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The Ghost Surgeon's Secret Billionaire Twins Novel Cover

The Ghost Surgeon's Secret Billionaire Twins

Adelia thought she was just heading upstairs to rest in the hotel suite arranged by her caring stepsister. But her champagne had been heavily drugged. In the pitch-black room, her rational thoughts melted away as she was violently pulled into the darkness by a terrifying stranger. The next morning, the heavy suite door was kicked open, and blinding camera flashes shattered her world. Her fiancé stormed in, hurling their prenuptial agreement directly at her bleeding cheek. "You make me sick! Violating our agreement like this. You are a disgusting, unfaithful whore!" Her stepsister squeezed to the front of the crowd, crying perfectly rehearsed tears of horror for the tabloid reporters, while her eyes gleamed with pure, unadulterated triumph. Desperate and trembling, Adelia begged her father for help, explaining she had been framed. But her father, the family CEO, only cared about his plummeting stock prices. He coldly stripped her of her inheritance, froze her trust funds, and had massive security guards physically drag her out of Manhattan. She hadn't just been betrayed; she had been completely slaughtered by the people she loved most. As the elevator plummeted toward the lobby, her tears dried into a bloody, silent vow. Six years later, Adelia stepped out of JFK Airport, flanked by her terrifyingly smart six-year-old twins. She was no longer a disgraced, pathetic victim. She had returned as a legendary, untouchable ghost surgeon, ready to rip her family's empire apart. And her very first move involves saving the life of the ruthless Wall Street predator who ruined her that night.
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Chapter 2

The bruising on Adelia's upper arm throbbed in time with her racing pulse as she pushed open the heavy glass doors of the Compton Enterprises boardroom.

The room was freezing. The air conditioning bit into her skin, but it was nothing compared to the ice in her father's eyes.

Enos Compton stood at the head of the long mahogany table. As Adelia stepped inside, he picked up a stack of New York tabloids and slammed them down onto the polished wood. The smack echoed like a gunshot.

The bold black headlines screamed: COMPTON HEIRESS CAUGHT IN HOTEL ORGY – STOCK PLUMMETS 12%. And beneath it, a grainy photo of the black cufflink, circled in red: MYSTERY LOVER'S IDENTITY? LION CREST BAFFLES EXPERTS.

In truth, when the reporters burst in, the room had contained only Adelia. But the tabloids needed a narrative that would sell. One photographer had captured a shot of the disheveled bedsheets-two champagne flasks, a discarded tie, the imprint of a second body on the mattress. From that single image, the story metastasized: "Mysterious Man" became "Multiple Men." "One Woman" became "An Orgy." The truth was boring. Lies sold papers. By the time the internet finished amplifying the story, Adelia Compton had become the face of high-society depravity. The unidentified cufflink only fueled the fire. The truth no longer mattered-only eyeballs.

"Dad, please," Adelia started, her voice shaking. She rubbed her cheek, feeling the raw scratch from the thrown papers earlier. "You have to listen to me. Bonny set me up. She drugged my drink-"

"Shut up!" Enos roared, violently yanking at his silk tie. His face was purple with rage. "Wall Street doesn't care about your pathetic excuses, Adelia. They care about results. And the result is that you just wiped out millions in shareholder value in a single night! Do you know what they're calling you? The Compton whore. The tramp heiress. And that cufflink-whose is it? Some drug dealer? A janitor?"

Adelia's breath hitched. "It wasn't me. I was framed."

"I am trying to save this company!" Enos slammed his fist on the table.

His eyes flickered for a split second. He knew Bonny had been acting strangely that day. He had even seen a hotel security screenshot-Adelia being helped upstairs by Bonny, clearly disoriented. He could demand a toxicology screen. He could investigate. He could save his daughter.

But the stock had crashed twelve percent. The board was already whispering about a vote of no confidence. If he protected Adelia, they'd ask why he hadn't vetted his own daughter's companions. They'd dig into Bonny. They'd dig into his marriage. They'd dig into everything.

Sacrificing one daughter to save his own position-that was the businessman's instinct. The board needed a scapegoat, and Adelia was already bleeding.

Besides, he had always resented this daughter who looked too much like his dead ex-wife. Elena had built the company, yes. But she had also made him feel small. Adelia had Elena's eyes-and every time Enos looked at her, he saw the woman who had never really loved him.

"To appease the board, I am officially stripping you of your inheritance rights, effective immediately."

A man in a gray suit-the family lawyer-stepped forward. He slid a thick legal document across the table.

"This freezes all your trust funds and cuts your access to family accounts," Enos said, his voice dropping to a lethal calm.

Adelia picked up the document. Her hands were steady now. She read every line, then looked her father dead in the eye. "You're not just disinheriting me. You're erasing me from the family registry. You're removing my mother's name from the company foundation."

Enos's jaw tightened. "Your mother is dead. And she would be ashamed of you."

The words hit like a physical blow. But Adelia didn't crumble. Something cold and hard crystallized in her chest. "My mother built this company from nothing. And you're handing it to Bonny-a woman who married you for your money six months after Mom's funeral."

"Security!" Enos barked, his face purple.

"You're abandoning me," she whispered, the physical pain in her chest making it hard to speak.

"I'm not abandoning you," Enos said, turning his back. "I'm erasing you."

Two massive guards stepped into the room. One of them grabbed her wrist, roughly snapping her corporate ID lanyard from her neck. They flanked her, physically forcing her toward the exit.

"Get her out of Manhattan," Enos ordered, his voice utterly devoid of fatherly warmth. "And don't let her back in."

They shoved her into the elevator. As the metal doors slid shut, cutting off the sight of her father's back, Adelia stopped crying. The tears dried on her face, leaving her skin tight and cold.

She dug her fingernails into her palms until the skin broke. As the elevator plummeted toward the lobby, she made a silent, bloody vow. She would come back. She would take back everything her mother had built. And she would destroy Bonny and Enos with her bare hands if she had to.

The elevator doors opened. Outside, the New York rain was pouring. Adelia stepped out into the storm, clutching the only thing she had left-her mother's wedding ring, hidden in her bra. She flagged down a cab.

"JFK," she told the driver. "And step on it."

As the cab pulled away, she looked back at the Compton tower one last time. "I'll be back," she whispered. "And when I am, you'll beg."

Six years later.

The VIP arrival terminal at JFK International Airport was a chaotic sea of people.

A pair of long legs, clad in sharp tailored trousers and Christian Louboutin heels, stepped out of the private corridor.

Adelia Compton didn't look like a victim anymore. She wore oversized black sunglasses, her posture rigid, radiating an oppressive, elite authority.

To her left walked Leo. The six-year-old boy wore a miniature black suit, his face completely devoid of childlike wonder. He effortlessly pushed a custom Rimowa suitcase while occasionally glancing at a tablet.

To her right skipped Luna. The six-year-old girl, a terrifyingly charismatic social butterfly, clutched a plush doll, her bright eyes taking in the airport with greedy excitement.

A blast of cold New York wind hit them as the automatic doors opened. Adelia pulled off her sunglasses. Her eyes were sharp, scanning the Manhattan skyline in the distance.

Luna tugged on the hem of Adelia's trench coat. "Mommy, is this the new map we're going to conquer?"

Adelia looked down, a soft smile breaking her icy exterior. She stroked Luna's hair. "No, baby. This is the old territory we're going to reclaim."

Leo glanced up from his tablet, his expression eerily focused for a five-year-old. "The news says Grandpa's company lost three hundred million dollars. The reporters are saying they're 'hemorrhaging value.' That means bleeding, right?"

Adelia raised an eyebrow. "You've been watching business news?"

"The hotel TV only had two English channels." He turned the tablet toward her-not a stock tracking app, but a saved screenshot of a financial news headline. "Also, I found the cufflink picture from the old articles. I searched for the lion symbol. It belongs to a family called Hays. They're rich."

Adelia's heart stopped. She forced her face to remain neutral. "Turn that off. Now."

Leo's eyes narrowed. "Why?"

"Because I said so."

She thought back to that dark night five years ago-after being thrown out of Manhattan, she had broken down crying in the taxi. The driver had asked if she needed a hospital. She'd said no. Then she'd discovered she was pregnant. Twins.

She arrived in London with seven hundred dollars, a fake ID, and her mother's old medical journals-handwritten notes from a woman who had built a biotech empire from nothing. Adelia had no degree, no license, no references. But she had her mother's hands: steady, precise, gifted.

She started in underground clinics. Stitching up gangsters who paid in cash. Performing secret surgeries for oligarchs who couldn't go to hospitals. Each procedure bought her another week. Each patient owed her a favor.

Three years later, she opened her own clinic in Zurich-legit this time, with forged credentials that became real credentials after she saved a Swiss minister's life. Two years after that, she became the "ghost surgeon" known as Ada. The woman who didn't exist. The hands that could fix anything.

The people she had saved were now scattered across the world-CEOs, crime lords, politicians, spies. Between them, they controlled enough wealth to buy a small country. And they all owed her.

But this was not the time for memories.

Before Adelia could reply, her private phone buzzed. It was a customized encrypted ringtone.

She pressed the device to her ear. "Speak."

"Miss Adelia!" The voice belonged to Mora, the old family housekeeper. She was sobbing hysterically. "It's your grandmother! Eleanora had a massive heart failure. They rushed her to Mount Sinai!"

Adelia's blood ran cold. Her stomach dropped so fast she felt physically sick.

"Is she in surgery?" Adelia demanded, her grip on the phone turning her knuckles white.

"No!" Mora cried. "Mr. Enos is refusing to call in the top specialists. He's telling the doctors to let nature take its course. He's going to let her die! He said it's 'God's will'-but I heard him on the phone with Bonny. They want her gone so they can sell her shares!"

A murderous rage flared in Adelia's chest. The air around her seemed to drop ten degrees.

"I'm on my way," she hissed.

She shoved the phone into her pocket and spun toward the curb where a massive, black Cadillac Escalade was idling.

She threw open the back doors. "Get in. Seatbelts. Now."

She slammed the doors shut, locking the kids safely inside. Adelia jumped into the driver's seat, her hands gripping the leather steering wheel tight enough to snap it. She slammed her foot on the gas pedal. The heavy SUV roared like a wounded beast, tearing out of the airport and speeding straight toward the heart of Manhattan.

Luna, buckled in the back, whispered to Leo: "Mommy's going to kill someone, isn't she?"

Leo didn't look up from his tablet. "Probably."

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