LOGINJessica had worked at Boston General for three years.
Long enough to memorise the smell of disinfectant. Long enough to survive a night shift without coffee.
Long enough for the hospital to feel more like home than the mansion in Kensington ever did.
Here, at least, people talked to her. Here, she existed.
"Morning, Jess," Maya called from the nurses' station.
"New transfer coming to maternity today. Management said you'll assist her."
JESSICA nodded, flipping through patient files absentmindedly.
"Name?"Maya checked the clipboard. "SARAH COLLINS".
The name meant nothing at first. Just another patient. Jessica took the file and walked toward the ward, already thinking about medication schedules and charts.
But when she pushed the door open and stepped inside, she froze.
The woman sitting on the bed looked... familiar. Too put-together to ignore. Long, smooth hair. Perfect skin. Expensive clothes, even in a hospital gown. She didn't look weak. Didn't look sick. She looked comfortable and confident, like she belonged anywhere she stepped.
And then Jessica remembered. She had seen her before. Once. Standing beside Michael's car.
Her stomach tightened.Professional, Jessica. Just do your job.She forced a small smile.
"Good morning. I'm Nurse Jessica I'll be taking care of you today."
Sarah looked up slowly. Her gaze moved over Jessica's face, then paused briefly at her hand. The ring.Something flickered in her eyes but didn't stay long enough to name.
"Oh," she said, almost casually. "So you're Jessica."
JESSICA frowned slightly.
"Have we met before?"
Sarah gave a small shrug, leaning back against the pillow. "Something like that."
That didn't answer anything. Jessica looked back down at the file to focus.
But the moment her eyes reached the medical notes, her heart stopped.Pregnant. Second trimester.She swallowed.
Then her eyes dropped to the emergency contact section.FATHER OF BABY: Michael Carter.
The pen slipped from her fingers. It hit the floor with a small sound too loud, too heavy for such a small thing.
Her ears started ringing. No. It must be another Michael. Carter is a common name... right?
It's has to be.But her hands weren't steady as she read it again.
Michael Carter. Not just any Michael. Her Michael.
Her husband.Her chest tightened so badly she forgot how to breathe.Sarah's voice came softly.
"He didn't tell you, did he?"Jessica looked up slowly.Sarah's smile wasn't kind. It wasn't cruel either. It was worse than both it was calm.
Like she had been expecting this moment for a while.
"He's always been bad at explaining things," Sarah continued, her hand resting gently over her stomach.
"But don't worry... this baby has been in his life long before you."
The words landed like a slap.Jessica bent down and picked up the pen. Her fingers didn't feel like hers. Because everything she had accepted — the contract, the arrangement, the careful distance between them — was suddenly sitting on top of something she had never been told.
The contract marriage didn't feel like business anymore. It felt humiliating.
"I'll come back to check your vitals later," Jessica said.
Her voice didn't sound like hers. It sounded far away.She forced herself to stand straight. Professional. Strong. Even though her heart felt like it was quietly breaking inside her chest.
She walked out before Sarah could say anything else.
THE HALLWAY
She leaned against the wall outside, pressing her hand over her mouth.Not here. She couldn't do this here.
Her throat felt tight in a way she couldn't swallow down. A breath came... then stopped halfway. She lifted a hand to her face and paused, like she wasn't sure she was allowed to cry here.
THE BATHROOM
The light was too bright. She turned the tap on and just watched the water for a second before touching it.Cold hit her skin. She flinched slightly, like it surprised her.She splashed her face again. Harder this time. As if that could reset something inside her chest.
LEAVING
She came out of the bathroom slower than she went in. She didn't rush. She couldn't, even if she tried.
Her legs moved but each step felt heavier than the last. Her fingers tightened around the strap of her bag like it was the only steady thing left.
Each step toward the elevator felt louder than it should. Her heels clicked against the floor but in her head it sounded like something collapsing — slowly, quietly, without anyone noticing.
When she reached the elevator she pressed the button once.
Then again. Like the first press wasn't enough to prove she still had control over something.
The doors stayed closed. In that stillness, everything she had been holding together started to loosen.
A coworker called her name from somewhere behind her soft, distant. She didn't turn. If she turned, she might break completely.
Her reflection appeared faintly in the elevator doors. Tired eyes. Slightly parted lips.
A face that looked like it had just survived something no one else could see.
She wasn't sure if walking away would make it easier. Or if it would just make everything worse.
The doors slid open.
She stepped inside and pressed the button.
A second later, another hand reached in stopping the doors.
She looked up. And froze.
Michael stepped inside.Neither of them spoke.
Her fingers tightened slightly at her side.
The elevator began to move.
And somehow, being trapped in that small space with him felt harder than anything she had faced all day.
Jessica had worked at Boston General for three years.Long enough to memorise the smell of disinfectant. Long enough to survive a night shift without coffee.Long enough for the hospital to feel more like home than the mansion in Kensington ever did.Here, at least, people talked to her. Here, she existed."Morning, Jess," Maya called from the nurses' station."New transfer coming to maternity today. Management said you'll assist her."JESSICA nodded, flipping through patient files absentmindedly."Name?"Maya checked the clipboard. "SARAH COLLINS".The name meant nothing at first. Just another patient. Jessica took the file and walked toward the ward, already thinking about medication schedules and charts.But when she pushed the door open and stepped inside, she froze.The woman sitting on the bed looked... familiar. Too put-together to ignore. Long, smooth hair. Perfect skin. Expensive clothes, even in a hospital gown. She didn't look weak. Didn't look sick. She looked comfortable a
Michael didn't move for a second after the door closed.The house felt different even though it was quiet.He stood there, eyes fixed on the empty space Jessica had just left behind.He didn't even know why he was still standing there.Finally, he exhaled and walked back into the living room. Picked up his phone from the table.A few minutes later it vibrated. One new message from an unknown number.His jaw hardened. He opened it."Fix it before she finds out everything".His fingers paused. He stared at the screen for a long moment.His chest tightened. Something shifted.He placed the phone down slowly and ran a hand down his face.Then another message came in fast,like they had been waiting for him to open the first one."You think you can keep this clean forever?"He didn't reply.He just stood there, staring at the screen long enough for the words to start feeling louder than they should.His thumb hovered over the phone for a second , he thought about calling the number back, a
Michael sank into his chair, running both hands through his hair. His mind raced. Investors expected reports. The board expected results..Rivalries companies were circling, waiting for any weakness.He couldn't change the past. Couldn't erase the contract.But he could act. Protect the company. Protect the family reputation. Protect Jessica... from the consequences of everything he had done , even if it meant facing every threat, every danger, every secret alone.Because as much as he tried to act detached, to be cold and distant, the truth was that she mattered more than any contract.More than any business deal. More than any threat looming over him.And if he had to burn the world down to keep her safe... he would.Jessica pushed open the front door, her keys clattering into the dish by the entrance.The house was quiet. She kicked off her heels, dragging her tired feet across the polished floor, and sank into the couch.Her chest felt heavy , the image of Michael and that woman by
Jessica woke up before her alarm. The thin morning light spilled into her room, She lay there a moment letting herself breath, Then dragged herself out of the bed and stepped into the shower the warm water helped shake off the heaviest in her chest, Though the thoughts of last night still lingered.Dressing for work was harder than usual, She tried One outfit then another, simple professional safe something that wouldn't draw attention but wouldn't make her invisible either. She straightened her hair, smoothen her dress, checked her reflection a hundred times, and let out a quiet breath.Finally, she grabbed her bag and stepped into the hallway. And froze.Michael was there, leaning against the wall, phone in hand, dressed like he belonged in a magazine. But then their eyes met and Jessica stomach did a little flip."Morning." She said. Voice a little too light."Morning." he replied. Calm, measured. His eyes didn't look away. Just held hers for a second longer than, she expected. Her
Jessica hand trembled as she held the hospital bill, The numbers blurring together under the weight of her panic. Her father's illiness had drained what little saving they had and every month brought another letter from the creditors. The phone calls never stopped, Each one was a reminder that were drowning, And she was powerless."Jessica." her mother said, voice tight with worry. "We can't keep borrowing something has to be done. You know what the offer is"Jessica closed her eyes, swallowing the lump in her throat. She did know, The contract marriage proposal. Five years with Michael. A man she barely knew, marriage without love. A deal to save her family, And how her father's eyes were on her, expecting her to sacrifice herself. Her chest ached. Not from fear of Micheal but From the weight of responsibility."I don't know if I can do it,"she whispered.Her father lying weakly in the hospital bed cough and managed a strained smile."Jessica.... You're our only hope." Hope. The word







