
TORN BETWEEN BILLIONAIRES; A NURSE'S DILEMMA
Chapter 7
Elena was cleaning the closet, wiping dust off outdated boxes of gauze, when Nurse Patricia called her name.
“Cruz! Director Mendoza needs you in her office. Now.” Patricia’s tone was wild, the way it always was when she was busy.
Elena’s stomach tightened. She immediately thought of all the things she might have done wrong.
Did she use too many gloves this morning? Did she forget to file the complicated insurance form for Mr. Sanchez? Or did someone finally complain about her late arrival because the second bus broke down?
She put the cleaning rag down, rubbed her tired eyes, and walked down the hallway. Her feet were already aching from the morning’s rounds. The walk to the director’s office felt like a walk to a meeting with a debt collector.
The office was located in the newest part of the clinic, which still meant the furniture was old, and the air conditioner made a rattling noise. Elena gently knocked on the door.
“Come in,” Mendoza’s voice said.
Elena stepped inside. Director Mendoza was a serious woman who usually looked annoyed. Today, however, she looked nervous. She sat behind a large desk, moving a pen between her fingers.
“Sit down, Elena,” Mendoza said, waving toward the single guest chair.
Elena sat, straightening her worn scrubs. “Is everything alright, Director?”
Mendoza took a slow breath. She did not meet Elena’s eye right away. “This is… unusual, Elena. Very unusual.”
Elena waited, bracing herself for the response.
Mendoza finally looked up. “Do you know of a company called Platinum Care Agency?”
The name meant nothing to Elena. It sounded like something expensive, something from the television dramas Miguel watched. “No, ma’am.”
“They are an elite service,” Mendoza explained slowly. “They provide private nursing and home care. But they only deal with high-profile clients. People with real money. Billionaires, politicians, that kind of world.”
Elena just blinked. It felt like Mendoza was talking about a different city, a different planet. “I don’t understand, Director.”
Mendoza walked forward a little, her voice dropping as if sharing a secret. “Well, someone from that agency called here today. They asked for a recommendation. They were asking specifically about you.”
Elena felt a strange beat in her chest. Suspicion was her first reaction. “Me? Why me?”
Mendoza lifted her shoulders slightly, showing she did not know either. “They wouldn’t say. Strictly confidential, they told me. But they mentioned your years of service here, your record of saying yes to extra shifts, and your reputation for compassion under pressure.”
Elena swallowed. She thought of Dr. Reyes, who always noticed her work. But he would never call an elite agency. He hated that world.
“They are looking for a caregiver position,” Mendoza continued. “A live-in role, I gather. For an elderly woman with mobility issues. The agency wants you to interview.”
A live-in position. That would mean leaving the apartment. Leaving Miguel. The idea was impossible, but the words Mendoza said next snagged her attention completely.
“The most compelling part, Elena, is the compensation. They said the pay is… huge. They even used the word ‘negotiable,’ which usually means excellent.” Mendoza’s eyes were wide now, reflecting the financial shock of it all. “They asked if I would release your file and recommend you. I told them of course, I would. Frankly, I’ve never heard of anything like it for a nurse from San Rafael.”
The single word, huge, echoed the promise Elena had whispered to Miguel just hours ago: I will figure it out.
She immediately thought of the medical debts, the $3000 debt the collector had mentioned. She thought of Miguel’s college registration fees. The substantial number suddenly became the solution she had been searching for when she fell asleep on the kitchen table.
But the suspicion returned, stronger now. “It doesn’t make sense, Director. I don’t have special certifications. I work in a clinic with broken equipment. Why would an elite agency want me, specifically? Why not someone from a city hospital?”
Mendoza tapped her pen on the desk. “I asked that, Elena. They said their client had very specific requirements about character that they felt your background met. They mentioned that sometimes, the best care comes from people who understand real struggle. Frankly, Elena, someone must have seen your file, or maybe someone here spoke highly of you. Someone who knows your work ethic.”
Elena sat very calm, processing the overwhelming possibility. This wasn’t a regular job offer. It was a high-stakes, high-reward risk. It meant money,real money that could change their entire life. But it also meant entering a strange world she didn't belong in, under conditions she couldn't guess.
“What are the details?” Elena asked, her voice tight.
“They didn’t give many,” Mendoza admitted. “They simply provided a name: Victoria Hastings, who's the senior recruiter. They want you to call this number to arrange an interview in three days. They are looking for an immediate start.” Mendoza pushed a small, clean white card across the table. It looked expensive and out of place on the desk.
Elena picked up the card. The letters were golden and shiny. Platinum Care Agency. Victoria Hastings, Senior Placement Specialist.
Mendoza leaned back, looking at Elena with something close to admiration. “Elena, I’m being honest with you. This clinic needs you. But if the pay is even half of what I imagine, you need to go to that interview. You have earned a break, Elena. You have earned a chance to get ahead.”
Elena nodded slowly. She folded the card carefully in her palm. The weight of it, though just paper, felt heavier than any medical debt notice. It was the weight of an impossible decision. If she accepted, she would be leaving her routine, her life, and the people who depended on her here. If she refused, she would be blaming herself and Miguel for years more of the struggle she carried every day.
She stood up. “Thank you, Director. I will think about it.”
“Don’t think too long please,” Mendoza warned. “Opportunities like this don’t come twice.”
Elena left the office, walking back toward the noise and smell of the clinic. Everything felt the same, yet completely different. She was a nurse with bills, but now she held a ticket to a world that could solve every one of them.
She found a quiet spot in the breakroom, pulled out her old phone, and typed one thing into the search bar: Platinum Care Agency. She had to know what she was getting into before she showed the card to Miguel
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