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His Rejected Billionaire Wife

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Blurb

She left on her wedding night with one bag and no goodbye. Five years later, she came back as the only surgeon who could save the man who destroyed her — and she came back better than he ever imagined she could be.He needs her hands to live. She holds every card he once held over her.But the truth about that night is bigger than either of them knew, and saving his life might be the least complicated thing she does.

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Chapter One
Ashford’s Pov "Dr. Ashford, we need you to come back to New York." I almost laughed. I was standing in a hospital corridor in London, still in my scrubs, still with someone else's blood drying on my gloves, and those were the words that found me. We need you to come back to New York. As if I had left something behind there worth returning to. "Who is this?" I asked, even though something in my chest had already gone very still. "My name is Dr. Raymond Hayes. I'm the chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Cole Medical Center." A pause. "We have a patient, Dr. Ashford. A critical one. We've exhausted every option on our end and every name on our referral list leads back to you." I pulled off one glove. Then the other. I dropped them in the waste bin beside me and leaned against the wall. "Send me the file," I said. "I'll look at it." "We already did. Three days ago." I closed my eyes. I had seen it. Of course I had ppp seen it. I had opened it, read exactly four lines, and closed my laptop without touching it again for two days. Then I had opened it again, read the whole thing in one sitting, and spent the rest of that night staring at my ceiling. The patient's name was Adrian Cole. My ex-husband. I did not sleep on the flight to New York. I sat in the window seat with the file open on my lap and I read it again, slowly this time, the way I read every difficult case — without emotion, without personal investment, without anything except the question of what was happening inside a body and what I could do about it. His heart was failing. Specifically, his left ventricle was deteriorating in a way that had resisted every intervention his current team had attempted. The damage was extensive. Without surgery, his team estimated he had six weeks, possibly less. I read that line twice. Six weeks. I am not a sentimental person. I stopped being one a long time ago, and I stopped apologizing for it even longer ago than that. But I sat on that plane somewhere over the Atlantic and I let myself feel it for exactly one minute — the strange, unwanted grief of learning that a person who once gutted you is running out of time. Then I closed the file and ordered coffee, and I did not think about Adrian Cole again until the car pulled up to the hospital. Cole Medical Center was new. Or newer than I remembered — they had rebuilt the east wing, expanded the cardiac unit, put glass everywhere. It looked expensive and intentional. It looked like everything the Cole family built — designed to impress before it did anything else. I checked in at the front desk. I followed the administrator to the fourth floor. I shook Dr. Hayes's hand in the hallway outside the cardiac ICU and I listened while he walked me through what they had tried and why it hadn't worked, and I asked the questions I needed to ask, and none of it felt real until he stopped outside a room and said, "He's been told you were coming. He asked to see you before the preliminary consultation." I looked at the door. "That's not standard," I said. "No," Hayes agreed. "But he was insistent." I had prepared for this moment on the plane. I had told myself it would be simple — he was a patient, I was his surgeon, and everything that existed between us before that was irrelevant. I had rebuilt myself on exactly that kind of discipline. The ability to walk into hard rooms and not flinch. I pushed open the door. He looked smaller than I remembered. That was the first thing. Adrian Cole had always occupied space in a way that made rooms feel arranged around him, but the man in that hospital bed looked like someone who had been quietly losing a fight for a long time. He was thinner. There were shadows under his eyes that had no business being on a man his age. But his eyes were the same. Dark and steady and, right now, fixed entirely on me. I walked to the foot of the bed. I picked up his chart from the hook on the rail. I read through it even though I had already memorized it, because looking at the chart meant I did not have to look at him. "Dr. Ashford," he said. His voice was lower than I remembered. Quieter. "Mr. Cole," I said without looking up. Silence. I finished reviewing the chart. I hung it back on the rail. I looked at him then, because there was nothing left to look at instead, and I made sure my face gave him nothing. "I've reviewed your file thoroughly," I said. "I'll need to run my own imaging before I can confirm a surgical approach, but based on what I've seen, I believe the procedure is viable. I'll have more answers for you after the consultation tomorrow." He nodded slowly. He was watching me the way people watch something they are not sure they have the right to look at. "Lena," he said. It was the first time he had used my name. Not Dr. Ashford. My name. The one he had used exactly the way he was using it now — quietly, like it cost him something. I picked up my bag from the chair. "Get some rest, Mr. Cole," I said. "You'll need it." I was almost at the door when his voice stopped me. "I know you didn't come back for me." A pause. "But there's something you need to know before you go into that surgery. Something about the night you left." I stood with my hand on the door frame. I did not turn around. "Whatever it is," I said, "it's five years too late." "Maybe," he said. "But your life might depend on hearing it anyway."

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