
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 8
The waiter silently cleared the main course plates and set down two delicate porcelain bowls of caramel macchiato mousse. The rich, burnt-sugar scent filled the small space between them.
Hope picked up her small silver spoon but didn't take a bite. She stared at her distorted reflection in the bowl of the spoon. The wine and the intense emotional unburdening had left her feeling raw and exposed.
"Actually," Hope said, her voice dropping to a self-deprecating whisper, "Franklin was right. I probably never belonged on Wall Street anyway."
Corbin's triumphant smile vanished. He set his wine glass down with a soft clink. He leaned forward, his broad shoulders dominating her field of vision. "Explain that."
Hope let out a shaky breath, tracing the edge of the table with her thumb. "It's called Imposter Syndrome. I've had it since my first day at Columbia. I sat in classrooms with kids whose parents owned hedge funds, and I was terrified someone would realize I was just a poor kid from Queens who got lucky with a scholarship. I felt the same way at the firm. I worked eighty-hour weeks just so they wouldn't realize I was a fraud."
Her voice started to tremble. The shame she had carried for years bubbled to the surface. "I tried so hard to fit into their world, but I was just faking it. I don't belong here."
Corbin didn't offer a platitude. He didn't say don't be silly. He sat perfectly still, his eyes narrowing as he analyzed her words. The silence stretched, heavy and thick.
Hope felt a spike of panic. She had said too much. She had shown him how pathetic she really was. She opened her mouth to apologize, to make a joke and brush it off.
Before she could speak, Corbin's hand shot across the table. He grabbed her hand-the one holding the spoon-and enveloped it completely in his large palm.
His grip was tight, almost bruising, grounding her instantly.
"Look at me, Hope," he ordered.
It was the first time he had used her first name. The sound of it in his deep, gravelly voice sent a shockwave straight to her core. She jerked her head up, meeting his fierce, icy blue gaze.
"In medicine, we rely on evidence-based practice," Corbin said, his tone deadly serious. He wasn't comforting her; he was presenting a diagnosis. "Let's look at the evidence. Evidence one: You graduated from an Ivy League university on a full academic scholarship. Luck doesn't write a thesis."
His thumb began to stroke the back of her hand, a slow, rhythmic friction that sent heat rushing up her arm.
"Evidence two: You survived three years in a toxic, high-pressure financial firm. Evidence three: You stood in a boardroom, suffering from an acute kidney infection that would have put a grown man on the floor, and you delivered a financial report."
He leaned closer, his face inches from hers. His eyes were burning with an intensity that made her breath catch.
"You survived a mother who uses guilt as a weapon, and a boss who uses humiliation as management. And you did it while keeping your empathy intact," Corbin said, his voice dropping to a rough whisper. "That is not luck. That is an extremely rare, highly resilient genetic makeup."
Hope's lips parted. Her chest tightened so painfully she thought her ribs might crack.
"You are not an imposter," Corbin stated, every word striking her like a hammer against glass. "You are a fighter. You are stronger than ninety percent of the entitled brats sitting in this restaurant tonight."
The dam broke.
A hot tear spilled over her lower lash line, dropping onto the white tablecloth. Then another. And another. Twenty-nine years of feeling inadequate, of being told she wasn't enough, washed away under the absolute certainty in his voice.
She didn't try to pull her hand away. Instead, she turned her palm up and laced her fingers tightly through his, clinging to him like a drowning woman to a lifeline.
Corbin let out a soft exhale. He reached into his pocket with his free hand, pulled out a pristine white handkerchief, and reached across the table. He gently dabbed the tears from her cheeks. His knuckles brushed against her hot skin.
"You can cry," he murmured, the harshness completely gone from his voice, replaced by a devastating tenderness. "But never, ever belittle yourself in front of me again. Understood?"
Hope nodded, a wet, breathless laugh escaping her lips. She took the handkerchief and pressed it to her eyes. The crushing weight of her self-doubt had been surgically removed.
The ambient noise of the restaurant faded away. The only thing that existed was the heat of his hand wrapped around hers.
After a long moment, Hope took a deep breath and gently untangled her fingers from his. Her face was flushed, but her eyes were brighter than they had been in years.
Corbin slowly pulled his hand back. He looked at his empty palm for a second, a muscle feathering in his jaw. The raw hunger in his eyes was no longer hidden.
He pushed the bowl of caramel mousse closer to her. "Eat the sugar," he said, a slow, wicked smile spreading across his face. "It triggers dopamine. You're going to need the energy."
Hope smiled back, her heart doing a frantic dance. She took a bite of the dessert. The intense sweetness exploded on her tongue. She looked at the man across from her, the man who had seen her naked, seen her broken, and had just pieced her back together.
A terrifying, thrilling realization hit her stomach like a lead weight: she was falling for him. Hard. And there was absolutely nothing she could do to stop it.
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7.9
Elena Crane wakes up in a hospital bed after barely surviving a resort fire, only to discover the devastating truth. The kidney she donated to her husband Leo three days ago wasn't for him. It was for his mistress, Lydia. Worse, she overhears Leo instructing a doctor to kill her within five days and make it look like surgical complications so he can collect two hundred million dollars in life insurance. Their entire five year marriage was an elaborate scheme to steal her organs and murder her for money.
What Leo and Lydia don't know is that Elena is actually Roberta Alfred, the legendary jewelry designer and billionaire heiress who abandoned her empire for love. After enduring multiple murder attempts, including being locked in a morgue and losing her uterus to forced hysterectomy, Elena escapes. She divorces Leo, claims the insurance money herself, and returns home to reclaim her identity and her family's billion dollar empire.

7.6
Jocelyn Yang lived in the grand Turner Mansion, not as a guest, but as a prisoner. Ever since her father's death, the ruthless billionaire Elam Turner forced her to atone for sins her father never committed.
On her nineteenth birthday, a male classmate secretly sent her a diamond necklace. Elam, who had flown back from London overnight, flew into a psychotic, jealous rage at the sight of another man's gift.
He mercilessly crushed the delicate necklace into the marble floor with his custom leather shoe.
"Did you forget what you are?" Elam hissed, dragging her into a pitch-black storage room. "You take gifts from other men behind my back?"
He pinned her to the dusty floorboards and violently assaulted her. The next morning, a wire transfer of $500,000 hit her bank account. He had humiliated her, broken her spirit, and was now casually trying to buy her silence. Later, when a broken bike left her walking miles through a freezing rainstorm, he just shoved scalding tea into her bleeding hands.
"Look at you," he sneered. "You look like a stray dog ruining my floors."
Jocelyn curled up in the cold, her lips bleeding and her heart shattered. She couldn't understand his terrifying obsession. If he hated her so much, why did he refuse to let her go? Why did he look at her with such manic hunger while systematically destroying her life?
Staring at the massive sum of hush money on her phone, a desperate spark of vengeance flared in her chest. Jocelyn wired every single cent back to Elam's account. She picked up her charcoal pencil, vowing to win the upcoming art competition and buy her escape from this monster forever.

7.8
Elie Joyce’s entire life was controlled by Ebert Ewing, a ruthless billionaire who held her sick grandmother's survival and her family's freedom in his hands.
But on a freezing, stormy night, he forced her into a scandalous scrap of red silk and handed her over to a notorious, disgusting predator.
"You aren't an escort. You're just a free gift."
Ebert mocked her, using her as a disposable bargaining chip to secure a corporate funding round.
When the predator humiliated her, forced high-proof vodka down her throat, and violently pinned her to the floor, Ebert simply watched with dead eyes.
And when Ebert finally intervened to brutally beat the man, it wasn't out of mercy.
"She is my property. Even if she is trash that I threw away, a filthy pig like you doesn't get to touch her."
Afterward, he dragged her battered, barefoot body into his car, only to kick her out into the torrential rain, leaving her on the dark streets to die.
Standing in the storm, shivering and bleeding from broken glass, the last shred of Elie's hope shattered.
She had sacrificed her dignity and soul, enduring his violent bites and cruel control, just to keep her family alive.
Why did she have to suffer this endless, twisted humiliation for a psychopath who only saw her as trash?
But she didn't break.
Tearing a strip of his expensive shirt to bandage her bleeding foot, Elie gripped her broken stiletto like a knife.
With her eyes turning cold and calculating, she limped out of the shadows.
She was going to survive, and Ebert Ewing would soon realize she was no longer his obedient prey.

9.1
Alysia lay on the freezing operating table, moments away from donating her kidney to her brother's fiancée.
But as the anesthesia set in, a violent shock tore through her brain, awakening agonizing memories of a thousand brutal deaths across a thousand past lifetimes.
She suddenly realized her family's true plan. Her brother and his fiancée weren't just taking her organ; they were secretly plotting to declare her mentally unfit post-surgery to steal her entire trust fund.
When Alysia abruptly stopped the procedure and exposed the fiancée's kidney failure as the result of severe drug abuse, her family's reaction was chilling.
Her father didn't care about the truth or the law. He ordered his bodyguards to lock Alysia up until she agreed to the surgery, while her brother threatened to freeze her assets and seize her late mother's penthouse.
"You have no heart, Alysia. You don't deserve the Kent name," her aunt spat in disgust.
For lifetimes, she had kept her head down, taking the blame and sacrificing everything for a family that viewed her as nothing more than a disposable blood bag and a financial pawn.
The resignation that had clouded her eyes for so long vanished, replaced by the absolute, zero-degree cold of a glacier.
Ripping the IV from her hand and leaving her family in stunned silence, Alysia walked straight out of the hospital.
She had exactly forty-six hours to find a husband to secure her inheritance, and she knew exactly which ruthless billionaire CEO to target to help her burn the Kent family to the ground.

9.3
Elliana sat on the cold marble floor, staring at the two pink lines on the pregnancy test. Overjoyed, she went to her husband Garrett’s study to surprise him.
But the room was empty. On his iPad, she accidentally opened a muted security video from the night before. As a graphic novelist trained in facial anatomy, she easily read Garrett’s lips as he spoke to their housekeeper.
"Increase the hallucinogens and the birth control. Let her become a complete lunatic."
The truth shattered her reality. Her three years of inexplicable exhaustion and mental collapses were orchestrated to keep her away from her ex-fiancé, who was now married to Garrett’s sister, Cristina. The nightmare worsened during a horrific highway crash. As their SUV flipped and caught fire, Garrett ruthlessly abandoned a pregnant Elliana in the crushed backseat. He dragged Cristina to safety, leaving Elliana to burn. She survived, but her right hand—her drawing hand—was permanently destroyed.
Lying in the hospital with her career ruined and her intellectual property stolen by the husband who forged her signature while she was drugged, a freezing void of hatred consumed her. She was nothing but a sedated decoy to hide Garrett's twisted, incestuous obsession with his own sister.
When Garrett knelt by her hospital bed with fake tears, Elliana didn't scream or expose him. Instead, she forced a pathetic, dependent smile, playing the perfect broken wife. She was going back to his penthouse to steal his encrypted files, ready to feed him to Manhattan's most cutthroat divorce lawyer and watch his empire burn.

7.5
Five years ago, Alisson Ford's adoptive family drugged her and offered her to a repulsive old investor to save their failing company.
She escaped the trap, only to accidentally stumble into the bed of Jake Yates, the most terrifying and powerful billionaire in the city.
Months later, while she was painfully giving birth to triplets in a freezing basement, her adoptive sister Bella tracked her down. Bella violently snatched Alisson's firstborn son to pass off as her own ticket into the Yates family. Then, Bella smiled as her men poured gasoline over the mattress and set the room on fire, leaving Alisson and her two remaining newborns to burn alive.
Shielding her fragile babies with her own blistering skin in the roaring inferno, Alisson's despair turned into absolute, blood-soaked hatred. She couldn't fathom how the family she had trusted for years could steal her flesh and blood and condemn her to such a horrific death.
Five years later, Alisson returns to the city as a powerful trauma specialist. She steps right into Jake and Bella's grand engagement banquet, watching coldly as her five-year-old daughter runs straight up to the untouchable billionaire and hugs his leg.
"You are a bad daddy! You abandoned Mommy and us, and now you are going to marry an ugly old witch!"