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THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE
THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE
Автор: Kayblissz

Chapter One

Aвтор: Kayblissz
last update Последнее обновление: 2025-06-11 11:37:11

Where do you think people go after they die?

Do you think they still remember the ones who cared most for them before their passing? Or is the whole memory gone, one-sided, clinging only to the person left behind?

Hi. I’m Gabriella Carlos, and I’ll admit that I’ve loved and cherished more dead people than I ever might the living.

I’m a nurse.

Not just the kind who checks vitals and changes IV bags—though that’s part of it, too.

I’m the one who stays behind after families have gone home, who holds the hands of those too weak to speak, who listens to the stories no one else has time to hear.

I work in palliative care. It’s not glamorous. It’s not even always hopeful. But it’s honest.

People think death is an ending. But sometimes, I think it’s more like a mirror. It reflects everything back at us, our regrets, our triumphs, and our unanswered questions.

In those final moments, people often speak with a clarity that life never gave them the chance to.

And that’s where I come in.

I’m not a hero. I don’t wear a stethoscope like a badge of honour. I sit. I hold hands. I listen. I carry words that will never be repeated. I memorize faces so loved that they don’t need makeup to be beautiful.

I wipe tears—sometimes theirs, sometimes mine. I am a witness to the rawest goodbye life has to offer.

Some call it depressing. Morbid, even. I call it a privilege.

Although I won’t lie to you, there are nights when that privilege feels more like a curse.

Like when I wake up at 3 a.m., heart racing, remembering the look in a son’s eyes when his father stopped breathing mid-sentence. Or when I smell lavender, and suddenly I’m back in Room 214, watching a woman whisper apologies to a husband she hadn’t touched in years.

There are days I go home feeling hollow, like someone scooped the empathy out of me with a spoon and left only the skin.

My paycheck doesn’t reflect the weight I carry. No bonus for emotional labour. No hazard pay for breaking quietly in the bathroom between patients

. And sometimes I wonder—how much is a soul's worth if mine keeps splintering bit by bit in the service of others?

But then, there are moments.

Beautiful, fleeting moments.

A woman in her nineties gripping my hand and saying, “Thank you for making me feel human again.” A teenager telling me, “You’re the first adult who didn’t lie to me about dying.” A man mouthing “Tell her I forgive her” before the machines go quiet.

These are not just stories. These are lives. And I get to stand at the edge of them—not as a nurse, but as a witness. A keeper of final truths.

But now, I don’t think it’s worth it. I barely have time for myself. Whatever pieces of my personal life I had left behind somewhere between late-night charting and early-morning grief calls.

No love life. No sex life. There is no space for softness.

The last time I had any kind of “action” was with a patient. I know how that sounds.

Wrong. Unprofessional. Messy.

And it was all of those things.

But it was also more human than anything I’d felt in years.

His name was Marcus.

Testicular cancer. It had spread before they caught it, and he’d already gone through a failed transplant, two rounds of chemo, and a clinical trial by the time he got to us.

He wasn’t supposed to be there long.

Six weeks, maybe seven.

But then we started talking.

First, just the usual nurse-patient chatter, pain scale, sleep, and appetite.

Then music. Then books. Then, the stories he never told his family because he didn’t want them to cry.

He didn’t make me feel like a nurse.

He made me feel like a woman.

It was subtle, slow. I didn’t even realize I was falling until it was too late.

It was something real.

And it wrecked me.

He died during a shift change.

I wasn’t in the room.

I wasn’t even on the floor.

They said he went peacefully in his sleep.

But I’d promised him I’d be there. He’d made me promise.

I found out in the hallway that someone had handed me his chart like it was just another update.

I didn’t cry that day

.

Not until I got home.

And then I couldn’t stop.

I took one of the pills a coworker gave me weeks earlier. Said it helped her sleep through the grief.

I took two the next night.

Three nights after that.

Soon, I stopped counting.

I wasn’t trying to get high. I just wanted the quiet.

To shut off the rerun of his voice in my head.

To stop feeling like I’d failed him.

To stop seeing the empty bed every time I closed my eyes.

People say grief comes in waves.

But for me, it was a flood that never receded.

I started showing up late.

Forgot patient names.

Skipped lunch breaks just to cry in the stairwell.

I lied to my supervisor. Said I was fine.

Used makeup to hide the shadows under my eyes.

Used coffee to fake energy.

Used silence to hide the scream stuck in my chest.

And I still kept showing up.

Because when you’re in this line of work, you don’t get the luxury of breaking down.

You just keep patching the cracks with guilt, caffeine, and borrowed resilience.

I don’t believe in hope.

Yes, I know how that sounds. I know what people expect from a nurse. Compassion. Light. Optimism, even. But hope… real, clinging, desperate hope—has always ended in the same place, with a flatline and a family that breaks in front of you.

And sometimes, when I look back, I wonder if I was part of the curse. If there’s something about me that carries the darkness closer.

They say everybody dies, but no one ever really expects to. That’s the cruel joke, isn’t it? We all know it’s coming, but we live like we’re invincible.

We make plans, chase dreams, and say “see you tomorrow” like it’s a promise carved in stone.

I think that’s crazy.

Because when the end comes—and it always does—they grip my scrubs with trembling fingers, eyes wide with disbelief, and whisper that they’re not ready.

That they don’t want to die. As if I have the power to stop it

As if my presence somehow grants them immunity.

But I don’t. And it doesn’t.

I’m not a miracle. I’m not a saviour. I’m not special.

I’m just like them, fragile, scared, uncertain. I’m just like you.

I used to believe in peace. Now, I just want silence.

So here I am, sitting in the silence of my apartment, the only light coming from my laptop screen.

The shadows in the room feel heavier tonight.

Maybe it’s the ghosts—the ones who never wanted to leave, whose last words still echo in my ears like unfinished symphonies.

And I’m writing my resignation letter.

I’ve thought long and hard about this. My job doesn’t let me live. It swallows the parts of me I used to recognize, my laughter, my light, my belief that life was beautiful, even when it was hard.

I’ve given everything I have to this work. My time, my heart, my sanity. And for a while, that felt noble. But now? Now, it just feels like a loss.

So maybe it’s time. Not to run away—but to breathe again.

To heal. To remember what it feels like to want to live.

Because maybe that’s what I owe myself. Not heroism, but a chance at something lighter. A life

where I’m not just surrounded by endings.

A life where I begin again.

I folded the letter carefully, pressing the crease with my thumb as if sealing in all the quiet confessions it held. I slipped it into an envelope and placed it inside my bag.

I wouldn’t drop it in today. But I will. Maybe tomorrow. Maybe the next.

I watched the morning light stretch across the floor. It didn’t ask for anything. It didn’t try to comfort me. It just existed. Calm, indifferent, untouched by the weight I carried.

For the first time in years, I called in sick.

And I didn’t lie about it.

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  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter 15

    The house looked different this time.Not colder. Not grander.Just… heavier.Like it knew what had happened. Like it was watching me.I followed Isaac through the front doors, the blood still drying on my scrubs, the silence between us thick enough to choke.He hadn’t spoken since the car. Not really. Just small things—you’re cold, slow down, drink more water—like his voice could shield me from what just happened.I didn’t know if it could.I didn’t know if he could.The last thing I expected was to feel anything here. Not safety. Not protection. Not whatever had just stirred in my chest when he said he wanted to feel again.But something about the way he looked at me…It was undoing every locked place I’d learned to live inside.He held the door open.Didn’t say a word when I stepped in.Didn’t even look at me like I was a mess—blood-spattered, shaken, spiraling beneath the skin.Instead, he placed a hand at the small of my back, like I was something delicate.Like I was worth prote

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter 14

    The 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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter 13: Issac’s POV

    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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter 12

    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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter 11: The shards glint like teeth.

    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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Ten

    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

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