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I Traded Eight Nights for His Father’s Fortune Novel Cover

I Traded Eight Nights for His Father’s Fortune

To fund her brother’s life-saving surgery, Elena enters a high-stakes pact with a distant billionaire. The deal requires her to spend eight nights with the icy tycoon, but she soon uncovers a shocking link: her benefactor is the estranged son of the man who destroyed her family. Amidst rising tension and buried secrets, Elena is forced to navigate corporate malice and long-held grudges to protect her brother and secure a future for herself.
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Chapter 1

The paramedics didn't rush.

That was the first thing I noticed. They moved through the master suite with the unhurried efficiency of people who already knew the outcome, and one of them — young, with tired eyes — glanced at me in the hallway and gave a small, apologetic shake of his head.

I nodded. Pressed my thumbnail into my palm.

Matthias Carroll was dead.

I stood there in my silk robe, the one he'd picked out, and waited for something to move inside me. Grief. Relief. Anything with a name. What came instead was a kind of cold, crystalline clarity — the same feeling I used to get right before a difficult exam, when everything narrows down to what you know and what you need to do next.

What I needed to do was call Mount Sinai.

I walked to the far end of the hallway, away from the noise, and dialed Dr. Holt's direct line. He picked up on the second ring.

'Ms. Webb.' His voice was careful. 'I heard about Mr. Carroll. I'm sorry for your loss.'

'How is she?' I said.

A pause. 'Her creatinine levels are up again. We've moved the transplant timeline forward. The deposit deadline is in ten days, Florence. I need you to understand — ten days.'

I understood. I'd understood for two years.

'I'll have it,' I said, and hung up before he could say anything else.

The brokerage account was the plan. It had always been the plan — Matthias had told me himself, in that flat, transactional way he had of discussing money, that the portfolio was mine upon his death. Eight figures. Enough to cover the transplant, the aftercare, everything. Enough to finally stop counting.

I sat down at Matthias's desk that same night and pulled up the account portal.

Eight-digit passcode required.

I tried his birthday. His mother's birthday. The year Carroll Capital was founded. The address of his first office.

Locked. Locked. Locked. Locked.

I stared at the screen until the numbers blurred.

Then I remembered what his attorney had mentioned once, offhandedly, at a dinner I wasn't supposed to be paying attention to: Matthias had given the passcode to Castiel. His son. His real heir, in every way that mattered.

I closed the laptop.

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm until I felt steady.

Then I went to find Castiel Carroll.

---

He was already at the penthouse when I came downstairs the next morning — standing at the floor-to-ceiling windows with a coffee cup, looking out at the Manhattan skyline like he owned it, which, I supposed, he now largely did. He was tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in a dark suit at seven in the morning. He didn't turn around when I walked in.

'Florence,' he said. Just my name. Like a period at the end of a sentence.

I had met Castiel Carroll exactly four times before this. At the wedding, where he'd stood in the back row with an expression I couldn't read. At two Carroll Foundation events, where he'd been polite in the way that costs nothing. And once in this very penthouse, when Matthias had called us both into his study for reasons I never fully understood, and Castiel had looked at me for exactly three seconds before looking away.

He was thirty. Eight years older than me. His face was all clean angles and controlled stillness, the kind of face that gave nothing away on purpose.

I had prepared what I was going to say. I said it — calmly, logically, laying out the situation with the same precision I used to use on financial aid applications. My grandmother. The transplant. The timeline. The account. The passcode.

He listened without moving.

Then he said, 'No.'

Just that.

I tried again the next day. I cooked dinner — actually cooked, standing in the penthouse kitchen for two hours making the kind of meal that said I am reasonable and I am trying and surely we can work something out. He stood in the doorway and watched me plate it. He ate three bites. He said, 'No,' and left the table.

I tried logical arguments. I tried appealing to his sense of family obligation. I tried reminding him that Matthias had explicitly told me the portfolio was mine.

Every time: 'No.' Flat. Quiet. Final.

So I pivoted.

The jewelry alone was worth close to two million. The artwork more. I started making calls — Christie's, Sotheby's, three private dealers I found through contacts of Matthias's. Within seventy-two hours, every single one of them had declined. A gallery assistant on the Upper East Side, young enough to be careless, let it slip while showing me the door: 'We can't touch anything Carroll-adjacent right now. Word came down from the top.'

I stood on the sidewalk outside the gallery in the November cold and felt the last door close.

He had anticipated every move. He had sealed every exit before I even found them.

I took the subway to Midtown. I had never taken the subway to Carroll Capital before — I'd always arrived in the town car, as Matthias's wife, announced and expected. Today I walked through the lobby in a coat that was starting to fray at the cuffs and told the receptionist I was here to see Castiel Carroll.

She looked at me the way people look at someone they've been told to expect.

He kept me waiting twenty minutes. Then his assistant showed me in.

The office was all glass and dark wood, forty floors up, the city spread out below like a circuit board. Castiel was behind his desk, jacket on, not a single thing out of place. He looked up when I walked in and said nothing.

I had planned to stay calm. I had planned to be strategic.

Instead I heard myself say, 'You blocked every auction house in Manhattan. You blacklisted my jewelry. You've been one step ahead of me since the day he died, and I want to know why.'

He set down his pen.

'She's on dialysis,' I said, and my voice cracked on the last word, which I hated. 'She is sixty-seven years old and she is running out of time and you are sitting here playing games with her life like it's a—'

'Florence.'

His voice was quiet. That was the thing about Castiel Carroll — he never raised it. He didn't need to. The room just got smaller when he spoke.

He stood up. Came around the desk. Stopped a few feet away and looked at me with that unreadable expression I'd been trying to decode for two years.

'I'll give you the passcode,' he said.

I exhaled.

'One digit at a time,' he continued. 'One digit per night. Eight nights, eight digits.' He paused. 'You stay with me. That's the arrangement.'

The room went very still.

I stared at him. I searched his face for something — a smirk, a tell, any sign that this was a bluff I could call. There was nothing. Just those dark, steady eyes watching me work through it.

'You're serious,' I said.

He didn't answer. He didn't need to.

Ten days. Dr. Holt's voice in my ear. Her creatinine levels are up again.

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm. Felt the small, familiar sting. Held it.

'Fine,' I said.

The word tasted like ash. But I said it, and it was done, and Castiel Carroll looked at me for one long moment before he turned back to his desk.

'Tonight,' he said. 'My car will be downstairs at eight.'

I walked out of his office, through the lobby, back into the cold. I didn't let myself feel anything until I was on the street, and then I only let myself feel it for thirty seconds — the humiliation, the fury, the particular helplessness of a trap that has no floor.

Thirty seconds. Then I pressed my thumbnail into my palm one more time, and I started counting.

Eight nights.

I could survive eight nights.

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