
Trapped By The Billionaire Doctor's Debt
Emilia desperately needed ten thousand dollars to save her dying father from being thrown out of the hospital. Driven into a corner, she agreed to a black-market egg retrieval "interview" at a luxury hotel.
But the buyer, a cold and ruthless billionaire, didn't just take her innocence. He threw a crumpled one-hundred-dollar check at her naked body.
"That is your actual market value. Not a penny more."
The nightmare escalated when cheap black-market hormone pills nearly killed her. Waking up in the ER, she was horrified to find her buyer was actually Clifton Watson, the hospital's top surgeon. To teach her a twisted lesson, he wired her a massive hundred-thousand-dollar loan, trapping her in a suffocating debt. When she demanded to treat it strictly as a loan and blocked his number, he retaliated ruthlessly. He leaked her confidential medical records to her university, letting the entire campus know she tried to sell her eggs.
Cornered in a dark alley by frat boys waving cash and demanding to buy her body, Emilia felt a freezing terror and absolute violation. She didn't understand why a billionaire doctor, a man who had already used and humiliated her, would go out of his way to completely destroy a desperate college student's dignity.
Kneeing her attacker to the ground, Emilia escaped the alley and made a silent vow. She would work until her fingers bled to pay off every single cent, and never let this monster control her life again.
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Chapter 7
The sharp morning sunlight pierced through the gap in the blackout curtains like a white-hot blade, stabbing Emilia right in the eyes. She gasped and sat up violently, the sheets pooling around her waist.
The memories of the night before hit her like a physical blow to the stomach—the heat, the desperate, clawing touches, the complete and total loss of control. Her face burned with shame so intense it felt like a sunburn.
She looked around frantically, her heart hammering. The massive bedroom was empty. The sheets beside her were cold. Clifton was gone.
On the nightstand next to her, there was a neatly folded stack of brand-new women's clothes—a soft cashmere sweater, dark jeans, even a new pair of flats, all exactly her size. Beside them sat a glass of warm water, a thin wisp of steam still rising from the surface.
Emilia bit her lip hard enough to draw blood, a wave of intense, sickening shame washing over her. She had done it again. She had let him touch her again. What was wrong with her?
She ignored the deep, throbbing ache radiating through every muscle in her body, grabbed the clothes, and dressed as fast as her shaking hands would allow. She fled the apartment without looking back, desperate to escape the scene of her repeated humiliation.
Walking down the bright, noisy, indifferent streets of New York, Emilia gripped her phone so tightly the edges bit into her palm. Her thumb hit the refresh button on her banking app every sixty seconds, a compulsive, desperate rhythm.
The screen loaded. The balance remained a pathetic two digits.
He didn't pay her. She had begged him in the dark—begged him—and he had taken her again, and he still hadn't sent the money.
A cold, paralyzing panic gripped her throat and squeezed. She had been used. Again. She was nothing to him but a body to discard.
Suddenly, a violent, tearing cramp ripped through her lower abdomen. It felt like a serrated knife was twisting deep inside her uterus, shredding her from within.
She collapsed onto the concrete sidewalk, her knees hitting the pavement with a crack. Her phone skittered out of her hand. A passerby—a woman in a business suit—shouted and pulled out her phone to dial 911. The distant wail of an ambulance siren quickly filled the air, growing louder and louder until it consumed everything.
She was rushed to North City Hospital, the fluorescent lights of the ER blazing overhead as she was wheeled through the chaos. A young triage nurse glanced at her intake form, then did a double take. "Emilia Sears? Wait, isn't she that architecture student from the university?" the nurse whispered loudly to a colleague, her eyes darting over Emilia's pale, sweating form with undisguised curiosity. "I heard those black-market brokers target girls from that campus. Look at her symptoms... you don't think she actually tried to sell her eggs, do you?"
The whispers faded into a blur of static as Emilia's consciousness slipped away, the pain finally dragging her under.
Up in the VIP wing of North City Hospital—a sterile palace of polished floors and hushed voices—Clifton sat at his pristine desk, wearing a crisp white doctor's coat with his name embroidered in gold thread. As the Chief of Surgery and the sole heir to the hospital's board of directors, his authority here was absolute and unquestioned.
He was flipping through a patient file, but his eyes weren't reading the words. His personal phone sat on the desk beside him. The screen was open to a bank transfer page. Fifty thousand dollars. His thumb hovered over the 'Confirm' button. He hadn't pressed it. Not yet.
He wanted to teach her a lesson. He wanted her to feel the absolute, soul-crushing terror of the edge, so she would never—ever—go near a black-market clinic again. It was for her own good. That's what he told himself.
The door to his office flew open with enough force to bang against the wall. An ER nurse rushed in, breathless and wide-eyed, her scrubs splattered with something dark. "Dr. Watson, we have a young female in the ER. Severe, unexplained abdominal pain. It looks like a critical gynecological emergency—possible internal bleeding. We need a consult immediately."
Clifton frowned, the file forgotten. He dropped it onto the desk and strode out of the office, his long legs eating up the gleaming hallway to the emergency room, his white coat billowing behind him.
He pushed through the swinging doors of the trauma bay. His eyes landed on the pale, sweating face on the bed. His boots locked to the floor as if he had been nailed in place.
It was Emilia.
Hearing the doors crash open, Emilia weakly turned her head. Through her blurred, pain-filled vision, she saw a man in a white doctor's coat standing there like a god—tall, imposing, haloed by the harsh fluorescent lights.
Her brain short-circuited. She stared at Clifton—at his cold face, at the gold badge on his chest, at the stethoscope around his neck. She couldn't process it. How was the cold, twisted buyer from the penthouse standing in a hospital wearing a doctor's badge? How?
Clifton recovered instantly, his face snapping into a mask of absolute, freezing professionalism. The panic that had seized his chest was buried so deep no one would ever see it. He walked to the side of the bed and snapped on a pair of blue latex gloves with practiced efficiency.
He ignored the wide, horrified look in her eyes—the look of an animal realizing it had walked directly into the hunter's den. "Go prep the ultrasound machine in Bay 4. Now," he ordered the attending nurses, his voice carrying an authority that brooked no argument, no hesitation. The nurses immediately scattered like startled birds, leaving them completely alone for a brief, heavy window of time.
As soon as the door swung shut, Clifton stepped closer to the bed. His shadow fell over her. "Lift your shirt," he commanded, his voice hard and clinical.
Emilia tried to thrash away, but the searing agony in her stomach paralyzed her. She could only watch in mute horror as his cold, gloved fingers pressed down onto her bare stomach, probing the tender, inflamed flesh.
He pressed hard, his fingers sinking into the exact spot of inflammation. Emilia gasped, her back arching off the bed as hot, blinding tears spilled out of her eyes and rolled down her temples.
Clifton looked down at her, his eyes like chips of frozen glass. He leaned in close, his broad shoulders blocking out the harsh fluorescent lights, casting her face in shadow. His voice dropped so only she could hear, a dark, intimate murmur. "This is what happens when you swallow random pills from the street."
The brutal, unforgiving truth in his words shattered her remaining pride like a hammer through glass. She turned her face away, staring at the blank white wall, humiliated to her core.
Clifton straightened up. He fired off a rapid series of medical orders to the nurses who had filtered back in, his tone clipped and absolute, leaving no room for questions.
The nurses moved quickly, efficiently, injecting painkillers and anti-inflammatories into her IV line with practiced precision.
As the drugs hit her bloodstream, the agonizing cramps began to dull, fading to a distant, throbbing ache. Emilia closed her eyes, completely spent, her body finally surrendering to exhaustion.
Clifton stood at the foot of the bed, motionless as a statue. He watched her pale, fragile face, the dark circles bruising the delicate skin beneath her eyes, the cracked, bitten lips. Inside the pockets of his white coat, his hands curled into tight, white-knuckled fists, his fingernails digging deep into his palms. The guilt was eating him alive, a slow, corrosive acid.
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8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.

9.0
Adaline Poole thought she had escaped her family's toxic corporate grip by moving to London and adopting a stray cat named Monty.
But when she returns to her empty apartment, her father delivers a chilling ultimatum: he has kidnapped the cat and will euthanize it by morning unless she accepts an arranged marriage with Barron Cooke, a notoriously elusive billionaire.
Her entire family becomes complicit in her sale. Her mother demands she secure their elite status, and her brother secretly spies on her social media to feed Barron her every move. Horrified to discover Barron is a thirty-three-year-old "fossil" twelve years her senior, Adaline resorts to sabotage. She goes to a Soho club, takes a scandalous photo with a frat boy, and sends it to the old billionaire to disgust him into canceling their upcoming dinner.
But her rebellion backfires horribly when the frat boy spikes her drink with a powerful narcotic. As her body burns with a terrifying, feverish heat, she collapses in a dark corridor. Stripped of her phone and betrayed by her bloodline, she is left utterly defenseless as a predator approaches to drag her away.
Suddenly, the heavy fire door is kicked open by a towering, terrifyingly handsome stranger who effortlessly neutralizes her attacker.
"Please... help me," Adaline begs, deliriously throwing her burning body into his arms.
She has absolutely no idea that the handsome savior she is clinging to is Barron Cooke himself.

7.2
I am a resident surgeon, secretly married to Dr. Barrett Walters, the Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery. It was a transactional marriage; he paid my mother's mounting medical bills, and I was his secret, obedient wife in the dark.
But at the hospital, he was a cold-blooded tyrant who deliberately made my life a living hell. During a major medical conference, he viciously tore apart my successful surgical repair, looking me dead in the eye as he called me incompetent in front of all my colleagues.
The humiliation didn't stop there. With his tacit approval, the senior residents bullied me, assigning me every brutal night shift. When his beautiful, wealthy heiress "girlfriend" visited the ward, he publicly mocked my background to make her smile.
"Some people get in through the back door. They're not fit for the front lines."
Even when I was forced to work as a secret banquet waitress to cover the medical copays he ignored, he found me, ruined the job out of pure possessive jealousy, and then fined my meager resident salary the very next morning just to show his absolute control.
I endured his punishing kisses and cruel rebukes, sacrificing my dignity just to keep my mother alive. But I couldn't understand why he had to destroy every shred of my peace. If he wanted the perfect heiress, why did he refuse to let me go?
Staring at his cold, controlling eyes in the stairwell, my exhaustion finally overpowered my fear. I was done being his victim, and it was time to tear up this contract.

9.1
With only fifteen days of cash flow left to save her tech startup, Aida had no choice but to seek a five-million-dollar bridge loan from Brendan Walls, a ruthless billionaire predator.
He agreed to sign the check, but on one sickening condition. He demanded Aida act as bait to get close to his corporate rival, Grayson Lott, treating her like a high-end call girl for a business transaction.
Forced to comply to save her employees, Aida let Grayson take her to a windowless underground club, where he secretly spiked her whiskey.
As the drugs paralyzed her body, triggering horrific flashbacks of a brutal assault from six years ago, Aida locked herself in the bathroom. She had to shatter a mirror and slice her own thigh open with a jagged shard of glass just to stay conscious enough to call Brendan for help.
Brendan's armored SUV immediately smashed through the club's wall to save her, and Grayson was arrested. But lying in the hospital, the horrifying truth finally clicked in Aida's mind.
The rescue was too fast. Brendan’s men hadn't rushed from Midtown; they had been parked outside the entire time. He had watched Grayson drug her and waited for the felony to happen just so he could legally seize Grayson's company. He had gambled her life and trauma for a hostile takeover.
When Brendan casually tossed a signed contract and luxury car keys onto her hospital bed as hush money, the last thread of Aida's sanity snapped.
"The deal is dead. NovaTech is mine. If you ever come near me again, I will kill you."
Bleeding and shaking with icy rage, Aida threw the keys at his chest, formally declaring war on the monster who thought he could buy her soul.

7.9
Eileen Goff was a nobody, scrubbing diner tables to survive while her greedy family bled her dry.
On the eve of her twentieth birthday, the government's mandatory marriage algorithm matched her with a spouse.
It wasn't a plumber or a teacher. It was Harrison Butler, the ruthless, untouchable billionaire king of Butler Industries.
At the registry, Harrison's glamorous intended fiancée threw a half-million-dollar check at her.
"Take the money, get out of here, and never show your face again."
The registry supervisor even offered her a million dollars to sign a cancellation agreement, trying to erase her from the system.
At their first high-society gala, Harrison's stepmother and the fiancée locked Eileen in an empty room, plotting to humiliate her and prove she was just cheap trash.
Eileen was terrified and confused. Men like Harrison Butler didn't just accept federal matches with girls who smelled like fried onions.
But instead of abandoning her, Harrison smashed the door open, publicly banished his own family, and kissed her in front of the entire city's elite.
Why was this billionaire going to such extreme lengths to protect a complete stranger?
Then she overheard his assistant talking about a marriage clause in his grandfather's trust fund.
He didn't love her; he just needed a powerless, state-mandated wife to lock his parasitic family out of his empire.
Realizing she was a highly valuable pawn, Eileen stopped trembling, looked the billionaire in the eye, and spoke.
"I believe we can have more than just a legal relationship. We can have a business arrangement."

9.3
For five years, I was Ashton Miller's invisible partner, his loyal fiancée, pouring my life into building his empire from the shadows. Tonight, the Bronze Deer exhibition, my masterpiece, was finally opening at the Met, a testament to our shared future.
Then, Bianca, a third-tier actress, stepped into the spotlight in *my* custom Vera Wang wedding dress. My blood ran cold as Ashton's arm circled her waist, his whispered words promising to make her the "new queen of the city."
Five years of trust and sacrifice crumbled. I was a blood bag, drained and discarded. When I publicly exposed their lies, Ashton cornered me backstage, his face twisted in fury, threatening to ruin me, to blacklist me forever. I ripped off his engagement ring, tossing it at his chest. "We're done," I said, walking out as his enraged screams echoed.
The man whose empire I secretly built called me a parasite, his mistress feigning tears, painting me as delusional. My guilt vanished, replaced by freezing, absolute hatred for the man who twisted reality to erase my existence.
Standing in the New York rain, I finally pulled out the military-grade encrypted phone hidden for five years. The line clicked open instantly, a low, gravelly voice asking, "Is it you?" Before I could answer, Archer's voice hardened: "Give me the location. I'll be there in ten minutes. Who touched you? I want his life."