Follow
Chapters
Share
The Ghost Surgeon: My Ruthless Ex's Obsession Novel Cover

The Ghost Surgeon: My Ruthless Ex's Obsession

I was balancing four pitchers of watery beer when my phone buzzed with a photo of my cousin flaunting a massive pink diamond on the hand of my ex-fiancé. Jennings Bowen didn't just break our engagement; his family stripped away my medical scholarship and branded me a "reputational liability," leaving me to scrub grease in a Queens dive bar. When Jennings walked into my bar with the arrogance of old money, my alcohol-fueled rage took over, and I ended up vomiting all over his handmade Italian leather shoes. He didn't just have me arrested; he baited my younger brother, Leo, into a fight and had him charged with felony assault. "He’s nineteen, Bronwyn. We’ll bury him," Jennings whispered at the precinct, while his mother ensured no lawyer in the city would touch our case. With a fifty-thousand-dollar bail I couldn't pay and an eviction notice on my door, I was backed into a corner with absolutely nothing left to lose. I couldn't understand why these people were so obsessed with crushing someone who was already down, or how they could sleep at night while destroying a teenager's life. I realized then that playing by their rules wouldn't save Leo, so I dug out the set of black ceramic scalpels I had hidden under my bed for five years. I wasn't just a waitress or a failed student; I was "The Ghost," a surgeon who operated in the shadows where the law couldn't follow. I marched to the gates of the Phelps estate, the home of the billionaire father who abandoned me, ready to trade his life for my brother's freedom. "I'm here to save you," I told the dying man as his family watched in horror. "But the price is my brother’s life, and you’re going to pay it."
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

Bronwyn woke up on a slab of concrete.

That was the only explanation. The surface beneath her was brutally hard and cold. It smelled of bleach and regret. Her head felt like someone had taken a sledgehammer to her frontal lobe.

She reached out blindly, her hand seeking the familiar chipped wood of her bedside table. Instead, her fingers brushed against gritty, cold metal.

Her eyes snapped open.

She wasn't in her apartment. She was in a holding cell, the fluorescent lights overhead humming a merciless, flat note. The walls were painted a sterile, calming grey that did nothing to calm the panic piercing through her hangover.

Memories flashed. The bar. The tequila. The suit. The vomit.

She sat up, a thin, scratchy blanket falling to her waist. She looked down. Her uniform-the stained polo and the grease-spattered apron-was gone. She was wearing a paper-thin, dark blue jumpsuit. It was huge on her, the fabric crinkling with every movement.

She checked underneath. She was wearing her own underwear. Thank God.

The sound of a key turning in a lock echoed down the hall. Bronwyn scrambled backward, pulling the blanket up to her chin, pressing her back against the cinderblock wall.

The man from the bar walked in, escorted by a uniformed officer.

He looked different under the harsh institutional lighting. Less like a shadow, more like a statue carved from marble. He was wearing a different, equally expensive suit, this one a sharp charcoal grey. He held a sleek leather folio.

He stopped just outside the bars, looking at her with that same detached, clinical expression.

"You're awake," he said. "Miss Brewer."

He knew her name.

"Who are you?" Her voice was a croak. "Where am I? What did you do to me?"

He didn't answer immediately. He gestured for the officer to open the cell door. The officer complied, then stood at a respectful distance. Jennings walked in, stopping a careful ten feet away from her, as if measuring a contamination zone.

"Is that how you usually speak to the person who had you scraped off a bar floor?" he asked.

Bronwyn swung her legs off the concrete slab. Her muscles felt like jelly. She gripped the edge of the slab to steady herself.

"My clothes," she demanded, trying to summon some dignity despite wearing nothing but a paper jumpsuit. "Where are my clothes?"

"Bagged as evidence," he said calmly.

Bronwyn blinked. "What?"

"They smelled like a distillery and failure," he said. "The arresting officer was kind enough to quarantine them. Assaulting a citizen tends to have consequences."

"You had me arrested?" Her voice rose. "For spilling a drink?"

He reached into his folio and pulled out a slip of paper. He placed it on the small metal table bolted to the floor.

"That check will cover a thousand of those polyester rags," he said. "Consider it a severance package for your dignity. And bail money. In return, you will sign a non-disclosure agreement and never speak of this again."

The arrogance radiated off him in waves. He wasn't just rich; he was the kind of rich that viewed other people as NPCs in his video game.

Bronwyn stood up. Her legs shook, but she forced them to hold her weight. She walked over to the table and picked up the check. She didn't look at the amount.

She ripped it in half. Then in quarters.

She let the pieces flutter onto the grimy concrete floor.

"I don't want your money," she said, her voice shaking with rage. "I want to know what happened last night. Did you... did we..."

She couldn't finish the sentence.

The man stood up. He moved with a predator's grace, closing the distance between them in two strides. He towered over her, forcing her to crane her neck to look him in the eye.

He leaned down, his face inches from hers. She could smell coffee and mint.

He stayed silent for a long moment, letting the tension stretch until it was almost unbearable. He saw the fear in her eyes, the way her pulse jumped in her throat.

"What do you think?" he whispered.

It wasn't an answer. It was a taunt. A punishment for tearing up his money.

Bronwyn's face drained of color. She stepped back, her heel catching on the edge of the cot.

He straightened up, looking bored again. He turned toward the door.

"The matron will return your personal effects upon your release. I suggest you accept the bail. The alternative is less comfortable." He paused at the door, turning his head slightly. "And one of my men retrieved your phone from the bar floor. He took the liberty of copying its contents before placing it in your property bag. Just in case you needed a reminder of who holds all the cards."

The cell door clanged shut behind him.

Bronwyn sank to the floor, her hands trembling. She had to get out. She had to get to a pharmacy. Plan B. She needed Plan B. Just in case.

You may also like

A Bride For The Mafia King Novel Cover
8.2
Forced into a cold marriage of convenience to settle a debt, Elena finds herself bound to the ruthless underworld sovereign, Lorenzo. As she navigates a world of lethal power plays and betrayal, she discovers that her husband’s icy exterior hides a dangerous passion. Elena must survive the violent crossfire of rival families while deciding if she can truly love the monster who bought her. Their union is a war where the heart is the ultimate prize.
After My Mate Sold Me to His Enemy Novel Cover
9.2
Betrayed by the man she loved, a young werewolf is sold by her own mate to his most hated rival. This ultimate act of cruelty leaves her shattered and trapped in the hands of a dangerous enemy. As she navigates her new life in captivity, she must survive the tension between these powerful rivals. Forced to face a future she never imagined, she discovers hidden truths about loyalty and desire while trying to reclaim her stolen freedom.
Caught In His Web of Manipulation Novel Cover
7.5
My genius boyfriend, Colten, was my savior. I was the "slow" girl he single-handedly tutored into NYU. He built my entire academic future, and I thought our love story was a fairytale. But after I found another woman's birth control pills in his bag and caught him in lie after lie with his lab partner, Addisyn, I finally left him. The price was brutal: I failed every class and faced expulsion. Desperate to save myself, I went back. I played the part of his sweet, obedient girlfriend, using his tutoring to ace my retake exams while secretly planning my escape to a new program. The day my transfer was approved, he ambushed me with a public proposal. In front of a cheering crowd, he got on one knee with a diamond ring, ready to trap me in his perfect life forever. "Will you marry me?" he asked, his voice full of triumph. But before I could answer, a different woman stepped forward. It was Addisyn, and her hand was resting on her pregnant belly.
Divine Contract: Marrying My Phantom Prince Novel Cover
9.2
Clara was drowning in student debt and barely making rent when she downloaded a fantasy mobile game to escape reality. Inside the game, an exiled prince named Alex was freezing to death. Pitying him, she spent her last few dollars on microtransactions to fix his shelter and cure his poison. But the game was far too real. Every time she paid, the prince reacted. When she complained aloud about going broke, the in-game army suddenly halted, as if the prince had heard her voice. Then, the terrifying real-world consequences hit. Clara woke up to find her water glass and a box of Kleenex had vanished from her locked bedroom overnight. She frantically searched the tiny apartment, her heart pounding in her chest. She thought she was losing her mind. Had she thrown them out in her sleep? Was there a stalker hiding in her home? How could physical objects just disappear into thin air behind a deadbolted door? Until she looked at her nightstand. Sitting exactly where her missing items used to be was a glowing, weightless crystal cup that defied all logic. And on her laptop screen, the exiled prince was carefully holding her Kleenex box, offering a mountain of real gold on an altar. She hadn't just downloaded a mobile game; she had opened a cross-dimensional trade route with a desperate future king.
Reborn Heiress: Dragging Traitors To Hell Novel Cover
8.7
The world was a symphony of agony, played on the strings of my own body. I was tied to a chair in a damp basement, the metallic tang of blood filling my mouth as my fingernails were ripped from their beds by a pair of rusty pliers. My best friend, Corrine, stepped into the flickering light wearing my favorite Chanel suit and the engagement ring that was supposed to be mine. Beside her, my fiancé Aldo held the pliers, his voice smooth and cultured as he demanded I sign over my entire inheritance to them. As I struggled, a news report flashed on an old TV in the corner: Hunter Gallagher, the man I had treated like dirt but who had always tried to protect me, was dead in a horrific car explosion. Corrine laughed, whispering in my ear that they had lured him to his death using a fake kidnapping tip. He died trying to save me from a trap set by the people I trusted most. They didn't just want my money; they wanted to erase me. They plunged a needle full of heroin into my neck, watching with cold, mocking eyes as my heart hammered against my ribs and finally seized into nothingness. I died in that basement, a blind, spoiled girl who had let her true protector be murdered. As the darkness closed in, my soul burned with a single, silent vow: If I ever get another life, I will drag you both to hell with me. Suddenly, I gasped for air, my lungs fighting against a weight that wasn't there. I wasn't in the basement; I was in my own bed, my fingernails intact and my skin unbroken. I checked my phone, and my heart stopped—it was May 20th, exactly one year before my death. Hunter was still alive, and this time, I wasn't the prey.
Shattered Vows And The Heiress's Revenge Novel Cover
9.4
I married Alistair Montgomery out of duty, enduring five years of his coldness and his mother stealing my son, hoping my love would eventually warm his heart. Then, his "dead" first love, Cordelia, returned. The second he heard her voice on the phone, he ordered me out of his car on a deserted dirt road and left me in the dust to rush to her side. She faked a suicide attempt and framed me. Alistair didn't even give me a chance to explain. "If she doesn't survive this, I will destroy you." He roared those words over the phone, openly declaring he would spend the night guarding her hospital bed. The very next day, Cordelia's secret son publicly attacked me and my child at the kindergarten gates, pointing at me and screaming that I was a thief who stole his father. For five years, I swallowed my pride and let his family strip me of my dignity, only to realize I was nothing but a temporary placeholder for a ghost. He actually thought he could just toss me the empty title of "wife" while giving his heart and his nights to another woman. I finally woke up from this pathetic joke. I didn't shed another tear or beg him to look at me. Instead, I calmly opened my tablet and searched for the most ruthless divorce lawyer in New York. The war was about to begin.