blood drained completely from her face.
Sitting across from her was Dr. Corbin Mullen.
His dark hair was slightly tousled. He wasn't wearing the white coat anymore, but the icy blue eyes were exactly the same.
Hope's knees buckled. Her leg slammed into the heavy wooden table leg. The impact rattled the table, causing the silver spoon in the coffee cup to clink loudly. A few people at the next table turned to look.
Her brain short-circuited. Her first instinct was to turn and run out the door, but her feet were glued to the hardwood floor.
Corbin stood up. His height immediately dominated the small space. He extended a large, masculine hand toward her, gesturing to the empty seat opposite him.
Hope stared at his hand. Her mind violently flashed back to thirty minutes ago-that exact hand, wrapped in a cold latex glove, touching the most intimate, vulnerable part of her body. Her stomach violently churned. She felt physically sick.
She didn't take his hand. She collapsed onto the velvet sofa like a puppet with its strings cut, her fingers digging into the strap of her purse with a death grip.
Corbin sat back down slowly. A faint, almost imperceptible smirk touched the corner of his mouth. He leaned back against the velvet cushions, his eyes locking onto her terrified face.
"It seems New York is a very small city, Ms. Spence," Corbin said, his low voice vibrating with dark amusement.
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9.1
Elise thought her life was finally falling into place. She turned down her father's company to work as executive assistant to Marcus Grey-the boy she's loved since childhood, now the powerful CEO she's devoted her life to.
But when Marcus proposes to another woman, Elise's world crumbles. Enter Sebastian Deluca-Marcus's tattooed, ruthless, long-estranged brother. He's everything Marcus isn't: dangerous, magnetic, and determined to take back his place in New York.
But, there's something odd about him.
Something changed since he arrived.
Bound by family secrets and a mutual desire to expose Marcus's fiancée, Elise and Sebastian form an uneasy alliance. But as sparks ignite between them, Elise must choose: remain loyal to the boy she thought she loved, or risk everything for the man who sees her as more than a shadow.
Some loves are safe. Others are consuming. Which one will she survive?

7.4
Evelina Barrett was the legitimate daughter, yet she was framed for a disgusting sex scandal, expelled from the Ivy League, and locked out of her late mother's massive trust fund.
While she was thrown out to rot on the streets with a jagged, hideous red scar covering half her face, her father and step-family were throwing a lavish charity gala to celebrate her total ruin.
They laughed as they officially published her disownment notice in the Times to cut her off forever.
"Without the school halo, that ugly freak will be begging on the streets by tomorrow," her sister Aspen sneered.
Her stepmother Annabella toasted to taking out the trash, perfectly happy to steal Evelina's inheritance while ignoring the fact that Evelina knew exactly how they had murdered her mother.
For years, Evelina had been locked in a dark basement, abused by bodyguards, and treated worse than a stray dog.
Why should she, the true heir, suffer in the gutter while the leeches who destroyed her life enjoyed the wealth that rightfully belonged to her?
She refused to be their victim anymore.
Washing away her fake scar to reveal her true, breathtaking face, Evelina blackmailed New York's most lethal billionaire into marriage to secure the ultimate shield.
Then, she put on a black mourning dress, ordered a dark web ghost crew, and climbed into a heavy semi-truck.
At exactly 6:00 PM, she smashed through the iron gates of her family's elegant gala, delivering three pure black coffins directly to the lawn.

8.9
Debora went to prison to protect the man she loved, only to end up a paroled convict living under the roof of her abusive foster parents.
When they found her positive pregnancy test from a one-night stand, they threatened to kick her out and send her straight back to a cell.
Just as they were about to report her, the stranger from that dark hotel room suddenly appeared.
He paid her foster parents one million dollars to marry her and take her away.
Debora thought she was finally safe.
But the moment they were alone, he looked at her with pure, venomous hatred.
He didn't want a wife; he wanted a prisoner.
He believed Debora was the ruthless murderer who had destroyed his life in a car crash, and he planned to make her suffocate in her own despair.
He didn't know she was just a scapegoat.
To survive and protect her baby, Debora found a job at a bridal shop, only to run into the real culprit—the man who actually drove the car and framed her.
He was now happily engaged to a wealthy heiress.
They deliberately ruined a priceless wedding gown and blamed it on her.
"Kneel on this floor and apologize, or I'm calling the police to revoke your parole!"
Why did she have to rot in hell for his sins, while the man she married wanted to destroy her?
Just as her trembling knees were about to touch the cold marble floor, the heavy glass doors were violently shoved open.
Her billionaire husband strode in like a force of nature, his eyes locked onto the wealthy couple with a terrifying, destructive rage.

8.2
Trapped in a deadly fire at my own engagement party, my lungs burned as I reached a shaking hand out to my fiancé for help.
He stopped and looked right at me through the thick smoke. But instead of saving me, he wrapped his jacket tightly around my stepsister and ran, leaving me to burn.
I barely survived. But when I woke up in the hospital, my father and stepmother didn't even ask about my injuries.
They threw a stack of legal documents right onto my bed.
"Sign the papers, Avah. Step aside. Jaclyn is far better suited to be Kain's wife."
My fiancé then stormed into the room, publicly humiliating me with false rumors of an illegitimate child and threatening to bankrupt my company.
Four years of swallowing my pride to be the perfect, obedient pawn for our family business, all for nothing.
They threw me to the wolves without a single second of hesitation, expecting me to just lower my head and cry like I always did.
But the fire had burned that pathetic version of me away.
I ripped out my IV, letting the blood drip onto the sheets, and tore their contracts straight down the middle.
"The engagement is over."
I threw my million-dollar ring right at my ex's chest, then picked up the phone to call my trust lawyer. They wanted to take everything from me, so I was going to make them bleed.

7.9
Fiona spent three years in a concrete cell, taking the fall for a hit-and-run accident caused by her billionaire husband's mistress.
When she finally got out and returned home, she found him throwing a lavish party, with the mistress on his arm wearing a gown Fiona had designed. Even worse, her own seven-year-old son pointed at her in disgust.
"Go away, bad woman!"
Her husband Cecil threw her out like a stray dog. To force her into submission, he trashed her belongings and cut off the life-saving medical funding for her mentor. Driven to desperation, Fiona snuck back into the mansion to retrieve her late mother's sapphire necklace. But the mistress caught her, ripped her own clothes, and screamed that Fiona was trying to kill her. Cecil didn't even hesitate. He violently shoved Fiona backward. Her head smashed against the sharp edge of a mahogany desk, and blood immediately poured into her eyes.
Lying in a pool of her own blood, Fiona watched the man she had sacrificed her freedom for wrap his arms protectively around the woman who ruined her life. He looked at her with pure, murderous disgust, as if she were the monster.
But Fiona didn't cry. Instead, a cold smile crept onto her face as her bloody thumb secretly pressed the emergency SOS button on her phone, snapping a clear photo of him standing over her shattered body.
"My husband just violently attacked me. I am bleeding from the head. I need help."
The police were already on their way. It was time to burn his empire to the ground.

9.7
Alya Harrell was the illegitimate daughter of a wealthy Long Island family, treated worse than a stray dog in her own home. Tonight, her family finally found a use for her.
Her stepmother and half-sister, Chloe, forced her into a scandalous, plunging red dress. They were offering her as a bargaining chip to Warren Thorne, a ruthless, sleazy hedge fund manager known for collecting and discarding young girls.
Just to ensure her absolute humiliation, Chloe intentionally "tripped" and spilled a glass of red wine all over the silk dress.
"Now you'll have to wear that hideous little black thing you own," Chloe sneered, leaving Alya to face the high-society dinner looking like a beggar.
When Alya tried to escape Thorne's groping hands, her own father hunted her down. He grabbed a fistful of her hair, yanking her head back, and raised his hand to strike her for embarrassing the family.
She was nothing but a pawn to them, a cheap product to be sold and abused for their financial gain. Alya's heart turned cold as she realized her blood relatives would gladly destroy her just to secure a lucrative business deal.
But when she was sent to the cellar to fetch a $50,000 vintage wine for their billionaire VIP guest, Alya caught her perfect sister hooking up with a personal trainer next to the priceless bottle.
Quietly stealing the vintage wine and burying it in the garden dirt, Alya returned to the ballroom with a dangerous smile.
"I think I saw Chloe carrying a bottle down to the cellar," she told her furious father and the VIP, leading them straight toward the trap that would completely ruin her sister's perfect life.