
The Billionaire Doctor's Runaway Patient
Hope worked eighty-hour weeks on Wall Street, enduring daily humiliation from her boss just to be her mother's golden ticket out of poverty.
But when a severe kidney infection left her bleeding and collapsing in the middle of a boardroom presentation, her boss didn't call an ambulance.
He slammed his hand on the table, publicly accused her of popping pills like a junkie, and threw her out of the building.
Dragging her agonizing, feverish body back home, Hope desperately needed a mother's comfort.
Instead, the moment her mother heard she had lost her six-figure job, the woman's face contorted with pure rage.
She didn't care that Hope's kidneys were failing; she grabbed a heavy glass ashtray and hurled it directly at Hope's head.
"You threw away a six-figure job? You threw away our ticket out of this dump?!"
The glass shattered against the wall, slicing Hope's bare leg open.
For twenty-nine years, Hope had sacrificed her health, her dignity, and her sanity to be the perfect daughter.
She didn't understand why her life was only worth the paycheck she brought home, or why her own mother would rather see her dead than unemployed.
Looking at the blood dripping down her calf, the guilt that had chained her for a lifetime suddenly vanished.
She pulled out her phone and hit send on a brutally honest resignation email to her toxic boss.
Then, she opened a text from the intimidating, billionaire doctor who had treated her at the clinic—the only man who had ever told her she was a fighter.
She packed her bags and walked out the door.
This time, she was going to live for herself.
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Chapter 1
Hope's fingers hovered over the keyboard. They were shaking. A sharp, dragging pain clawed at her lower abdomen, forcing a sharp breath through her teeth. Cold sweat gathered at her hairline, making the fluorescent lights of the Wall Street bullpen blur into harsh white streaks.
She pressed her thighs together under the desk, desperate to ease the burning pressure in her bladder. The slight movement caused her office chair to roll an inch. The friction sent a fresh wave of searing heat through her pelvis. She bit her lower lip so hard she tasted copper.
A thick stack of financial reports slammed onto her desk. Papers slid across the worn laminate surface, a few fluttering to the floor. Hope flinched, her shoulders jerking up to her ears.
"Are you blind, Spence?" Franklin Finch's voice boomed over the low hum of the office.
Hope looked up. Her boss leaned over her cubicle, his face flushed with anger.
"The margins on page four are completely misaligned," Franklin spat, his voice loud enough to make the analysts in the next row stop typing. "I don't pay you to format like a middle schooler. Fix it."
The humiliation burned the back of her neck. She could feel the cold, indifferent stares of her coworkers pressing into her skin. The physical agony in her lower half flared again, making her vision swim. She couldn't focus on the numbers. She couldn't even breathe properly.
Hope stood up abruptly. Her chair screeched against the plastic floor mat, cutting off Franklin's next insult.
"I need to use the restroom," Hope whispered, her voice tight.
Franklin rolled his eyes, crossing his arms over his expensive suit. "You have five minutes. If this isn't fixed when you get back, you're redoing the entire deck tonight."
Hope didn't argue. She clutched her stomach, pressing her forearm against the sharp ache, and walked toward the long hallway. Her low heels sank silently into the thick carpet of the hallway. Though the sound was muffled, every single step sent a shockwave of pain straight up her spine. It felt like walking on shattered glass.
She pushed through the heavy bathroom door and locked herself in the furthest stall. Her hands trembled violently as she pulled down her pantyhose. A tearing sensation ripped through her, so intense she had to close her eyes and lean her forehead against the cold metal wall of the stall.
When she looked down at the toilet bowl, the water was stained a bright, terrifying red.
Panic seized her chest. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird. She pulled out her phone, her thumbs slipping on the screen as she searched for the nearest community clinic. The earliest available appointment was in three days.
A wave of absolute despair washed over her. She couldn't survive three hours like this, let alone three days.
Desperate, she opened her messages. Yesterday, her mother's overbearing matchmaker, Beatrice, had sent her a promotional text about an elite private clinic in Manhattan. Hope had ignored it, knowing she couldn't afford it. Now, her trembling fingers tapped the number.
The line rang once. "Manhattan Comprehensive, how can I direct your call?" a crisp, efficient voice answered.
"I need a doctor," Hope gasped out, leaning heavily against the stall door. "I'm bleeding. It's an emergency."
"We have a cancellation," the receptionist said, her tone completely devoid of emotion. "One of our top specialists has a fifteen-minute window right now. Can you be here in ten minutes?"
"Yes," Hope breathed. "I'll be there."
She hung up and turned to the sink. She splashed freezing water on her face, shivering as it dripped down her pale cheeks. She smoothed her wrinkled skirt, grabbed her bag, and walked out.
She ignored Franklin yelling her name as she sprinted past his office. She pushed through the revolving doors of the building and practically threw herself into the back of a yellow cab.
"Upper East Side," she told the driver, clutching her stomach as the cab lurched into traffic.
The cab pulled up to a discreet, luxurious annex building attached to the main hospital. Hope paid the exorbitant fare and pushed through the heavy glass doors.
The lobby was silent. Thick, plush carpets absorbed her footsteps. The air smelled of expensive white tea and eucalyptus, a jarring contrast to the exhaust fumes outside. She felt instantly out of place in her cheap, off-the-rack suit.
She walked up to the marble reception desk and gave her name. The nurse behind the counter eyed her wrinkled clothes, then slid a thick electronic tablet across the counter.
Hope sat on a leather sofa, her hands shaking as she filled out the endless medical history forms. The cramping in her lower stomach hit her in relentless waves. Her stylus dragged across the screen, leaving jagged signatures.
A nurse in pristine light blue scrubs walked up to her. "Hope Spence? Follow me."
Hope stood, her legs feeling like lead. She followed the nurse down a long, quiet corridor. Her pulse thudded in her ears. The fear of the unknown medical procedure twisted her stomach into tighter knots.
The nurse pushed open a heavy wooden door. The examination room was freezing. The bright surgical lights reflected off the stainless steel sink and the cold metal examination table in the center of the room.
"Take off everything from the waist down," the nurse instructed, handing Hope a paper gown so thin it was practically translucent. "Put this on. The doctor will be right in."
The nurse walked out, shutting the door.
Hope's face burned with intense shame. She stripped off her skirt and underwear, her fingers clumsy. She pulled the paper gown over her lap and climbed onto the crinkly paper covering the examination table. The air conditioning blasted against her bare skin. She gripped the edges of the paper gown so hard her knuckles turned white, her entire body shivering.
Heavy, deliberate footsteps sounded in the hallway. The doorknob turned.
Hope's heart slammed into her throat. She held her breath.
The door pushed open. A tall, broad-shouldered man walked in. He wore a perfectly tailored white coat over a dark shirt. His dark hair was neatly styled, and his jawline looked like it had been cut from stone. He was holding a tablet, his eyes fixed on the screen.
Corbin Mullen looked up.
His eyes were a piercing, icy blue. They locked onto Hope. The sheer, overwhelming presence of the man sucked the air out of the room. He was devastatingly handsome, which only made the situation a thousand times worse. Hope's humiliation skyrocketed. Her instinct took over, and she clamped her bare legs tightly together.
Corbin walked over to the sink and turned on the water. "How long have you been experiencing hematuria, Ms. Spence?" he asked. His voice was a low, smooth baritone, completely detached and professional.
The clinical coldness in his tone grounded her slightly. "Since this morning," she stammered, her voice barely a whisper.
Corbin dried his hands and snapped on a pair of latex gloves. The sound echoed in the quiet room. He walked to the foot of the table.
"Lie back," he commanded. It wasn't a request. "Put your feet in the stirrups."
Hope squeezed her eyes shut. A hot tear leaked out of the corner of her eye. She lay back against the crinkly paper and forced her legs apart, placing her heels into the cold metal stirrups.
Corbin's gloved fingers touched the sensitive skin of her inner thigh. The latex was freezing.
Hope gasped, her body flinching violently away from his touch.
Corbin's hand stopped moving. He didn't pull away. "Relax your muscles, Ms. Spence," he said, his voice dropping an octave, firm but steady.
He proceeded with the examination. It was thorough, highly invasive, and agonizingly slow. For three endless minutes, Hope stared at the blinding ceiling lights, her fingernails digging into her own palms, tears of pure, helpless humiliation pooling in her ears.
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7.0
My chest tightened with anticipation, five years of shared struggle culminating in this moment at the Manhattan penthouse banquet. But Chace, my partner, didn't look at me; he turned to Karyn, sliding his family's heirloom emerald ring onto her finger. Then, his voice echoed through the hall, dismissing me as "nothing but an asset under my name to provide entertainment."
My smile froze, the room erupted in laughter, and a cruel kick sent me sprawling, spraining my ankle on the cold marble floor. Karyn mocked me, but it was Chace’s icy gaze that truly shattered me. He dismissed our past, threatening my mother’s grave and my father’s life if I didn't "stay in your place and be an obedient dog."
The man I bled for, starved for, fought for, was a complete stranger, a monster veiled in cold disdain. My heartbreak bled out, replaced by a reckless, destructive madness. This wasn't just humiliation; it was an execution.
Retreating to the lavish restroom, my mind sharpened. I unblocked a forbidden number, a name whispered with terror in the New York underground: Keith Mosley. My text was brief: "I am ready to pay my debt." His reply flashed, stark and dominant: "The price is marriage." This wasn't a price; it was my knife.

7.1
I was the top commander of a black-ops military program. After slaughtering my way through a hellish mission, I reached the extraction helicopter, trusting my second-in-command to watch my back.
But the moment our hands locked, he didn't pull me up. Instead, he plunged a syringe of lethal neurotoxin directly into my neck.
He aimed his gun at my chest, coldly stating that I was too dangerous to live. My lungs stopped, and I died in a pool of my own blood. But the endless blackness suddenly shattered. My consciousness violently forced its way into a new, broken shell. I woke up in a freezing alley, soaked in muddy rain.
This body belonged to seventeen-year-old Eliza Wyatt. A massive wave of foreign memories crashed into my brain. Her own younger sister had just stood at the top of the stairs with a mocking smile, watching street thugs beat Eliza to death.
"Take good care of the Wyatt family's eldest daughter. Tonight is the night she finally disappears."
The endless humiliation, the cold stares of her family, and the brutal betrayal by her own blood flashed before my eyes. Why was this fragile girl treated like garbage and pushed to her death by the very people who should have protected her?
I looked down at my pale, trembling hands. The top commander was dead, but in this bleeding shell, Eliza Wyatt was very much alive. I picked up a switchblade from the bloody puddle and stood up in the storm. It was time to hunt.

8.9
For seven years, I hid my MIT Ph.D. and my identity as a top haute couture designer to be the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Cornelius Lambert.
But on our anniversary, while I waited at home with a cold dinner, I found him at a Michelin restaurant with his childhood sweetheart, Halle.
My seven-year-old son sat between them, laughing loudly.
"Mom is too boring. I wish Aunt Halle was my real mom."
Cornelius didn't defend me. He just smiled and affectionately ruffled the boy's hair.
When I finally packed my bags and left, I accidentally triggered an old AI robot prototype Cornelius had given me years ago.
A hidden recording played his voice from the very night he proposed.
"Why marry her? Because she's easy to control. Halle doesn't want to settle down yet, so Cassidy is just a perfect, temporary shield."
Later, when I caught them being intimate in a dark parking garage and snapped a photo, Cornelius watched with cold, dead eyes as his massive bodyguard shoved me against a concrete pillar.
My arm was torn open, blood dripping onto the floor, as they forced me to delete the evidence of his affair.
For seven years, I filed down every sharp edge of my brilliance for a man who saw me as nothing but a pathetic, disposable placeholder.
My heart turned to absolute ice. He thought I was just a weak, powerless housewife.
But he forgot who he was dealing with.
As his luxury car drove away, I pulled up the hidden command terminal on my phone and recovered the encrypted cloud backup of the photos.
I looked at my lawyer with a bleeding arm and a cold smile.
"Let's go. Now, we have a weapon."

8.5
Cecile jolted awake from months of prescription haze, only to realize she was trapped in a live reality show designed to destroy her.
Her billionaire husband had orchestrated the broadcast to publicly humiliate her and elevate his own PR image. He ordered her to follow a degrading script. What was worse, her five-year-old son, Damien, was genuinely terrified of her. When an empty wine bottle rolled across the floor, the tiny boy instantly threw his arms over his head, bracing for a hit.
The production crew shoved microphones into the trembling child's face, trying to trigger his trauma for ratings. The live chat cursed Cecile as a toxic abuser. The show's golden girl maliciously tried to poach Damien on camera to prove Cecile was an unfit mother. The crew even rigged the game, forcing Cecile and her son into a freezing, rotting mud shack with a collapsed roof. They were all just waiting for her to break down and beg.
"A toxic woman like you doesn't deserve to be a mother."
The crew read the hateful comments aloud, expecting a hysterical meltdown. The realization that she had been manipulated into destroying her own child hit Cecile like a physical blow. How could a father subject his own son to this public cruelty?
The weak, easily manipulated Cecile was dead. She threw the PR script away, rolled up her sleeves, and picked up a rusted hammer. This time, she would protect her son and tear down anyone who stood in her way.

9.7
Gemma expected the tearing agony of the bullet wound that had just ended her life.
Instead, her trembling fingers met the cool, smooth friction of heavy silk.
She stared into the mirror. Her face was flawless, completely devoid of the jagged scar that had marred her cheek for the last five years.
It was exactly ten years ago. The day of her engagement party to the ruthless billionaire, Brion Hubbard.
In her past life, her "best friend" Katelyn convinced her to run away with a scheming scumbag.
Katelyn claimed Brion was a heartless tyrant who would ruin her. Gemma had foolishly believed those fake tears.
That choice led to her family's bankruptcy, her brutal disfigurement, and ultimately, a fatal bomb explosion.
The only person who tried to save her was Brion, his blood-soaked body shielding hers from the blast.
She even realized too late that the strawberry cream cakes she always made for him were full of dairy.
He wasn't leaving to cheat on her. He was locking himself in a medical bay, fighting fatal allergic shock, just to accept a tiny scrap of her affection.
Gemma had been so incredibly blind. Why did she trust the venomous snakes who destroyed her, while hating the man who died for her?
Hearing Katelyn frantically knocking on the dressing room door, urging her to run away again, a towering hatred surged through Gemma's veins.
This time, she wasn't going to run.
She was going to expose the traitors, take back her family's wealth, and claim the tyrant for herself.

7.1
For six years, I was the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Hartwell Ware, enduring his coldness because I thought my love could eventually thaw his heart.
Then, my friend sent me a photo. Hartwell was at the airport, tenderly holding the waist of his first love, Eveline Craig.
He came home smelling of her synthetic rose perfume, accused me of stalking him, and coldly demanded a divorce.
His lawyer handed me a thick settlement agreement. It offered astronomical alimony and luxury properties, but it came with a humiliating ten-page non-disclosure agreement.
He wanted to buy my silence. He wanted to strip me of my rights to our son and gag me permanently, just so he could parade his new life with Eveline without any PR backlash.
Even now, he still thought I was a gold digger who had orchestrated a media scandal to trap him into marriage.
I stared at the man I had worshipped for two thousand days. My six years of desperate devotion had been nothing but a humiliating, one-sided delusion.
Hope was finally dead, and with it, my tears had completely dried up.
He expected me to cry, to beg, to negotiate for more millions.
Instead, I snatched the pen, crossed out the massive alimony, and signed my name on the dotted line.
"I am taking the basic child support, and not a single red cent more."
Leaving my five-carat diamond ring on the marble table, I walked out the door with nothing but my old suitcase.