The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband

The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband

Qing Shui

3.5
Comment(s)
45.6K
View
300
Chapters

I sat in the gray, airless room of the New York State Department of Corrections, my knuckles white as the Warden delivered the news. "Parole denied." My father, Howard Sterling, had forged new evidence of financial crimes to keep me behind bars. He walked into the room, smelling of expensive cologne, and tossed a black folder onto the steel table. It was a marriage contract for Lucas Kensington, a billionaire currently lying in a vegetative state in the ICU. "Sign it. You walk out today." I laughed at the idea of being sold to a "corpse" until Howard slid a grainy photo toward me. It showed a toddler with a crescent-moon birthmark-the son Howard told me had died in an incubator five years ago. He smiled and told me the boy's safety depended entirely on my cooperation. I was thrust into the Kensington estate, where the family treated me like a "drowned rat." They dressed me in mothball-scented rags and mocked my status, unaware that I was monitoring their every move. I watched the cousin, Julian, openly waiting for Lucas to die to inherit the empire, while the doctors prepared to sign the death certificate. I didn't understand why my father would lie about my son's death for years, or what kind of monsters would use a child as a bargaining chip. The injustice of it burned in my chest as I realized I was just a pawn in a game of old money and blood. As the monitors began to flatline and the family started to celebrate their inheritance, I locked the door and reached into the hem of my dress. I pulled out the sharpened silver wires I'd fashioned in the prison workshop. They thought they bought a submissive convict, but they actually invited "The Saint"-the world's most dangerous underground surgeon-into their home. "Wake up, Lucas. You owe me a life." I wasn't there to be a bride; I was there to wake the dead and burn their empire to the ground.

The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband Chapter 1 1

The metal chair was bolted to the floor. Mia Sterling sat on it, her spine not touching the backrest, her hands clasped on the cold steel table. Her knuckles were white, the skin stretched tight over the bone. She focused on the sensation of her own pulse throbbing in her fingertips. It was the only thing proving she was still alive in this gray, airless room at the New York State Department of Corrections.

The heavy door groaned. It was a sound of friction, metal grinding against metal.

The Warden stepped in first, holding a file. He didn't look at her. He looked at the wall, at the floor, anywhere but her eyes.

"Parole denied," he said. The words were flat, rehearsed. "New evidence submitted by the victim's legal team. Sterling Group alleges further financial misconduct."

Mia didn't blink. She didn't scream. She felt a cold knot tighten in her stomach, a physical constriction of her diaphragm, but her face remained a mask of porcelain indifference. She had expected this. Her father, Howard Sterling, didn't leave loose ends. He tied them into nooses.

"However," the Warden said, stepping aside. "You have a visitor."

Howard walked in. The scent of expensive cologne-sandalwood and arrogance-hit Mia before he even sat down. It overpowered the smell of industrial bleach that permeated the prison. He waved a hand, dismissing the Warden.

The door clicked shut. Silence, heavy and suffocating, filled the space between them.

Howard didn't say hello. He tossed a black folder onto the table. It slid across the metal surface and stopped inches from Mia's hands.

A griffin crest was embossed on the leather. The Kensington family seal.

Mia stared at the mythical beast. The Kensingtons were royalty in New York, the kind of old money that made the Sterlings look like street peddlers.

"Sign it," Howard said. He adjusted his silk tie. "You sign, the charges disappear. The parole board reverses the decision. You walk out today."

Mia let out a short, dry laugh. It scraped her throat. "Has the stock price dropped that low, Howard? You're selling me to fix the quarterly report?"

Howard's jaw clenched. A vein pulsed in his temple. He slammed his palm on the table. The sound echoed like a gunshot.

"Don't be ungrateful. Do you know how many women would kill for this? Lucas Kensington is the most eligible bachelor on the East Coast."

"Lucas Kensington," Mia said, her voice dropping to a whisper, "is in a persistent vegetative state. He's been in the ICU for three months. The doctors declared his condition irreversible last week. You aren't selling me a husband. You're selling me as a nursemaid for a corpse so you can access their trust fund liquidity."

Howard leaned back. The anger in his eyes was replaced by something worse. Amusement.

He reached into the inner pocket of his suit jacket. He pulled out a photograph and slid it over the black folder.

Mia's breath hitched. Her heart hammered against her ribs, hard and painful.

The photo was grainy, taken from a distance with a telephoto lens. It showed a toddler in a playground. The face was turned away, but on the back of the child's neck, just above the collar, was a birthmark shaped like a crescent moon.

Her vision blurred. The room tilted.

She lunged across the table, her fingers clawing for the photo.

Howard caught her wrist. His grip was bruising.

"He's dead," Mia hissed, her voice shaking. "You told me he died in the incubator. You showed me the death certificate."

"Paperwork is easy to forge, Mia. You of all people know that." Howard smiled, showing his teeth. "He's alive. He's safe. He's well-fed. But his continued safety depends entirely on your cooperation today."

Mia froze. The fight drained out of her muscles, replaced by a cold, paralyzing dread. She stared into her father's eyes and saw the truth. He wasn't bluffing.

Her mind raced. As "The Saint," the underground surgeon who had patched up cartel leaders and shadow brokers, she could break out of here. She could disappear. But if she ran, she would never find the location of the child. She needed a legal identity. She needed resources. She needed to be inside the circle of power to track the money trail that paid for the boy's care.

She pulled her hand back. She sat down. She forced her lungs to expand, inhaling the stale air.

"Where is the pen?" she asked.

Howard produced a Montblanc fountain pen. He uncapped it and set it down.

Mia opened the folder. She didn't read the clauses about the prenup, the debt transfer, or the fact that she would be penniless if Lucas died. She didn't care.

She pressed the nib to the paper. The ink flowed black and permanent. She signed Mia Sterling. The tip of the pen tore through the paper on the last loop of the 'g'.

"Good girl," Howard said. He took the folder and the photo.

"The photo stays," Mia said.

Howard paused, then shrugged. He tossed the photo back to her. "The car is outside."

Mia took the photo. Her fingers trembled as she touched the image of the birthmark. She tucked it into her sleeve, feeling the sharp edge against her skin.

Thirty minutes later, she walked out of the heavy steel gates. The sun was blinding.

A black Rolls-Royce Phantom was waiting. It wasn't her father's car. It bore the Kensington crest.

The window rolled down. An elderly man with a face like carved granite looked at her.

"Get in," the butler said. He didn't open the door for her.

Mia climbed into the back seat. The door locked automatically. The air conditioning was freezing.

As the car pulled away, heading toward the Hamptons, Mia closed her eyes. She wasn't thinking about the wedding. She was visualizing the anatomy of the cervical spine. She was pulling up the hacked medical files of Lucas Kensington in her mind.

Her hand drifted to the hem of her sleeve. Hidden within the double-stitched fabric, she felt the reassuring hardness of six thin, sharpened silver wires she had painstakingly fashioned from a stolen coil in the prison workshop over the last six months. They were crude compared to her surgical tools, but they would have to suffice.

She wasn't going to a marriage. She was going to war.

As the privacy partition slid up, blocking the driver's view, Mia didn't waste a second. She stripped off the prison-issue sweats. On the seat beside her lay a white dress box Howard had clearly arranged. She pulled out the white silk dress. It was simple, elegant, and felt like a costume. She pulled it on, the silk cool against her skin, zipping it with efficient, steady hands. She smoothed her hair, checking her reflection in the dark window. The convict was gone. The trophy wife remained.

Continue Reading

Other books by Qing Shui

More
Billionaire's Fake Savior: Unmasking The Truth

Billionaire's Fake Savior: Unmasking The Truth

Modern

5.0

I was a disgraced heiress hiding as a dishwasher in a high-end club, scrubbing lipstick off glasses until my fingers went numb. One night, I was forced to deliver a bottle of vintage whiskey to the penthouse, only to find the tech billionaire Kenan Cervantes collapsing from a lethal neural storm. I used my surgeon’s training to save his life, holding him in the dark until his fever finally broke. The next morning, the world I knew shattered. My coworker Tiffany, who hadn't even stepped foot in the room, claimed my identity as the savior. She signed a non-disclosure agreement and walked away with a $200,000 check, while I was accused of stealing the whiskey and had my entire month's wages forfeited as punishment. While Tiffany was flaunting Chanel suits and posting photos from his balcony, I was being shoved into the mud by my abusive foster father in a dark alley. I watched from the shadows as Kenan stepped into his luxury car, looking right through me with nothing but cold distaste. To him, I was just "street trash" cluttering the sidewalk, while the imposter was the "angel" who had stabilized his heart. The injustice felt like a physical weight. I had quieted the noise in his brain and kept him from the brink of death, yet I was the one facing eviction and hunger. I didn't understand how he could be a genius and still be so blind to the truth, rewarding a thief while I rotted in the basement. Everything reached a breaking point when Tiffany forced me to sneak into his penthouse to help her maintain the lie. But Kenan returned from Tokyo early, finding me on the terrace with his military-grade protection dog. The beast that had tried to bite Tiffany was now resting its head in my lap, protecting me from its own master. Kenan dropped his briefcase, his eyes locking onto mine as the fragmented memories of the storm finally clicked into place. "You," he whispered.

Shattered Vows: The Mob Wife's Revenge

Shattered Vows: The Mob Wife's Revenge

Mafia

5.0

My husband was the Don of New York, and for ten years, I was his perfect trophy wife. I designed his buildings, kept his secrets, and stood by his side as the envy of the city. But the moment his mistress marched into my casino with a secret son, my decade of loyalty meant nothing. The boy demanded my grandmother's bracelet—which was dangling from his wrist. When I reached to take back what was mine, Emilio didn't defend me. He shoved me. Hard. I crashed backward into a wall of shattered glass. While I lay bleeding on the marble floor I had hand-picked, losing our unborn child, he didn't even look at me. He was on his knees, wrapping his suit jacket around another woman's son to shield him from the debris. In the hospital, the cruelty only worsened. "It was an accident, Elana. Leo was scared." He dismissed the death of our baby as collateral damage. He had given my family heirloom to his bastard child and chose them over me without hesitation. I realized then that the Omertà—our sacred code of silence—was a lie. He had built a warm, loving shadow family while I was just a useful decoration waiting in a cold mansion. He wanted to bury me in that life forever. So, I decided to give him a funeral. I staged my suicide off the cliffs of the estate, letting the freezing ocean swallow Elana Thomas. Now, everyone thinks the Don's wife is dead. But in Zurich, a new woman named Elena is very much alive, and she’s coming back to burn his empire to the ground.

Second Chance, Deadly Trap

Second Chance, Deadly Trap

Fantasy

5.0

One moment, I was just Sarah, pulling weeds from my tomato patch under the hot Nebraska sun, living the quiet farm life I' d painstakingly built. The next, a chilling wave of memory, raw and horrifying, washed over me – memories of another life, a past I' d lived and died. And with that horrific clarity, I saw him again: Mark, my husband, the man who disappeared seven years ago, now limping up our driveway, playing the pathetic, broken-down prodigal son. My heart didn't leap; it solidified into a cold, hard stone, because I remembered everything he'd done in that other life. I remembered how we' d welcomed him in, how my in-laws had drained their life savings, how I'd sold my mother's last keepsakes, all out of love and misguided pity. I remembered how he' d squandered every penny on his secret city wife and her gambling debts, then, when the money ran out, tried to sell our farm out from under us. I remembered the barn burning, the livestock screaming, the loan sharks he brought to our door, leaving us with nothing but ashes, debt, and the bitter taste of his laughter as he drove away. None of us survived that first time. Now, he was back, with the same tattered clothes and the same practiced look of sorrow, mouthing the same fake emotions: "Sarah, I finally made it home." My blood ran cold with the memory of starving in the winter, of seeing my mother-in-law cry, of the life he had so casually incinerated. I would not let it happen again. This time, I would not be the same naive country wife; I would make sure he walked into a trap of his own making, a trap from which he would never escape.

Digital Detox Survival Challenge

Digital Detox Survival Challenge

Romance

5.0

The last thing I remembered was the cold, not from the biting wind in the remote forest, but the icy grip of utter betrayal. My own family, my sister Ashley, my parents, stood by a luxury RV, watching me. Ashley screamed for the camera, a performance of feigned terror, then shoved me hard, sending me stumbling towards the grim-faced survivalists waiting in the shadows. I later learned, in the brief, hellish time before I died, that the video of my "accident" went viral. Ashley' s follower count exploded, millions celebrating my demise, fueled by my family's lies about my supposed tech addiction and instability. They raked in donations and sponsorship deals, building a life of grotesque luxury upon my very corpse. Then, there was only crushing darkness. Until now. My eyes snapped open to the familiar white ceiling of my bedroom. My heart hammered, a trapped bird, but there were no wounds, no lingering chill of death. Frantically, I grabbed my phone, and the date glowed back, October 12th-the very day they coerced me into the "digital detox survival challenge." I was back. A hysterical laugh bubbled from my throat, a wild, unhinged sound. "You' re finally awake, Ashley has the most wonderful idea," my mother, Brenda, cooed, her voice dripping with fake sweetness. Ashley appeared, phone already rolling, a predatory smile on her face. "Sissy! We need a family trip, a real bonding experience!" They stood there, these soulless monsters who profited from my murder, smiling. Last time, I fought, I pleaded, I was worn down by their emotional blackmail, used for my skills, then discarded. But this time would be different. A slow, chilling smile spread across my face, one that didn't reach my eyes. "That sounds like a fantastic idea," I said, my voice smooth as glass. I would play my part, be the compliant daughter, the sister who had finally seen the light. And then, deep in the wilderness, far from any help, I would make them pay. I would give them the authentic survival content they craved, just not in the way they expected. The hunt was on.

You'll also like

While I Was Bleeding Out, He Lit Lanterns For Her

While I Was Bleeding Out, He Lit Lanterns For Her

Katie Oettgen

As I lay on the floor of our manor, bleeding out from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, I used my last ounce of strength to call my husband, Cole. I begged him for help, my vision blurring. But the only thing I heard was the clinking of champagne glasses and his mistress's giggle in the background. "Stop the drama, June," Cole snapped, his voice cold. "We're about to go on stage. Don't call again." He hung up, leaving me to die alone on the Persian rug while he accepted an award with another woman on his arm. I woke up in the hospital days later. My baby was gone. They had removed my fallopian tube. Cole finally arrived, smelling of expensive scotch and his mistress's perfume. He didn't hug me. He didn't cry. Instead, he leaned over my hospital bed, pressing his knee into the mattress until my fresh stitches tore open and bled. "You embarrassed me by calling an ambulance," he hissed. "My mistress, Alycia, says you're faking it. Clean yourself up." He left me bleeding again to go announce a $10 million donation to Alycia's "groundbreaking" medical research. I stared at the TV screen, numb. The research Alycia was taking credit for? It was mine. I wrote that patent years ago under a pseudonym. They thought I was just a poor, orphan housewife who needed Cole's money to survive. They had no idea I was actually a billionaire scientist hiding my identity. I pulled the IV needle out of my arm. A drop of blood fell onto the divorce papers I had been hiding. I didn't wipe it off. I signed my name right over it. Then I walked into the bank, reactivated my dormant account with $128 million, and bought the penthouse directly overlooking Cole's house. The mourning widow is dead. The avenger is born.

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

Xiao Xiaosu

I went to the City Clerk’s office for a routine copy of my marriage license to finalize a trust fund audit. I expected a simple piece of paper, but the clerk’s pitying look told me my entire life was a lie. "The license was never finalized, Ms. Oliver. In the eyes of the state, you are single." The three-hundred-guest wedding at the Plaza and the Vogue features meant nothing. My husband, Gray Cooley, had intentionally filed the documents with a "procedural defect" so he could discard me without a legal divorce. Moments later, an iCloud invite titled "Our Little Secret" popped up on my screen. It was a photo of my best friend, Brylee, holding a positive pregnancy test at our Hamptons estate. Gray’s text to her was the final blow: "Happy anniversary, babe. This baby is the best gift. Once the trust unlocks today, we’re done with the charade." I soon discovered they were even stealing my career, reassigning my architectural masterpiece to Brylee while preparing my eviction notice. Gray's mother called me a "barren mule" in a leaked recording, mocking the infertility I suffered after saving Gray’s life in a construction accident. I wasn't a wife; I was a three-year placeholder used to secure his inheritance. How could the man I bled for treat me like a disposable prop? How could my best friend carry his child while pretending to comfort me through my darkest moments? The betrayal burned until it turned into a cold, hard stone of fury. I didn't cry. Instead, I walked into the penthouse of the Barretts, the Cooleys' most powerful rivals. I signed a marriage contract with Kane Barrett, the man the tabloids called the "Beast of Wall Street." "I want a wedding," I told his father, my voice steady and lethal. "Bigger than the one I had with Gray." If they wanted me gone, they would have to watch me become the woman who owns their world.

The Blind Billionaire's Hidden Genius Wife

The Blind Billionaire's Hidden Genius Wife

Xi Yue

My father didn’t look at me like a daughter; he looked at me like a bad loan he needed to settle. After five years of being nothing but a monthly expense on his ledger, I was shoved back into the Quinn mansion, smelling the expensive lavender that masked the rot beneath the floorboards. He slammed a prenuptial agreement onto the mahogany table and gave me a heartless ultimatum. "Sign it and marry Harrison Sterling, or I call the care facility in ten minutes and tell them to pull the plug on your mother's life support." My stepmother Lydia told me I should be grateful for this "future," while my stepsister Tiffany kicked a bag with her old, hideous wedding dress at my feet. They told me I was born for nothing but to pay off their debts. I was shipped off in the rain to the Sterling estate, a stone fortress where the housekeeper treated me like a servant and locked me in a pitch-black room. Inside, my new husband—a man rumored to be a blind, unstable monster—hurled a crystal glass at my head and tried to strangle me with his bare hands. I could feel the tremors in his grip and the sickly-sweet smell of neurotoxins on his breath. I realized then that Harrison wasn't the master of this house; he was a specimen in a jar, being systematically poisoned by his own family while cameras watched his every move. My own father had sold me into a death trap, thinking I was just a desperate girl with nowhere else to go. But they didn't know I had been living a double life as a medical prodigy who graduated from Johns Hopkins at nineteen. I pinned my "monster" husband to the floor, pulled a set of silver acupuncture needles from the hem of my dress, and made him a deal. "I’ll give you your eyes back, and in exchange, you help me burn both our families to the ground."

Abandoned Ex-Wife: Now Untouchable

Abandoned Ex-Wife: Now Untouchable

Tao Yaoyao

My five-year-old daughter was dying in the ICU, her heartbeat replaced by the continuous, electronic scream of a flatline. I gripped her cold hand, my throat sealed shut by a terror so absolute I couldn't even cry out. I dialed my husband Grayson's private number, the one reserved only for me and his assistants. He declined the call instantly. A second later, a text buzzed against my palm: "In a meeting. Do not disturb. Stop calling." Five miles away, Grayson was at a luxury gala, adjusting his silk tie and laughing with Belle Escobar. He told her I was just being "dramatic" and using our daughter's "fever" as an excuse to avoid the event. He had no idea Effie's heart had already stopped. When I finally reached our penthouse, soaked from the rain and carrying Effie's small socks in a plastic bag, Grayson didn't even look at me. He snapped at me for ruining the hardwood floors and asked if I'd left Effie with the nanny just to "feel sorry for myself." Three days later, while I buried our daughter in a small, lonely ceremony, Grayson was at the Hamptons. Belle posted a photo of him golfing with the caption: "A mental health day with the boys." He didn't even attend the funeral, but he returned home demanding I clear out Effie's room to make a study for Belle's son. The injustice burned through me until there was nothing left. I swallowed a handful of sleeping pills, desperate to join my daughter. But instead of the darkness, I woke up to blinding lights and the scent of Grayson's expensive cologne. I was standing in a ballroom, wearing a blue silk dress I had already burned. Above me, a banner read: "Happy 5th Birthday Kaiden & Effie." I was back, exactly one year before the tragedy. This time, I wasn't going to be the grieving wife. I was going to be their worst nightmare.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband Qing Shui Modern
“I sat in the gray, airless room of the New York State Department of Corrections, my knuckles white as the Warden delivered the news. "Parole denied." My father, Howard Sterling, had forged new evidence of financial crimes to keep me behind bars. He walked into the room, smelling of expensive cologne, and tossed a black folder onto the steel table. It was a marriage contract for Lucas Kensington, a billionaire currently lying in a vegetative state in the ICU. "Sign it. You walk out today." I laughed at the idea of being sold to a "corpse" until Howard slid a grainy photo toward me. It showed a toddler with a crescent-moon birthmark-the son Howard told me had died in an incubator five years ago. He smiled and told me the boy's safety depended entirely on my cooperation. I was thrust into the Kensington estate, where the family treated me like a "drowned rat." They dressed me in mothball-scented rags and mocked my status, unaware that I was monitoring their every move. I watched the cousin, Julian, openly waiting for Lucas to die to inherit the empire, while the doctors prepared to sign the death certificate. I didn't understand why my father would lie about my son's death for years, or what kind of monsters would use a child as a bargaining chip. The injustice of it burned in my chest as I realized I was just a pawn in a game of old money and blood. As the monitors began to flatline and the family started to celebrate their inheritance, I locked the door and reached into the hem of my dress. I pulled out the sharpened silver wires I'd fashioned in the prison workshop. They thought they bought a submissive convict, but they actually invited "The Saint"-the world's most dangerous underground surgeon-into their home. "Wake up, Lucas. You owe me a life." I wasn't there to be a bride; I was there to wake the dead and burn their empire to the ground.”
1

Chapter 1 1

06/01/2026

2

Chapter 2 2

06/01/2026

3

Chapter 3 3

06/01/2026

4

Chapter 4 4

06/01/2026

5

Chapter 5 5

06/01/2026

6

Chapter 6 6

06/01/2026

7

Chapter 7 7

06/01/2026

8

Chapter 8 8

06/01/2026

9

Chapter 9 9

06/01/2026

10

Chapter 10 10

06/01/2026

11

Chapter 11 11

06/01/2026

12

Chapter 12 12

06/01/2026

13

Chapter 13 13

06/01/2026

14

Chapter 14 14

06/01/2026

15

Chapter 15 15

06/01/2026

16

Chapter 16 16

06/01/2026

17

Chapter 17 17

06/01/2026

18

Chapter 18 18

06/01/2026

19

Chapter 19 19

06/01/2026

20

Chapter 20 20

06/01/2026

21

Chapter 21 21

06/01/2026

22

Chapter 22 22

06/01/2026

23

Chapter 23 23

06/01/2026

24

Chapter 24 24

06/01/2026

25

Chapter 25 25

06/01/2026

26

Chapter 26 26

06/01/2026

27

Chapter 27 27

06/01/2026

28

Chapter 28 28

06/01/2026

29

Chapter 29 29

06/01/2026

30

Chapter 30 30

06/01/2026

31

Chapter 31 31

06/01/2026

32

Chapter 32 32

06/01/2026

33

Chapter 33 33

06/01/2026

34

Chapter 34 34

06/01/2026

35

Chapter 35 35

06/01/2026

36

Chapter 36 36

06/01/2026

37

Chapter 37 37

06/01/2026

38

Chapter 38 38

06/01/2026

39

Chapter 39 39

06/01/2026

40

Chapter 40 40

06/01/2026