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The Billionaire's Medicine: His Silent Obsession

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 631    |    Released on: 19/01/2026

t loud, but it woke Bella instantly. She had

eat had collected along his receding hairline. He tossed a simple, gray maid's uniform onto the bed. In

he said. It w

ked, scrambling to pull on t

uesti

curtains were drawn, keeping everything in a perpetual twilight. The staff they p

t Wing, the sounds began. A low, guttural roarin

eading up to the double doors. He shoved the si

Hansel said. H

nt me to go in there? He sou

eclusion for months, and he never bothered to look at your file. He knows us. He knows the guards.

ella said, s

ontract, Miss Miller. If you don't go up those stairs, I make a call. Your

. It was a checkmate. She looked at the

she wh

making the teacup dance in its saucer.

run. The roaring grew louder. She could hear words n

were ajar. The smell hit her first-stale w

t. The hinge gave a muffled groan, the

ed had been stripped of its linens. An antiqu

here

pe of tension, muscles coiled tight like steel cables. Scratches marred his skin, self-inflicte

of broken glass. She took a step. A shard

spun

wide. There was no recognition in them, only a raw, animalisti

l blow. He clapped his hands over his ears as

ay shook violently.

und. He grabbed a heavy crystal

ui

ashtray direct

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The Billionaire's Medicine: His Silent Obsession
The Billionaire's Medicine: His Silent Obsession
“My stepmother sold me like a piece of inventory to a man known for breaking people just to plug the financial crater my father left behind. I was delivered to the Morton estate in the middle of a freezing storm, stripped of my phone, and told that if I didn't make myself useful, my senile grandfather would be evicted from his care facility by noon. The master of the house, Adonis Morton IV, was a monster living in a silent mausoleum, driven to the brink of madness by a sensory condition that turned every sound into a physical assault. When I was forced into his suite to serve him, he didn't see a human being; he saw a source of agony. In a fit of animalistic rage, he pinned me to the wall and nearly strangled me to death just for the sound of a shattering teacup. I only survived by using my grandfather's secret herbal blends and pressure-point therapy to force his overactive nervous system into a drugged sleep. But saving him was my greatest mistake. Instead of letting me go, Adonis moved me into a guest suite connected to his own bedroom by a hidden door. He didn't just want me as a servant; he needed me as a human white-noise machine to drown out the demons in his head. The nightmare deepened when he took the promissory note that defined my freedom and tore it into confetti. By destroying the debt, he destroyed my exit strategy. He replaced my maid's uniform with a silver silk dress that clung to my skin but did nothing to hide the dark, ugly bruises his fingers had left on my neck. He branded me as his "primary care associate," a title that was nothing more than a gilded cage. I felt a sickening sense of injustice as he forced me to sign a contract that banned me from contacting other men and required me to sleep wherever he slept. He looked at me with a possessive heat, calling me his "medication" rather than a woman. My family had sold my body, but Adonis Morton was intent on owning my very presence, using my grandfather's medical bills as a leash to keep me within twenty feet of him at all times. Standing in a neglected greenhouse with mud staining my expensive silk, I realized I was no longer a victim waiting for rescue. If I was going to be his medication, I would learn how to be his cure-or his undoing. I began clearing the weeds with a cold, calculated frenzy, determined to turn this prison into my laboratory. He thinks he has trapped a helpless girl, but I am going to pry open the cracks in his stone walls until his entire world comes crashing down.”