
The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon
8.3 / 10.0
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For three years, I served as Abraham Crane’s "Surgeon"—the secret fixer who managed his agonizing spinal injury and the even messier fallout of his billionaire empire. I thought the intimacy we shared behind closed doors meant I was the exception to his coldness, but I was just another line item in his ledger.
The morning after a frantic night together, Abraham didn't offer a confession of love. Instead, he handed me a manila envelope containing a deed to a penthouse and a blank check. It was a severance package, a cold transaction to buy my silence and end our three-year arrangement.
When I walked away and refused his money, the retaliation was swift and brutal. He sent his men to dump my meager belongings in a grimy hotel hallway, intentionally crushing the only photo of my dying mother under an expensive leather shoe. Even after I saved his life during a near-fatal medical crisis that very night, he mocked me, slurring that I had only returned to scavenge for the check.
The nightmare escalated when he realized I was truly trying to leave. To force me back, he revoked the funding for my mother’s nursing home, leaving her facing immediate eviction. He wasn't just obsessed; he was desperate. He needed a scapegoat for a federal investigation into his illegal drug supply, and he wanted me to be the one to hold the bag.
I stood in his study, looking at a marriage contract that was actually a legal death sentence. His original fiancée had fled in horror after realizing the "wife" would assume all criminal liability for his crimes. Abraham sat in his wheelchair, looking at me like a predator who had finally caught its prey, using my mother’s life as the ultimate leverage.
He thinks he’s bought himself a shield. He thinks I’m signing my life away just to keep my mother safe. He doesn't realize that by making me his wife, he’s giving me full access to the encrypted records and offshore accounts that can incinerate his entire legacy.
I reached for the pen, my heart turning into cold, hard stone. This wasn't a wedding; it was a declaration of war. I looked him dead in the eye and asked, "Where do I sign?"
The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon Chapter 1
The bed was cold.
That was the first thing her body registered before her eyes even opened. The specific, biting cold of high-thread-count silk that hasn't been touched by body heat in hours.
She rolled over, her limbs heavy, muscles aching with a dull throb that radiated from her hips down to her thighs. A physiological receipt of last night.
The pillow beside her was pristine. No indentation. No stray hair.
It was as if Abraham Crane had never been there at all.
She sat up, the sheet pooling at her waist. The air in the penthouse was always filtered to a sterile sixty-eight degrees, odorless and sharp. She swung her legs over the edge of the mattress, her feet hitting the hardwood floor.
She didn't look for him. She didn't call his name.
Instead, she moved with the efficiency of a soldier breaking camp. She gathered her clothes from the floor where they had been discarded in a frenzy six hours ago. Her bra, the clasp twisted. Her dress, a wrinkle in the fabric that no amount of steaming would fix.
Water ran in the bathroom. The shower.
He was washing her off.
She pulled her dress over her head, the zipper catching slightly at the small of her back. She forced it up, ignoring the pinch of skin.
She walked out into the living area. The floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of Manhattan, bleached gray by the early morning overcast. It looked like a prison made of steel and glass.
Abraham was there.
He sat in his wheelchair, back to her, facing the city. He was dressed in a crisp white shirt, cuffs rolled to the elbows, reviewing a document on a tablet.
He didn't turn around. He didn't need to. He knew her tread pattern on the floorboards better than he knew his own heartbeat.
She walked to the kitchen island and poured a glass of water. Her throat felt like it was lined with sandpaper.
"There's something on the table for you," his voice cut through the silence. Baritone. Detached.
She took a sip of water, letting the cool liquid settle the acid in her stomach, before she approached the dining table.
A thick, manila envelope lay there. The wax seal of Crane Industries was stamped on the flap.
She set her glass down. Her hand didn't shake. She wouldn't let it.
She slid the contents out.
A deed. A penthouse in Tribeca. Three bedrooms, four baths, private elevator access.
And a check.
The number had six zeros.
She stared at the paper. It wasn't a gift. It was an invoice. Payment for her silence. For her complicity. For the role she was about to play. Bride. Nurse. Alibi.
"It's a signing bonus," Abraham said. The whir of his electric wheelchair announced his movement before he did. He turned to face her.
His eyes were dark, intelligent, and devoid of anything resembling warmth. "Combined with a standard NDA. The lawyers drafted it this morning."
Her stomach clenched. Not a flutter, but a hard, violent contraction.
He was buying her silence. He was buying her disappearance from her own life, to step into another's.
She looked at him. Really looked at him. The sharp jawline, the deceptive stillness of his legs covered by a wool blanket. The man who had whispered her name against her neck hours ago was gone. This was the CEO.
She slid the papers back into the envelope. The sound of paper scraping against the polished mahogany table was deafening.
She pushed it toward him.
"If you don't like the location," he said, his brow furrowing slightly, "you can negotiate. I'm open to the Upper East Side."
"I don't need it."
Her voice was raspy, but the words were solid.
Abraham blinked. A micro-expression of confusion. In his world, assets were never rejected. Leverage was never abandoned.
"Elida," he warned, his tone dropping an octave. "Don't be dramatic. You have debts. Your mother-"
"Is my problem," she cut him off.
She grabbed her cheap handbag from the chair, shoving her phone inside. She zipped it shut with a finality that echoed in the cavernous room.
"I sent my acceptance of the terms to your legal team at 6:00 AM," she said. "Effective immediately."
Abraham's hand tightened on the armrest of his chair. His knuckles turned white. The only sign that he wasn't a statue.
"You're trying to renegotiate," he scoffed, a cruel smirk touching his lips. "It doesn't suit you. You're a pragmatist, Elida. Take the money."
She walked to the door. Her legs felt weak, the adrenaline fading, leaving behind a hollow exhaustion.
She put her hand on the cold brass handle.
"I'm not playing," she said, looking back over her shoulder.
He looked small in that chair. Powerful, yes. But small.
"My service has a price," she said, her eyes meeting his. "But my signature isn't for sale. Consider the debt paid."
She opened the door and walked out.
The heavy thud of the door closing behind her severed the air supply.
She leaned against the corridor wall, gasping for breath. Her lungs burned.
She wasn't going to cry. Tears were a biological waste of hydration.
She dug into her bag and pulled out the white plastic keycard. Access Level: All.
She walked to the elevator bank. There was a sleek, chrome trash can next to the call button.
She didn't hesitate. She dropped the card.
It clattered against the metal bottom, joining empty coffee cups and discarded tissues.
The elevator dinged. The doors slid open.
She stepped into the small metal box and pressed the button for the lobby. As the numbers descended, she felt her stomach drop with them.
She was free.
And she had absolutely nothing.
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The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon of Contents
New Release Novels

7.9
Allyson was the most hated actress in Hollywood, forced to wear a cheap, tearing gown after America's sweetheart, Joanne, stole her S-tier role.
During a red carpet disaster, Allyson tripped and fell—straight into the arms of the untouchable megastar, Byron Estes.
The internet exploded, accusing Allyson of faking the fall to seduce him. Drowning in bad press and desperate to pay her agency's termination fee, she signed a reality TV contract. She was forced to play the desperate, clingy villain, acting as a pathetic stepping stone for Joanne and Byron's highly anticipated on-screen romance.
"You could throw yourself at Byron a hundred times, and you'd still never make it into his bed," Joanne mocked.
What Joanne and the furious public didn't know was that three years ago, when Byron was in a horrific crash, Joanne had abandoned him. It was Allyson who stayed.
Even more absurd? Allyson and Byron were actually secretly married, bound by a multi-million dollar NDA.
Determined to play her villainous role and get paid, Allyson memorized a book of cringe-inducing pickup lines, ready to disgust her secret husband on live television.
"The stars are in the sky. But you... are in my heart."
She expected the ice-cold superstar to push her away in disgust. Instead, when another male guest got too close to her, Byron completely shattered his untouchable facade, his eyes burning with a lethal, undeniable possessiveness that sent the internet into absolute chaos.

7.1
The last thing I remembered was the blinding flash of my starship crashing. But instead of a rescue crew, I woke up tied to a wooden post, surrounded by hostile beastmen.
My universal translator kicked in just in time to hear their priestess, Chelsea, declare that I was a cursed demon who ruined their hunt. To save the clan from winter starvation, I was to be burned alive.
The flames were already blistering my legs, and jagged stones hurled by the crowd gashed my forehead. I barely negotiated a three-day reprieve to find them food, venturing into the deadly primeval forest.
I found a massive supply of wild potatoes and even gained the protection of Bronson, a terrifyingly powerful saber-toothed tiger beastman.
But Chelsea wouldn't stop.
She labeled my food as poisonous, tried to sentence me to starve in a penitent's cave, and when my agricultural knowledge proved her wrong, she invoked an ancient law. She incited the tribe's savage warriors to fight over me, turning me into breeding property.
I was a scientist offering them endless food, yet their primitive ignorance and one woman's vicious jealousy kept pushing me toward a brutal end. I was terrified, completely powerless against their monstrous physical strength.
As five ruthless challengers drew their bone axes to claim me, I begged Bronson to leave me and run.
Instead, he pulled me against his scarred chest and kissed me fiercely in front of the entire clan.
"She is my mate," he roared, unleashing a soul-crushing aura. "Anyone who wants her, come at me together."

9.0
I am the undisputed ice queen of the ER, a doctor whose life is built on absolute control. A month ago, I impulsively married a stranger to create a legal shield against my ex-mentor's betrayal.
Our prenup had one strict rule: a fake marriage with zero interference in each other's lives. But tonight, my "husband on paper" was wheeled into my ER, unconscious, reeking of cheap whiskey, and suffering from a bleeding ulcer.
To authorize his emergency surgery, I had to sign the consent form as his wife, detonating a gossip bomb among my colleagues. Worse, his overbearing family found out he was hospitalized. To stop his terrifying mother from flying in and exposing our sham marriage, I had to lean over his hospital bed and take a fake, loving couple's selfie.
I didn't understand why this disciplined math professor was suddenly drinking himself to death, nor why my chest tightened when he looked at me with exhausted eyes and begged for homemade soup. My perfectly ordered, untouchable life was crumbling into a chaotic mess, and I was losing my grip on the narrative.
"We should probably spend some time together beforehand. We could be roommates."
To prepare for an unavoidable family dinner and a wedding, my stranger husband just asked me to move into his apartment. The ultimate uncontrolled variable has just crossed the line, and our fake marriage is about to become dangerously real.

8.3
On the night of my career-defining art exhibition, I stood completely alone. My husband, Dante Sovrano, the most feared man in Chicago, had promised he wouldn’t miss it for the world. Instead, he was on the evening news.
He was shielding another woman—his ruthless business partner—from a downpour, letting his own thousand-dollar suit get soaked just to protect her. The headline flashed below them, calling their new alliance a "power move" that would reshape the city.
The guests at my gallery immediately began to whisper. Their pitying looks turned my greatest triumph into a public spectacle of humiliation. Then his text arrived, a cold, final confirmation of my place in his life: “Something came up. Isabella needed me. You understand. Business.”
For four years, I had been his possession. A quiet, artistic wife kept in a gilded cage on the top floor of his skyscraper. I poured all my loneliness and heartbreak onto my canvases, but he never truly saw my art. He never truly saw me. He just saw another one of his assets.
My heart didn't break that night. It turned to ice. He hadn't just neglected me; he had erased me.
So the next morning, I walked into his office and handed him a stack of gallery contracts.
He barely glanced up, annoyed at the interruption to his empire-building. He snatched the pen and signed on the line I’d marked.
He didn’t know the page tucked directly underneath was our divorce decree.
He had just signed away his wife like she was nothing more than an invoice for art supplies.

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife.
Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining.
To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live.
She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson.
When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds.
Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family.
The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted.
He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed.
"Stop crying. I'll handle it."
Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life.
To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.






![[Dubbed Version] Fall in Love After the Wedding](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/60c566195145403705174537124/ojBAhVMaIzIA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)
![[Dubbed Version] The Reawakened: Avenge My Mom's Shame](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/07b2033f5145403705285262348/VAjmN9pCSwcA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)



