Chapter 1

827 Words
Hazel Moore had scared off 107 blind dates in her lifetime. She smoked. She drank. And she sat across from them, casually recounting her nights picking up male escorts at clubs, watching their expressions curdle in real time. She was a fire that refused to die, burning through every cage her father tried to lock her in. Then she met Christian Blake. A prodigy who'd claimed medicine's highest honor by twenty, he was nothing like the men her father usually dragged in. Their first meeting was anything but proper. Fresh off an illegal race, still reeking of motor oil, Hazel picked up her father's call, his usual theatrics, threatening to kill himself if she didn't show. "Last chance! Screw this up, and I'm cutting you off for good!" "I'd rather die than live with this shame at my age." The 108th attempt. She was long past caring. Hazel shoved open the private room door and found him standing by the floor-to-ceiling window, immaculate in a tailored suit. She smirked, strode over, and slammed her mud-caked gloves onto the coffee table. "Let's get one thing straight," she announced. "I drink like a fish, smoke like a chimney, and hire male escorts for fun. We—" She braced for him to bolt, like the 107 before him. "I don't mind," Christian interrupted calmly. "If it makes you happy." He rose, nodded to his assistant, who poured steaming coffee and slid it toward her. "This'll do you good," he said. "You're always up late practicing. My grandfather's favorite herbal blend." For a moment, Hazel froze. Everyone called her worthless. Shameless. The Moore family's disgrace. Only this man saw what actually lit her up inside. She didn't believe anyone could truly accept her, not all the wildness, not all the defiance. So after they married, she pushed harder. Relentlessly. She got blackout drunk at a bar, started a fight, and tore the place apart. When Christian showed up at 3 a.m., his face held no anger. He simply told his assistant, "Take care of it." Then he carried her, drunk and disheveled, to the car, drove her home, and gently cleaned her up and changed her clothes. By morning, the bar's damages were settled, and her name hadn't touched a single news report. One night, during an illegal street race, she lost control and slammed her sports car into a guardrail. The front end was obliterated. Christian pulled her, bloodied, from the wreck seconds before it exploded. Then he operated on her himself to save her life. When she woke, he sat by her bed, his face as calm as ever. "Next time you want to race," he said quietly, "take me with you." Christian tolerated everything from Hazel. By anyone's measure, he was the perfect husband. But to Hazel, wild, untamed Hazel, he was too controlled. Too steady. No matter what she did, he never lost his temper. Never showed a c***k. And yet, that steadiness chipped away at her defenses, bit by bit. She told herself it was just his nature, cold outside, warm inside, until the day everything shifted. A girl covered in blood was rushed to the hospital. For the first time, Christian's eyes reddened. His hands, steady through eighteen consecutive surgeries, trembled too badly to hold a scalpel. A colleague had to finish. Afterward, Christian sat on a bench in silence. Hazel noticed his unease. Tried joking to get his attention. He didn't even look at her. Head down, fists clenched, lost somewhere she couldn't reach. Hazel had no idea what was happening. She decided to get him food, at least to make sure he ate. But when she returned, he was gone. She chased after him. His car tore through the streets before stopping in a suburban alley. From the shadows, Hazel watched: Christian, eyes bloodshot, using those surgeon's hands to throw punches at a gang of thugs. One punch after another. Outnumbered, he took hits but never backed down. Only when police sirens wailed did the crowd scatter. The pale girl from the hospital came running. She flung herself into his arms, and he held her like instinct. The tenderness in Christian's eyes, Hazel had never seen anything like it. "Why didn't you tell me you were back?" The girl pressed against his chest, her voice cracking. "Christian, you're married now. You belong to someone else. I didn't know how to reach you." Without a word, he kissed her. The winter night shattered into splinters of ice, each one finding its way into Hazel's chest. The man she loved now crushed another woman against him. Hazel wanted to storm over. Stopped herself. She felt like the intruder. But her love had always demanded purity. Untamed and defiant, she'd never needed a man to survive. She played hard, but she walked away harder. Watching coldly, she pulled out her phone and dialed her lawyer. "Draw up divorce papers," she said, her voice flat. "Now."
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD