
The Stoic Nurse's Obsession: My Secret Queen
At St. Jude’s Prep, I was the "scholarship waste" in a sea of navy blue blazers and old money. I purposely handed in a blank placement exam, accepting a spot in the remedial track just to gain access to the school's high-speed server backbone.
While my teachers mocked my "inevitable failure," I was secretly fighting a digital war. I intercepted a high-level breach by the notorious hacker Black Eagle, bricking his hardware and neutralizing the threat before he could touch the school’s financial records.
But at home, the victory tasted like ash. My socialite mother, Inger, called me a "useless stain" and a "waste of space" over a dinner of roast beef and expensive wine. My stepsister Erika mocked my lack of talent, never realizing that the "freak" she despised had just earned a $50,000 bounty for a single hour of work.
I lived as a ghost, hiding my genius behind a frayed gray hoodie and a mask of indifference. I thought I was invisible, but the school nurse, Fielding Pickett, saw through my cover, tracing my pulse and my code with predatory precision.
"Nice code, Ruiz," he whispered, a warning that my sanctuary was crumbling.
The pressure finally broke me. I collapsed in the infirmary with a 103-degree fever, my secret identity hanging by a thread. As I lay half-conscious on the cot, the IT administrator burst in, screaming that the Dark Web had just put a million-dollar bounty on the head of a hacker named "Q."
Fielding leaned over me, his eyes dark and knowing, as the world outside began hunting for my life.
"I've got you, Q," he whispered, just as the darkness took me.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 2
The Art Building was a glass and steel monstrosity that looked like it had crashed into the classic brick architecture of the rest of the campus. It was named the Bentley Center for the Arts, a constant, looming reminder of who owned this school. Who owned this town.
Dallas walked across the manicured lawn, the grass so green it looked painted. She needed to cut through the building to get to the dorms without being seen by the administration.
She heard the violin before she opened the door.
It was fast. Aggressive. Paganini's Caprice No. 24. A piece that required fingers to move like spiders on caffeine.
But something was wrong.
The notes were there, technically. But the rhythm was jagged. It sounded frantic, breathless. It sounded like someone running for their life, not someone making music.
Dallas slipped inside. The hallway was cool and smelled of turpentine and clay. The music was coming from the main recital hall. The double doors were cracked open just an inch.
Dallas stopped. She peered through the gap.
Erika Bentley stood center stage. She was wearing a silk blouse that probably cost more than Dallas's entire wardrobe. Her blonde hair was pulled back in a severe bun. She was sweating. Beads of perspiration glistened on her forehead. Her bow arm was sawing back and forth violently.
She missed a shift to third position. The note screamed-a sharp, ugly sound that echoed in the empty hall.
Dammit! Erika shrieked.
She pulled her arm back, her face contorted in a silent scream of frustration. For a second, it looked like she would smash the expensive instrument, but the socialite in her took over. Instead of breaking the bow, she swung her empty left hand and violently swept the heavy binder of sheet music off the metal stand. The pages scattered across the floor like dead birds.
Erika stood there, chest heaving, her violin clutched in her right hand like a weapon. Her face was twisted in a mask of pure, unfiltered rage. It was ugly. It was the face she never showed the cameras or the donors.
Dallas watched, impassive. She leaned her shoulder against the doorframe.
Erika spun around, sensing the presence. When she saw Dallas, the rage instantly evaporated, replaced by a smooth, plastic mask of condescension. It was terrifying how fast she switched.
Dallas, Erika said, her voice dripping with artificial sweetener. You're not supposed to be here. This is for honor students.
Dallas pushed the door open and stepped inside. She didn't look at Erika. She looked at the fallen music sheets.
You were sharp on the ascending run, Dallas said. And your bow hold is too tight. You're choking the sound.
Erika's eyes widened. A flash of genuine hatred cut through the plastic mask.
Excuse me? Erika laughed, a high, brittle sound. What would you know about Paganini? You can't even pass a math test. Go back to your dorm, Dallas. Before I call security.
Dallas looked at her stepsister. Really looked at her. She saw the trembling in Erika's hands. The fear behind the eyes.
Pick up your music, Erika, Dallas said quietly. It looks messy.
She turned and walked out, leaving Erika standing alone in the silence. Behind her, the violin started again, louder, angrier, and even more desperate.
Room 302 in the girls' dormitory was small, cramped, and currently smelled like an explosion in a floral shop.
Dallas pushed the door open. Her roommate, Whitney, was sitting at her vanity, spraying something pink and noxious into the air. Sloan, the other roommate, was sitting on her bed, looking uncomfortable.
Oh god, Whitney said, waving her hand in front of her nose. The smell of public school just walked in.
Sloan looked down at her hands. Whitney, stop.
Dallas ignored them. She walked to her bed-the one by the window, the one with the thin, scratchy blanket. She dropped her bag.
I heard you got a zero, Whitney sneered, turning around. She was applying lip gloss, her mouth making a popping sound. My dad says people like you lower the property value of the school just by existing.
Dallas sat on her bed. She pulled her knees up to her chest. She looked at Whitney.
And people like you raise the collective narcissism index, Dallas said. It's a delicate ecosystem.
Whitney blinked. Her mouth hung open slightly. What?
Dallas reached into her bag and pulled out her headphones. Large, noise-canceling, battered. She put them on. The world went silent.
She pressed a button on the side. Static hissed, then cleared.
...Black Eagle is scanning the nodes... Sector 4 is vulnerable...
The voice in her ear was synthesized, distorted. It was the voice of the underground. Dallas closed her eyes, letting the data wash over her.
Whitney was still talking, her mouth moving, her hands gesturing. She looked like a silent movie actor overacting a scene. She stood up, stomped her foot, and grabbed Sloan's arm. They stormed out of the room, presumably to go complain to someone who cared.
The door slammed.
Dallas opened her eyes. The room was empty.
She reached under her pillow. Her fingers brushed against the cool metal of her laptop. It wasn't the clunky school-issued device. It was a matte black beast, customized with processors she had salvaged and soldered herself.
She opened it. The screen glowed with a terminal prompt. Green text on black.
WARNING: External IP detected probing St. Jude's Mainframe.
Dallas stared at the cursor blinking.
Black Eagle.
He was here. In her school.
She shouldn't get involved. She was supposed to be the idiot. The sleeper.
Her stomach growled, a painful, hollow twist. She hadn't eaten since yesterday morning.
Dallas closed the laptop. Not yet.
She pulled a squashed energy bar from her pocket. The wrapper crinkled loudly in the quiet room. She took a bite. It tasted like sawdust and chemicals. She chewed slowly, staring out the window at the campus lights below. They looked like stars, cold and distant.
You may also like

7.7
In their first year of marriage, Melinda's husband never shared her bed, and the loneliness became a craving.
She understood why after catching him kissing her sister-she was just a stand-in.
When that restless craving finally sharpened into an ailment, she went to the hospital and met a doctor whose steady hands almost unraveled her.
The next day, he showed up as the company's new CEO and made her his assistant.
"Sir, I have a husband. Stop hitting on me." She had tried to resist, but eventually, she still became his girlfriend.
Her ex begged tearfully, "Melinda, let's start over. Don't leave me."
Melinda huffed, "Sorry. I'm not interested in a man who couldn't perform in bed."

9.3
On her wedding night at The Plaza Hotel, Clara went looking for her husband.
Instead, she found him in the dimly lit parking garage, passionately pinning down her bridesmaid.
She couldn't even scream or expose them. Just hours before the ceremony, Julian had tricked her into signing away her twenty percent shares of their co-founded company, leaving her completely penniless and unable to pay her grandmother's life-saving medical bills.
Fleeing in absolute despair, a sudden hotel blackout plunged her into a second nightmare. She was dragged into a pitch-black room and brutally violated by a heavily drugged stranger.
When a shattered Clara returned to the office to audit the books and reclaim her power, Julian demoted her to a dusty desk by the trash cans.
He flaunted his mistress in the executive suite and deliberately sent Clara into a horrifying trap. He arranged for vicious clients to drug and assault her, demanding high-definition blackmail photos so he could divorce her with absolutely nothing.
"Since you want to play rough, you can service Mr. Petrocelli tonight," the thug sneered, locking the VIP room door.
Clara was pushed to the brink of hell. Why was the man she devoted three years of her life to trying to destroy her so completely? And why did the freezing cedarwood scent of the stranger who ruined her in the dark perfectly match Conrad Vance, the ruthless CEO and Julian's untouchable uncle?
Rather than let Julian win, Clara smashed a glass bottle, held the jagged edge to her own throat to force the men back, and threw herself off the second-floor balcony into the freezing night.
But the bone-crushing impact never came. A massive figure shot out from the shadows and caught her, and her brutal counterattack finally began.

8.3
" let that wetness drip. I want to see what I do to you without even touching You "
He stared at her trembling fragile figure who stood naked in front of him with wetness dripping down her thighs making her cheeks burn in shame and embarrassment and he just sat there, staring at her.
" Please ...... daddy "
----------
He was my father's best friend and a very close family friend. I had been in love with him since I was fifteen. He was the man of my dreams but Also a man I could never have. A man who could make me feel tingles.
One night and It changed everything.
I was in bed, letting my hand satisfy the needs and desires of my dark fantasies when he had just walked in, catching me disheveled and messed up. That night he had helped me and that was the first time I had gotten off.
I thought it was a step closer to our relationship but He made it clear, he wanted to be a father figure to me. But his body opposed his words. I knew Luciano Morelli wanted me just as much as I did or maybe more.

9.8
Raven Lopez, the estranged heiress of a powerful family, sacrifices her fortune and her pride to save her husband Viktor's collapsing empire.
She raises his children as her own and builds his success from the ground up only for his former lover to return and her world to fall apart.
Blinded in a hospital accident and abandoned by the man she gave everything to, Raven is forced to depend on an arrogant doctor, Killian....the one man she should never trust. As she regains her sight, she uncovers shattering truths.
Her amnesia, her failed marriage, and even her blindness were all part of a twisted plan set in motion by the two brothers who claimed to love her or rather three brothers.
The last brother had always been a mystery,lurking in the dark and waiting for her to be most vulnerable before he possesses her. Now that she's been divorce,he returns to claim what has always been his.
One brother wanted her wealth. One wanted to own her completely. One loved her, but broke her first to make her his.
Torn between three brothers,Raven must submit to one of them or they all ruin her.
____________________
WARNING ⚠️ ?
For the girls that take interest in books with trigger warnings,May God help us. :-)
This book is not for the faint of heart. It's dark,contains stalking,forced proximity,sexual situations (quite a lot),violence , kidnapping, gory scenes,non/dub con, manipulation etc

7.7
I was driving through a rainstorm in upstate New York, pushing my old Volvo to the limit just to pick up a Dior gown for my wife, Catarina. She needed it for a gala tonight, where she planned to spend the evening standing next to the man she actually loved, Atticus Deleon.
The truck hit me head-on, crossing the center line and sending my car rolling down an embankment in a shriek of twisted metal and shattered glass. As the steering column crushed my chest, my brain didn't see a white light; it was pried open by a digital tsunami, flooding my mind with the "Quantum Archive"-billions of data points on surgery, high-frequency trading, and combat.
I woke up in the ICU with three broken ribs and a concussion, but the only thing waiting for me was a screaming voicemail from my wife's assistant.
"Jorden, where the hell are you? Catarina has been waiting for thirty minutes! You are so incompetent it's actually impressive."
There was no "Are you okay?" or "Are you alive?"-only fury over a ruined dress and a missing tie. While I was being resuscitated, my wife was on Instagram, singing "Endless Love" with Atticus and laughing at my "tantrum." She even called the family lawyer to freeze my credit cards, wanting to make sure I couldn't even buy a coffee without her permission.
For three years, I had been the "useful husband," the doormat who apologized whenever she stepped on my toes. But the accident had overwritten my desperation with cold, hard logic, and I realized I had almost died for a woman who viewed me as a liability with a negative return on investment.
When Catarina finally stormed into my hospital room to demand an apology for ruining her night, I didn't look at her with the usual puppy-dog eyes. I looked at her with ice in my veins and handed her a manila envelope I had drafted myself.
"Sign the divorce papers, Ms. Evans. I'm done being your canary."

7.3
Clara came home from a fourteen-hour board meeting to the sound of a piercing scream in the playroom.
When she rushed in, she found her husband, Chadwick, kneeling on the floor in a panic.
But he wasn't looking at their five-year-old son, Leo, who had a massive bleeding welt on his forehead.
Instead, Chadwick was trembling as he held the nanny's daughter, Autumn, who barely had a microscopic scratch.
"She needs ice. And antibacterial ointment," Chadwick snapped, carrying the nanny's daughter away and leaving his bleeding son behind.
From that moment, the nightmare only escalated.
Chadwick ordered Clara to cook a three-hour meal for the nanny's kid, threw away Leo's favorite toys because Autumn sneezed, and even secretly took the nanny and her daughter on Leo's promised Disney trip.
The final humiliation came at the Met Gala.
Right before their sponsor speech, Chadwick received a frantic call from the nanny claiming Autumn was having a panic attack.
He abandoned Clara in front of hundreds of flashing cameras, sprinting out of the ballroom.
Clara stood completely alone, the humiliation eating through her veins like acid.
She couldn't understand how a father could call the nanny's kid his "little princess" while watching his own son cry.
Why was he treating his own flesh and blood like garbage just to play savior to another woman's child?
Suddenly, the blinding camera flashes were blocked by a massive shadow.
Erasmo Chase, the heir to New York's largest financial dynasty, stepped out of the darkness and shielded her.
"A man like that is unworthy of your grief, Ms. Best," he whispered, pressing a silk handkerchief into her trembling hand.
Looking at the sharp profile of the powerful man beside her, Clara's shock hardened into a lethal, cold fury.
She was going to dump her family's shares, crash the board, and make Chadwick lose absolutely everything.