Gabriella Calos has spent years guiding others through death, while quietly drowning in her own guilt. After losing the man she loved in a hospital bed she couldn’t save, she turned to pills for silence and vanished from everything she once was. Now back in her hometown, ready to leave nursing behind, she’s pulled into an emergency that changes everything—and into the path of Isaac Langton. Billionaire. Media mogul. Owner of half the city’s news stations and newspapers. He’s powerful, untouchable, and recovering from wounds no headline ever printed. When Isaac offers Gabriella a position as his private nurse at his secluded estate, she steps into a world far colder than the hospital—one filled with secrets, an unsettling wife, and a daughter who sees too much. As Gabriella and Isaac grow closer, so do the ghosts of their pasts—and the tension between them begins to burn.
View MoreThe blood wouldn’t come off.I’d washed my hands three times. Scalding water. Industrial soap. Scrubbed until the skin on my knuckles went raw and red.But it was still there.Under my nails.In the folds of my wrist.On my scrubs—thick in some places, smeared in others. James’s blood. Warm, metallic, and real.He’d be okay. That’s what the nurse had said—something about the bullet going clean through the muscle, not hitting bone or artery. He was stable. Talking. Even cracking dry jokes in the trauma bay like nothing had happened.But I wasn’t okay.Not even close.I stood in the corner of the nurses’ station, trembling, arms folded tight across my chest. My breath kept catching in my throat like it didn’t know whether to sob or choke. There were voices around me—colleagues murmuring, someone offering a chair, a cup of water, I think—but I couldn’t really hear any of it.I had called the Langton estate twenty minutes ago. Told the security team there was an incident. That there was a
She didn’t come back that night.I waited. Longer than I should have.By midnight, I’d convinced myself she’d walked away—and maybe she should have.The halls felt emptier than usual. The silence thickens. Even the air was different without her in it.I stood by the library window, staring out at the driveway like I was expecting headlights to slice through the trees and tell me she hadn’t changed her mind.But the gates stayed closed.And the shadows stayed still.I poured a second drink I didn’t want.The burn in my chest had nothing to do with the whiskey.The knock came softly. Too polite.I didn’t turn.I knew that perfume before she opened the door.Daphne.“You’re still awake,” she said, voice smooth as glass.She came in barefoot, a silk robe draped like it cost more than most people’s rent, holding a half-filled glass of red in one hand.I didn’t respond. Just looked past her, at the fire.“You’re brooding again,” she added, stepping closer. “It’s not a good look for you.”“A
Daphne didn’t say a word.Not when the door swung open.Not when she took in the space between us. The distance wasn’t enough.Not even when her eyes flicked down to my hand—still resting on the desk, just inches from his.She only smiled.Tight. Poised. Diamond-cut cruelty behind perfect lipstick.Isaac didn’t flinch.He turned to her like she was no more than a detail. A shadow on the wall.“Gabriella,” he said calmly, “you’re excused.”It wasn’t a dismissal.It was a warning. A shield. A way out before things got bloody.I didn’t speak. Didn’t move.For a breath, I just stood there—watching Daphne watch me like a piece she hadn’t quite figured out how to remove from the board.I nodded once and turned.Her perfume hit me in the hallway—sweet, cloying, expensive. She didn’t follow.But her silence did.It followed me all the way to the front steps.The hospital smelled the same.Bleach. Burnt coffee. Cheap soap and something metallic beneath.I hadn’t meant to come here, but my legs
I crouch on the still-warm tile and start collecting what’s left of Avery’s plate, the echo of Daphne’s slap pulsing in my cheek.A housekeeper rushes in, eyes wide, but I wave her off.“Please—just give me a minute.”She hesitates, then nods and retreats. Even the staff obey the rule of distance here.I find the fork last—twisted, sticky with chocolate—and drop it into the trash. A smear of syrup darkens my palm. It looks too much like blood.Breathe.I rinse my hands, dab my face with cold water, and tell myself the sting will fade.The slap still rang in my ears.The sting had faded from my cheek, but the shame hadn’t. It never faded that fast.I stood motionless, my hand on my face, fingers trembling.Daphne’s words circled like vultures:“Kill her. Like you did someone else.”She knew.Marcus.She knew.It seemed like she knew how many people had held on to me in the hope that I couldn’t save.She knew how I couldn’t save you, Marcus.My stomach turned, nausea scraping up my thro
His voice was low when he spoke next. “You’re not what I expected.”I looked at him. Really looked.“You’re not what I expected either,” I said quietly.He held my gaze.Something unspoken simmered there. Unraveled. I could feel it like static beneath my skin. Something thick, electric.I looked away first.“You didn’t tell me you had a daughter.”His expression didn’t change, but the air around us cooled a degree.“I figured you’d meet her eventually,” he said.“I did. She’s sharp. And your wife—.”“Daphne isn’t her mother,” he cut in, voice calm but deliberate. “Not legally. But she’s present. Plays the part when it’s required.” A pause. “And Avery… Avery’s smart. She sees through people faster than most adults.”I nodded slowly, reading between the spaces he left unspoken.“Daphne didn’t like me,” I said, folding my arms across my chest like I needed the barrier.“She doesn’t like anyone who doesn’t orbit her,” he replied, taking a sip from his glass. “You didn’t bow.”“I’m not ver
The sky had started folding into dusk, the kind that draped the estate in gold and gray, the shadows stretching like secrets across the path.I needed air.I left the folder back in the room they gave me without signing yet, after seeing the way Isaac watched me like I’d already given more than my name, I needed to breathe something that didn’t feel like a deal.So I wandered. Past the stone walkways, the place was wealth made sterile—every leaf and corner polished to a shine. It made my skin itch a little.I pulled out my phone and tapped Maya’s number, bringing it to my ear.“Hello?”“Hey. Can you let Mom know I won’t be home tonight?”A beat. “Why? Did you get called in?”“No,” I said, voice low. “Just—personal. I’ll explain later.”“You okay?”I didn’t answer that part. “Tell her not to wait up.”Maya sighed. “Alright. Text me if you need anything.”“I will.”I ended the call and slipped the phone into my hoodie pocket just as I turned a corner—and saw her.A little girl. Alone.S
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