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The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon

Chapter 6 

Word Count: 624    |    Released on: 21/04/2026

. She knew Mercer. He could disar

t in t

ed to go to t

home,"

boss

I open this door w

or. The partition was down. Abraha

s," Abraham said.

am stared straight ahead.

in Queens, she felt a flush of shame. It was a stark

m asked. He looked at t

at I can

orror, the car door d

am go

looked like a god descending into the underworl

up," she said, bl

ed, his eyes scanning the derelict

You'll hav

ing her to step back into the entry

ing you, Abraham. Standing here, in this neighbo

that she saw through the a

e a low growl that echoed

live like a rat when you have a check f

re it

rite ano

shouted. The sound boun

backing her against

e growled. "You want me to

nothing

door right next to her head. "You came back

as a mi

s i

se. She could

," she said. The l

froze.

d, forcing her voice to be steady. "For when I find a real h

The fire in them ext

that wasn't armored. His

ck. He adjust

ce was ice. "Well. I'm gl

d and wa

n't lo

he SUV's engine roar to life

oxes until she hit the floor. She bu

hone

ed at the screen. It was th

ssage from u

t its clauses are written in blood. Refus

the message. H

ck, her fing

being sold is the soul. Then th

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The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon
The Surgeon's Debt: Bound To The Tycoon
“For three years, I served as Abraham Crane's "Surgeon"-the secret fixer who managed his agonizing spinal injury and the even messier fallout of his billionaire empire. I thought the intimacy we shared behind closed doors meant I was the exception to his coldness, but I was just another line item in his ledger. The morning after a frantic night together, Abraham didn't offer a confession of love. Instead, he handed me a manila envelope containing a deed to a penthouse and a blank check. It was a severance package, a cold transaction to buy my silence and end our three-year arrangement. When I walked away and refused his money, the retaliation was swift and brutal. He sent his men to dump my meager belongings in a grimy hotel hallway, intentionally crushing the only photo of my dying mother under an expensive leather shoe. Even after I saved his life during a near-fatal medical crisis that very night, he mocked me, slurring that I had only returned to scavenge for the check. The nightmare escalated when he realized I was truly trying to leave. To force me back, he revoked the funding for my mother's nursing home, leaving her facing immediate eviction. He wasn't just obsessed; he was desperate. He needed a scapegoat for a federal investigation into his illegal drug supply, and he wanted me to be the one to hold the bag. I stood in his study, looking at a marriage contract that was actually a legal death sentence. His original fiancée had fled in horror after realizing the "wife" would assume all criminal liability for his crimes. Abraham sat in his wheelchair, looking at me like a predator who had finally caught its prey, using my mother's life as the ultimate leverage. He thinks he's bought himself a shield. He thinks I'm signing my life away just to keep my mother safe. He doesn't realize that by making me his wife, he's giving me full access to the encrypted records and offshore accounts that can incinerate his entire legacy. I reached for the pen, my heart turning into cold, hard stone. This wasn't a wedding; it was a declaration of war. I looked him dead in the eye and asked, "Where do I sign?"”