
Adrian didn’t even spare a single glance at the cityscape as his private jet descended.
He was staring at the platinum band on his left hand. The ring was a custom piece Lilian had designed. It was heavy and ostentatious, just the perfect symbol of the Monroe family’s status.
For three years, even while living in self-imposed exile, he hadn’t taken it off. It served as an important reminder of the life they had convinced him he deserved.
He turned it slowly under the cabin light. He remembered sliding it onto Lilian’s finger, with the stupid belief that he was stepping into a destiny built on love and achievement.
He was Adrian Cole, the youngest surgeon to chair a division at the Metropolitan Medical Group, otherwise known as MMG.
He was the golden boy. She was his golden ticket.
Now, it was just lead.
As the plane settled and the steps got lowered onto the asphalt of the private terminal, Adrian pulled the ring off.
It felt relievingly light.
He walked past the uniformed flight attendant and, without hesitation, dropped the ring into a discarded coffee cup by the exit.
The faint clink was the final sound of Adrian Cole, the husband of the undeserving wife.
A moment later, he stepped out into the familiar air of the city that had once celebrated him, and then brutally discarded him.
He was wearing an impeccably tailored, dark grey suit, a fabric so expensive it worth enough to feed half a thousand people comfortably.
His face was leaner now, sharper, lacking the soft, hopeful edges of the man Lilian had married. His eyes that was once vibrant with the exhausting passion of a dedicated surgeon, were now a ice cold blue—the eyes of an investor, an owner, a predator.
Three years ago, Adrian had been in court, sitting alone. He still remembered the smell of the room—dusty paper and cheap cologne.
The accusations kept raining on him endlessly.
He was charged with gross medical negligence, sabotage, and the wrongful death of a high-profile patient. The Monroes, Lilian’s family, had leveraged their media power to ensure every paper called him a reckless butcher.
But the real wound wasn't the press.
It was never the press.
The real wound was Lilian. He could still see her on the witness stand, tears perfectly placed, delivering the killing blow.
“Adrian always had an overinflated ego,” she’d choked out, dabbing her eyes. “He pushed boundaries. He demanded control. I told him he needed to slow down, but he always thought he was the smartest man in the room. He convinced me that the evidence of equipment failure was real, but I now realize he was manipulating the facts to cover his own error.”
Lies.
All of it was a pack of believable, well-rehearsed lies.
She knew the equipment was faulty. She knew her father had cut corners on maintenance.
But when the scandal threatened the Monroe name, Lilian threw her husband to the wolves without blinking.
He was jailed briefly, then acquitted on technicalities, but the damage was irreversible. His license was revoked. His career was ash. His finances were a horrible mess.
A sleek black Maybach pulled up. A tall, impeccably dressed man in his late forties, Eric, stepped out.
Eric had been Adrian’s first contact three years ago, a sharp-tongued legal strategist who specialized in hostile takeovers.
“Chairman Cole,” Eric greeted him in a low and respectful tone as he proceeded to opening the rear door.
Adrian slid into the plush leather seat. “Eric. Everything is in place?”
“Perfectly,” Eric confirmed, getting in beside him. “The board meeting is scheduled for four o’clock this afternoon. We just sent the announcement to the wire services. It’s going to break precisely when you walk through the door.”
Adrian merely nodded. “And the Monroes? Are they suspecting anything yet?”
Eric let out a dry, cynical chuckle. “They’re panicking over a massive debt restructure, Adrian. Their attention is fixed on the balance sheet, not the ownership ledger. They think they’re fighting off a faceless corporate vulture, which, technically, they are. They have no idea the vulture has a face they once spit on.”
The car pulled onto the freeway. Adrian leaned back, closing his eyes briefly.
The three years had been spent meticulously rebuilding, not a surgical career, but a financial empire.
He had taken his substantial savings, leveraged his high-level contacts who still believed in his intellect, and started ColeTech.
They focused on medical hardware, diagnostics, and now, finally, crazy medical group acquisition.
“How is the Metropolitan Medical Group holding up?” Adrian asked in a clinical voice.
“Rattling apart,” Eric supplied. “Poor management, aging infrastructure, and a reputation they never recovered after… well, after your trial. They’re ripe for the picking. We purchased the majority stake last week. It was surprisingly cheap.”
Adrian watched the city rush by, the high-rise towers standing like cold, sentinels. His jaw tightened as they passed a massive, gleaming glass structure that housed the hospital complex.
It was there—the operating room where he had stood over the dying patient, the courtroom where he had been betrayed, the corridors where he had once been a god.
“Pull over for a moment, Eric.”
The driver slowed and stopped in the bus lane just across the street from the hospital entrance.
Adrian stared at the main building, his eyes narrowed. It was home to the Monroes, his ex-wife, and every single person who had stood by and watched his world burn.
He wasn't just here to own the property; he was here to own the consequences.
“The fact that they thought they destroyed me,” Adrian murmured, his reflection visible in the car window. “They thought they sent me back to the obscurity I came from.”
“They made a costly error, Chairman,” Eric agreed.
Just then, the giant digital screens plastered across the hospital’s facade, typically showing promotional loops for new wings and services, flashed a stark message in bold red lettering: METROPOLITAN MEDICAL GROUP: CEO ANNOUNCEMENT TODAY. URGENT BOARD MEETING CALLED.
A slow, utterly devoid-of-humor smirk touched Adrian’s lips. He finally looked away from the building, tapping the glass.
“Driver, let’s go,” Adrian instructed, leaning forward, the coldness in his voice sharper than any scalpel. “It’s time. It's high time the haunting began.”
Latest Chapter
What’s so urgent?
The morning light in Lily Monroe’s temporary hospital-provided apartment was slightly harsh, cutting across the pristine, impersonal beige walls.She hadn’t even bothered to unpack more than a single suitcase.This place felt exactly like what it was: a holding cell until her family decided where to slot her back into the Echelon City hierarchy.She was sipping coffee, leaning against the counter, when her phone screen lit up with a video call from half a world away.“Betty, you’re up early,” Lily answered, smiling.Betty, her best friend and fellow resident from her time abroad, looked blurry and cheerful on the screen.“Early? It’s past five, but who’s counting? I wanted to catch you before the great Monroe Medical Machine chewed you up and spat you out. How’s the prodigal sister settling in?”Lily sighed, running a hand through her hair.“It’s surreal. Like returning to a house that’s been perfectly preserved in amber, except now there’s a giant, vengeful Adrian Cole shaped hole in
The Price Of Treachery
The voice on the other end of the line was the sound of damnation, and Lilian had accepted the terms. She had said, "I'll do it," but the agreement felt less like a choice and more like sliding down a slick, dark slope she’d already stood too close to.Adrian hadn't just defeated them; he’d exposed them to something far worse than public humiliation. He’d exposed them to those who waited for this moment. A perfect time to strike.A heavily armored, black SUV—nothing flashy really, just some expensive anonymity—picked her up exactly where the voice had told her to wait. A defunct loading dock three miles from MMG. The ride was an eerily silent one, the soundproofed interior making the chaos of the City disappear.She felt like a package being delivered, not a partner being welcomed or going through the introductory phase. For a second, she wondered if she was doing right thing or something. The vehicle stopped inside a massive, windowless warehouse located somewhere near the industr
Humiliation On A Gown
By morning, the news was all over the place. The net was on fire, newspapers, headlines, everything. And it wasn't a humble corporate press release; it was a scorched-earth media campaign orchestrated by ColeTech’s PR team, designed for maximum shock value.The front page of every major financial and local paper screamed the same headline: FALLEN SURGEON RISES: DISGRACED DOCTOR PURCHASES THE HOSPITAL THAT RUINED HIM.The articles didn't mince words. They detailed Adrian Cole’s meteoric rise, the infamous malpractice suit, the subsequent destruction of his medical career, and then the shocking, three-year metamorphosis into the mysterious Chairman Cole, who now owned 51% of the Monroe Medical Group. They painted Adrian as a cold, brilliant titan who returned not just for money, but for a very specific, personal vengeance.The Monroes watched their world crumble at the breakfast table.“This is a catastrophe,” William choked out, throwing the paper down so hard his coffee jumped in th
First Victory, First Blood
What a waste. Sure, the little confrontation from earlier had been quite unsettling, but Adrian was no fook. He could sense how furious and possessive she was being. Adrian needed to remind himself that Lilian was poison, pure and simple.The next day, Adrian took his first decisive step in dismantling the old guard. He called a private meeting with Dr. Garrison Vance, the Head of Procurement and Logistics, the man who had signed off on the faulty equipment that caused the death on Adrian’s table three years ago. Vance had been William Monroe’s golfing partner and had actively testified against Adrian, claiming Adrian had overridden his warnings.Adrian sat across the table from Vance in the private conference room. Vance was sweating profusely. He'd been seeing the news. And if they were legit, and from what he was seeing they were, it meant that his life was over. Literally. Panic clawed at his throat. “Dr. Vance,” Adrian began, cutting straight to the point. “Our audits show
Softness He Didn’t Plan For
Adrian hadn’t anticipated this. He had planned for fear, for pleading, and for corporate warfare. He hadn’t planned for this quiet, wide-eyed gratitude or the gentle way Lily’s voice said his name.He immediately defaulted to his prepared persona. “Dr. Monroe. I apologize. I’m afraid I don’t know who you are referring to. I am Adrian Cole, the new Chairman of ColeTech. You may have mistaken me for someone else.”Lily shook her head, her eyes suddenly glistening with a clarity that said she saw right through the expensive suit and the cold mask. “No. I didn’t. That voice. And those eyes, Adrian. They’re exactly the same. They’re just… colder now.”She took a step closer, and Adrian’s defense mechanisms went into overdrive. He wanted to push her away, to remind her that he was the monster her sister claimed he was. But the look on her face wasn’t judgmental; it was something surprisingly close to pity, mixed with relief.“It’s so good to see you,” she said with all sincerity. Adrian
Lily's Return
The front doors swung open and a young woman walked in, a tender, bright smile on her face. Dr. Lily Monroe wasn't Lilian. As a matter of fact, it felt like they were from two different worlds entirely. Lilian was a definition of perfectionism, order, control, and expensive tailoring designed to convey power. Lily, however, was energy wrapped in a cheap, slightly rumpled trench coat, carrying a backpack and a rolling carry-on bag that looked like it had been dragged through several continents. Her hair, a warm brown color, was currently pulled back into a quick, functional ponytail, and she was grinning like she’d just landed in Disneyland, not a debt-ridden hospital owned by a revenge-driven sociopath.She loved hospitals. Not the money or the politics her family obsessed over, but the actual, pulsing heart of the place. She’d spent the last three years in the humanitarian medicine circuit—tents in Southeast Asia, makeshift clinics in South America—where decisions were fast, re
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