LOGINSpirit had spent the remainder of the afternoon tucked in the bedroom, the television playing in the background while her tired eyes tracked the slow hands of the wall clock.
Despite the ridiculous luxury surrounding her, her stomach was beginning to growl with hunger. Chris had told her to use the intercom to call the housekeeper, but the thought of invoking the hospitality of this house made her skin prickle uneasily. She wasn’t a guest. She was an uninvited stray in a rich man's cold psychological war. To anchor herself back to reality, she pulled out her phone and dialed a familiar number. The line rang twice before a small, impossibly bright voice exploded through the receiver. "Sis!" A genuine, weary smile broke across Spirit’s face, the tension melting from her shoulders at the sound of her ten-year-old brother, Liam. "Hey, buddy. You answered fast." "I was helping Mrs. Gable set the table for dinner, and her phone was right there," Liam said, his voice carrying the smartness of a child whose mind outpaced his years. "How is the hospital? Did you finish the paperwork? Are you on the floor yet?" Spirit chuckled a little, and just like that, the stress and anxiety from the day vanished into nothing. Liam was terrifyingly smart for his age, a trait that both comforted Spirit and kept her on high alert. She couldn't let him catch on to the ugly truth. He didn't need to know his sister was currently facing hell in a billionaire's estate because she had to provide for him. "I'm actually on an off-site assignment for the weekend," Spirit lied smoothly, keeping her tone light. "A special protocol shift. I'm currently on a long break, so I wanted to check in. Are you behaving for Mrs. Gable?" "Of course. I helped wash the dishes, water the hydrangeas," Liam noted proudly. "And I didn't let her lift the heavy grocery bags. But she wants to talk to you." A moment of rustling passed before the warm, raspy voice of Martha Gable filled the line. Martha was sixty, a widow who loved her kids but had zero children of her own. She had been their neighbor since before Spirit's parents died five years ago, transforming from a friendly face behind their house to the surrogate grandmother who kept their fractured little world spinning whenever Spirit was trapped with exhausting schoolwork. "He's telling the truth, Spirit. He's been an absolute prince," Martha said softly, ensuring her voice was low enough to keep Liam from overhearing. "How are you holding up, dear? You sound exhausted." "I'm fine, Martha. Just... a lot of unexpected variables today," Spirit murmured, rubbing her sore temples. "I won't be back until Monday morning. Thank you for watching him. I don't know what I'd do without you." "You don't ever have to thank me for this boy. Just take care of yourself. And don’t forget to eat a proper meal, we don’t want your ulcer flaring up again." After promises to call again tomorrow, Spirit hung up. The deep stillness of the room returned, immediately disrupted by a loud, aggressive growl from her empty stomach. Sighing, she walked over to the wall intercom and pressed the small button. "Hello? Missus... hello?" Nothing. She waited a minute, then tried again. Then a third time. The line remained completely, stubbornly dead. I thought Chris said this machine worked, she thought, a spark of irritation replacing her hunger. Still dressed in her scrubs, she turned the handle of her door and stepped out into the silent hallway. She moved like a ghost, tiptoeing down the stairs and navigating the sprawling lower level by until she finally caught the scent of stainless steel cleaner and citrus. The kitchen was a minimalist masterpiece of black and white design. But Spirit froze the moment she crossed the threshold. A man was standing by the oversized island. He was still shirtless, his broad, athletic back turned to her. Spirit immediately tensed, preparing to turn on her heel and sprint back up the stairs before he noticed her. Then he turned around. The bright red shade of her palm print was clearly visible against his cheeks. It was Chase. Spirit’s breath caught sharply, her weight shifting nervously to her back foot. "You don't have to run," Chase said quietly. His voice lacked the mischievous purr from earlier. It was respectful, grounded. He held his hands up slightly, a gentle gesture of submission that looked entirely foreign on a man built like a god. "I'm an idiot," Chase murmured, looking directly at her, his eyes unblinking. "What I said to you out there... it was disgusting and absolutely disrespectful. I'm sorry."Spirit remained frozen by the doorway, her clinical evaluation of his body language telling her he was actually being sincere. Yet, her protective walls remained firmly locked in place. She hadn’t expected him to fold that quickly, or maybe he was just trying to get her to lower her guard. Men like this can’t be trusted. “You’re not pressing charges?” Spirit blurted, still stunned by the unexpected apology. “No,” Chase said, a small, self-deprecating smile twisting his lips. He touched his bruised jaw lightly. “Honestly, I deserved worse. Chris already gave me a lecture that lasted three hours. I’ve got enough drama in my life without trying to sue the only nurse brave enough to teach me a lesson.” Spirit let out a slow, cautious breath, her shoulders lowering an inch. “I have a lot on my plate this weekend, Mr. Voss. I would highly appreciate it if you never speak to me like that again. If we can agree on basic boundaries, we won’t have a problem.” “Agreed,” Chase said quick
Spirit had spent the remainder of the afternoon tucked in the bedroom, the television playing in the background while her tired eyes tracked the slow hands of the wall clock. Despite the ridiculous luxury surrounding her, her stomach was beginning to growl with hunger. Chris had told her to use the intercom to call the housekeeper, but the thought of invoking the hospitality of this house made her skin prickle uneasily. She wasn’t a guest. She was an uninvited stray in a rich man's cold psychological war. To anchor herself back to reality, she pulled out her phone and dialed a familiar number. The line rang twice before a small, impossibly bright voice exploded through the receiver. "Sis!" A genuine, weary smile broke across Spirit’s face, the tension melting from her shoulders at the sound of her ten-year-old brother, Liam. "Hey, buddy. You answered fast." "I was helping Mrs. Gable set the table for dinner, and her phone was right there," Liam said, his voice carr
For ten agonizing seconds, the only movement in the room was the slow drift of dust in the morning sunbeams.Spirit’s hand remained suspended in mid-air, the palm burning as if she had struck an open flame instead of human skin. The vibration of the impact rattled right up to her elbow. Then, the stillness was shattered by a low chuckle. It was Charles. He straightened up from the doorframe. The coldness in his eyes had changed into something entirely different. He looked at his brother, then back to Spirit. “For the first time today, Nurse Browne,” Charles said, “you did something right.” Spirit’s breath hitched in her throat. Her eyes widened, shock paralyzing her nervous system. Of all the reactions she had braced herself for (threats, a call to the police, the immediate arrival of the estate’s guards) praise from the most hostile, aggressive brother was entirely off the script. Charles didn’t wait for a response. He turned on his heel and retreated toward the
A mocking chuckle vibrated through Charles’s chest. “You’ve got a lot of nerve for a rookie, Nurse Browne,” Charles murmured, straightening to his full, imposing height.He took a step forward, using his tall body to crowd her into the glass side table. “But let’s get something straight. This is my house. I dictate exactly what happens under this roof, not the other way around. I don’t care what kind of papers you signed. To me, you are a nobody. If I don’t want you here, you don’t stay.” “And let me remind you of something,” Spirit countered, tapping her fingers against the badge pinned to her chest. “I am a fully licensed professional. My residency status is a formality of training, Mr. Voss; it doesn’t diminish my authority, and it certainly doesn’t make me less of a nurse.” Chris nodded in admiration, clapping his hands silently. “If I walk out those doors,” Spirit continued, “I will be answering to the administration board and the state nursing council for client abandonmen
Spirit froze, the kit suddenly weighing a hundred pounds. If she went back to the hospital now, she would lose the five-thousand-dollar bonus. Worse, Katherine would know she had failed on her very first day, completely ruining her credibility before her residency even truly began. She thought of Liam’s school fees, thought of the empty pantry, and her student loan, which she had to pay back in six months. Stand your ground, she commanded herself. She forced her voice into the calm tone she’d practiced during clinical simulations. “Listen to me, Mr. Voss,” Spirit said, squaring her shoulders. “I am a licensed Registered Nurse, not a babysitter. Your grandfather signed a medical directive for three days of continuous private care, and I have signed a legally binding corporate NDA. If you have a grievance with his arrangement, you are welcome to call his office. Until then, I am entering this house and doing my job.”The man didn’t flinch. If anything, her defiance only made his
“I don’t care where or how you’re gonna do it, John! Find someone!” The furious voice cut right through the silence of the lobby where Spirit Browne was seated with her messenger bag strapped to her shoulder. It was her first official day at Voss Memorial Hospital as a licensed Registered Nurse resident. She was supposed to be waiting for her Medical-Surgical clinical preceptor, but the fuming woman behind the desk caught her attention. Her name tag read Katherine Hayes, Nursing Director. “Three private agency nurses walked out this morning because they refused to deal with them,” Katherine hissed into her desk phone, her sharp eyes scanning a stack of documents. “The Chairman is threatening to fire the entire administrative board if we don’t have a nurse at the estate in thirty minutes. Just pull a float nurse! I’ll cover the liability!” A pause. Katherine closed her eyes, rubbing her temples. “No one wants the shift? Even with a five-thousand-dollar emergency bonus? Damn it.”







