Share

Chapter Eight

Author: Kayblissz
last update Last Updated: 2025-06-11 12:00:09

I didn’t say anything else. Not to the men, not to my parents. I just stood there for another minute, staring at the life I thought we had, now hanging by a thread.

I went upstairs.

Closed the door to my room and sat at the edge of my bed, still in my scrubs, tasting the bitterness of almost slipping earlier that day.

Eighty-three thousand dollars.

I couldn’t cry. There wasn’t time for that.

I pulled out my phone, scrolled to the most recent unknown number. No name. Just a message from yesterday: Done thinking?

I didn’t overthink it this time. I typed:

Yes.

It was sent before I could regret it.

Not even thirty seconds passed before my phone lit up with a reply:

You’ll start tomorrow. The car will come by at 9. Discretion required.

I stared at the message like it was a signature on something I couldn’t undo. My stomach twisted.

This wasn’t a nursing assignment. This was stepping into his world. 

But when your family’s sinking? You don’t wait for clean lines and comfort.

You jump.

I lay back on my bed, eyes tracing the ceiling. I should’ve felt relief. I should’ve felt like I did something right.

Instead, all I felt was the sharp edge of something new pressing against the back of my ribs.

Curiosity.

Before the sun had fully risen, I slipped out the front door, beating the agreed-upon nine o’clock pickup. I couldn’t wait.

I drove back to my apartment—the one I’d tried to leave behind but never really could.

Inside, I moved straight to the trash can in the kitchen, the one where I’d thrown the pills weeks ago.

The plastic bag rustled as I reached in, fingers trembling, brushing against the bottle. Half-empty, but still enough.

No hesitation this time.

I swallowed the pills, bitterness flooding my mouth, burning down my throat. No haze. No escape. Just raw, unfiltered me.

I leaned back against the counter, heart pounding, waiting.

Because the car would be here soon.

And after that, there was no turning back.

My phone buzzed once. A text.

The driver’s five minutes out.

No name. Just like the last time. I didn’t reply.

I grabbed my bag. Locked the door behind me without looking back.

The city was waking up—soft gray light slipping between buildings, morning traffic beginning to hum. Somewhere, people were brushing their teeth, pouring coffee, kissing someone goodbye without realizing it might be the last time.

Then the black car pulled up. Sleek. Tinted windows. No logos. The back door opened automatically, and I climbed in without a word.

The driver didn’t ask my name. He didn’t have to.

I rested my forehead against the window, watching the world blur past.

 I had no idea where we were going.

Only that I was already gone.

The car slipped through the private gate—it didn’t creak, just opened like it had been expecting me. The driveway curved through manicured hedges and tall trees, silent and endless.

Isaac Langton’s estate wasn’t a home. It was a monument.

Stone walls, pale and untouched by time. Windows too tall to feel warm, too quiet to welcome. Nothing flashy. No gold, no glass. Just weight. Presence.

The kind of place that didn’t ask for attention. It commanded it.

I stepped out.

Everything was too quiet. No dogs barking. No birds. Just the hush of trees in windless air.

The front doors opened before I reached them. 

Inside, the floors gleamed like they’d never been walked on. The air carried a faint scent—clean, clinical, with something herbal underneath, like money trying to smell like calm.

A woman appeared—early forties maybe, tight bun, expression hard. “Miss Gabriella Carlos?”

I nodded.

“Right this way. Mr. Langton is expecting you in his office. Contract will be reviewed before duties begin.”

Her voice was crisp, no room for small talk. She walked fast, and I followed.

We passed rooms I didn’t have time to take in—vaulted ceilings, quiet corners. Every space felt curated, like a photo in a catalog, expensive, cold, untouched.

The woman stopped at a heavy set of double doors.

“He’s inside.”

I opened them before I could overthink.

The room was large—masculine in a quiet, understated way. Bookshelves lined the walls, a decanter sat untouched on a sideboard, and behind the desk, in a chair too big to look comfortable, was Isaac.

He didn’t stand when I entered, but I noticed the slight stiffness in his posture. His left arm rested carefully in a sling, shoulder clearly still healing

“Gabriella,” he said, voice lower than I remembered. “Right on time.”

I nodded. “Still breathing, I see.”

His mouth twitched. “Much to the surprise of a few people, yes.”

I set my bag down beside the chair he gestured toward. It felt too plush, too expensive for someone who still lived out of a shared laundry closet at home.

On the desk between us, a folder sat waiting. My name was typed cleanly across the tab. No hospital logo. Just stark letters and silence.

He nodded toward it. “Standard NDA. Your terms. Boundaries. Compensation. Expectations.”

I flipped it open—mostly out of habit, not trust. My eyes scanned the pages fast, but I stopped at the number. The pay made my throat tighten.

“This is…” I trailed off. “I thought you said this wasn’t charity.”

“It’s not. It’s compensation for discretion, loyalty, and the emotional stamina to not flinch when things get… complicated.”

“Sounds like you’re hiring a therapist.”

He gave a dry laugh, but it was brief. “Not quite. I’ve got too many people telling me what I want to hear. I need someone who doesn’t work for the media, doesn’t care about money, and isn’t here to be impressed. You proved all three.”

“And the nurse part?”

He glanced down at the sling and the bandages barely visible beneath the hem of his sweater. “Still very necessary.”

I exhaled slowly, the weight of the moment starting to settle in my chest. My thoughts flicked back to my mother’s voice on the phone. The scene in the living room. The way her shoulders curled in like a woman who’d been carrying too much, for too long.

I looked up. “You’re wrong about not caring about the money though. I’m here until I’m satisfied.”

His brow lifted. “Satisfied?”

“I need a specific amount,” I said flatly. “Once I hit it, I’m gone. No notice, no drama. And I’m not quitting my job at the hospital—just so we’re clear.”

That caught his attention.

“You’re planning to do both?” he asked.

“Part-time, here and there,” I said. “I’m not going to give that up without knowing what I’m getting into.”

He didn’t press. Just tilted his head and studied me like he could already see the number written somewhere on my skin.

The contract lay between us on the desk, pages crisp and waiting.

“Fair enough,” he said finally, leaning back in the chair. “Then let’s get you paid.”

“I didn’t say I’d sign anything today.”

His mouth quirked. “You came all this way just to window-shop?”

“I came to see the terms,” I said, crossing my arms. “This isn’t a job—it’s a transaction. And I don’t sign anything I haven’t read twice.”

A pause.

Then he stood—or tried to, wincing slightly from the strain on his shoulder. My instinct was to move toward him, to help, but I held still. So did he.

“Take the contract,” he said. “Read it. Rip it up, if you want. But while you’re here, I expect presence. Eyes on me. Mind in the room.”

I nodded once. No promises. Just acknowledgment.

He gestured toward the woman in the hallway. “Miriam will show you to your quarters. We’ll speak later.”

I grabbed the folder, heavy with ink and implications, and followed Miriam in silence.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • 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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Nine

    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

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Eight

    I didn’t say anything else. Not to the men, not to my parents. I just stood there for another minute, staring at the life I thought we had, now hanging by a thread.I went upstairs.Closed the door to my room and sat at the edge of my bed, still in my scrubs, tasting the bitterness of almost slipping earlier that day.Eighty-three thousand dollars.I couldn’t cry. There wasn’t time for that.I pulled out my phone, scrolled to the most recent unknown number. No name. Just a message from yesterday: Done thinking?I didn’t overthink it this time. I typed:Yes.It was sent before I could regret it.Not even thirty seconds passed before my phone lit up with a reply:You’ll start tomorrow. The car will come by at 9. Discretion required.I stared at the message like it was a signature on something I couldn’t undo. My stomach twisted.This wasn’t a nursing assignment. This was stepping into his world. But when your family’s sinking? You don’t wait for clean lines and comfort.You jump.I lay

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Seven

    The flowers came on my first real day off in over a week.I wasn’t even dressed. Still in my oversized T-shirt and mismatched socks, toothbrush shoved halfway into my cheek like a chew toy, mouth full of foam when I heard the screech.“Oh my God, Gabby!” Nadia’s voice ricocheted down the hallway like a warning shot. “Someone left you flowers!”I squinted at the light pouring through the living room window and shuffled toward the noise, still brushing. “What?”“Toothpaste,” Maya called lazily from the kitchen. “You’re dripping it all over the floor.”I wiped my chin with the back of my hand—very glamorous—and peered over Nadia’s shoulder at the bouquet. Dozens of deep red tulips and eucalyptus sprigs. Classy. Clean. Like something from a showroom, not a grocery store shelf. No cartoon balloon or glittery ‘Get Well Soon’ nonsense. Just flowers. Thoughtful ones.Nadia turned and held up the little card like it might explode. “There’s a note,” she said in a dramatic whisper, which meant s

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Six

    The lighting inside was soft, warm — like a lounge on wheels. His left arm still in a sling, his suit gray this time, his expression unreadable.“Gabriella,” he said, like we were bumping into each other at a coffee shop.“What the fuck,” I breathed. “What the actual fuck is this?”He didn’t flinch. Didn’t even blink. “You’re okay.”“You kidnapped me!”He gestured calmly to the seatbelt. “Please buckle up. I don’t like chaos in my car.”“You think this is a joke? Do you even understand what you just did?”“I do. I just didn’t think asking you nicely would get me far.”I was shaking. From fear, rage, the crash of adrenaline—or maybe all three.“I could have a panic attack right now. I could call the police.”“You left your phone on the ground.”“You’re insane,” I spat.“And you’re exhausted,” he said quietly. “And unraveling.”My breath caught.That… felt like a knife pressed to something I wasn’t ready to name.“You’ve been walking around like you’re made of glass. But when you were w

  • THE BILLIONAIRE'S PRIVATE NURSE    Chapter Five

    “Do you always flirt with your nurses?” I asked, just to deflect.He smiled faintly. “Only the ones who look like they’ve been running from something.”I didn’t answer. Couldn’t.Instead, I scribbled something—anything—onto the chart just to keep my hands moving. Just to stop them from trembling. Then I nodded once, too fast, and turned toward the door.“Call the desk if you need anything.”My hand had just touched the handle when he said it—calmly, but like it mattered.“What’s your name?”I paused.It was a simple question, but it felt like a doorway. And I wasn’t sure what was waiting on the other side.I could have walked out and kept the space between us clinical and clean, like I was supposed to.But his voice, steady despite the pain, pulled something out of me. Or maybe it was his eyes. Clear now. Present. Like he was actually seeing me, not just the nurse assigned to his chart. Turned back, slower this time.“Gabriella.”His mouth moved like he was tasting it. “Gabriella,” h

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status