Chapter 7

Hayes let out a sharp, mocking laugh.

He unlocked his bottom desk drawer and pulled out a plain manila envelope.

He tossed it onto the desk.

"Open it."

Ana reached out, her fingers trembling slightly.

She dumped the contents onto the wood.

A stack of glossy photographs and a printed dossier slid out.

The top photo showed the man from last night, wearing the dark trench coat, walking into the hospital.

"Read the name on the dossier," Hayes commanded.

Ana's eyes scanned the black ink.

Her gaze locked onto the bold letters at the top.

Auguste Raymond.

The name hit her brain like a freight train.

Flashes of the recent inauguration ceremony broadcasted on every TV screen in America flooded her mind.

Her hands started to shake violently.

The photograph slipped from her fingers and fluttered to the floor.

Hayes leaned over the desk, his face inches from hers.

"Yes, Ana. You just spent the night with the President of the United States."

Ana felt the blood drain from her face.

Her stomach he heave, and she clamped a hand over her mouth.

She remembered standing in the clinic, telling the most powerful man in the free world that his prostate was failing.

"Oh my god," she groaned, her legs giving out as she collapsed into a chair. "I'm going to lose my license. They're going to send me to Guantanamo."

"And the boy," Hayes continued, his voice dripping with cruel satisfaction, "is Leo Raymond. The First Son."

Cold sweat broke out across Ana's back.

She remembered the boy calling her Mommy.

She remembered the men with guns. They weren't mafia thugs. They were the Secret Service.

She jumped up and started pacing the small office, her breathing shallow and rapid.

Hayes watched her panic, a calculated gleam in his eye.

He walked over and handed her a paper cup of water.

"Calm down. You didn't offend him. You saved his son. You are a hero to the First Family."

Ana took a sip, her teeth chattering against the rim of the cup.

"I don't care. I just want to be a urologist. I want nothing to do with the White House."

Hayes's expression darkened.

"Don't be stupid, Ana. You have a golden ticket."

He stepped closer, lowering his voice.

"Think about your mother's nursing home bills. Think about your three hundred thousand dollars in student debt."

Ana stopped pacing.

The mention of her mother felt like a knife twisting in her ribs. It was her deepest, most painful vulnerability.

"The boy is attached to you," Hayes whispered, his tone hypnotic. "Use that. Get close to the President. You'll never have to worry about money again."

Ana looked at her mentor, a cold prickle of suspicion running down her spine.

"Why do you care so much if I get close to him?"

Hayes pushed his glasses up his nose again.

"Because the department needs funding. If you have the President's ear, we can secure massive federal grants."

It sounded plausible, but the intense hunger in his eyes made Ana's stomach turn.

Before she could answer, a violent pounding shook the office door.

Alistair Cromwell's panicked voice echoed from the hallway.

"Hayes! Open the door!"

Chapter 8

Hayes swiftly swept the photos and the dossier back into the envelope, shoved it into the drawer, and locked it.

He unlocked the door.

Cromwell burst into the room.

The hospital CEO was sweating profusely, his expensive silk tie pulled loose.

He grabbed Ana by the upper arm, his fingers digging into her flesh.

"They're here."

Ana tried to yank her arm away, wincing in pain. "Who is here?"

Cromwell swallowed hard, his eyes wide with fear.

"The White House motorcade. They are parked at the loading dock."

Ana gasped.

Her mind instantly jumped to the worst conclusion. The President had sent his men to arrest her for knowing too much.

"The Oval Office sent direct orders," Cromwell panted. "You are to report to the White House immediately."

Ana backed away, hitting the edge of the desk.

"No. I'm not going."

Hayes stepped up beside her. He gripped her shoulder, his fingers pressing hard into her collarbone.

He leaned close to her ear.

"If you refuse, you bring the wrath of the federal government down on this hospital. And when the board gets angry, budgets get reassessed. I'd hate to see your mother's 'non-essential' experimental treatments cut from the financial aid program to appease them. Do you understand me, Ana?"

Ana bit her lower lip so hard it bled.

The metallic taste of defeat filled her mouth.

She was trapped under the crushing weight of power and poverty.

Cromwell practically dragged her out of the office.

They rushed down the sterile, fluorescent-lit service corridors to the back of the hospital.

Ana pushed through the heavy metal exit doors.

Three massive, black, bulletproof Chevrolet Suburbans idled in the dark alleyway.

Agents in dark suits and sunglasses stood by the vehicles, creating an impenetrable perimeter.

Ana recognized the lead agent standing by the middle SUV.

It was the same man who had pointed a gun at her head in the ER.

He pulled open the heavy rear door of the Suburban and gestured for her to get in.

Ana looked back over her shoulder.

Hayes stood in the doorway, giving her a slow, encouraging nod.

She took a deep breath, her chest tight with dread, and climbed into the back seat.

The door slammed shut behind her, sealing her inside.

The interior of the SUV was pitch black.

Sitting across from her was a woman with sharp features and cold eyes.

"I'm Agent C. J. Stone," she said.

The motorcade accelerated smoothly, merging into the D. C. traffic.

C. J. handed Ana a thick stack of papers.

"Sign this Non-Disclosure Agreement."

Ana squinted in the dark. "I can't read this. I need to see what I'm signing."

C. J. leaned forward, her voice devoid of warmth.

"If you don't sign it right now, this vehicle will reroute to an FBI interrogation facility."

Ana's hands shook as she took the pen and scribbled her name on the last page.

C. J. snatched the papers back.

She pulled out a metal detector wand and ran it aggressively over Ana's body, followed by a harsh, invasive pat-down.

Ana's cheeks burned with humiliation, but she kept her mouth shut.

She looked out the tinted window.

The illuminated obelisk of the Washington Monument flashed by.

The motorcade turned onto Pennsylvania Avenue.

The imposing white columns of the White House loomed in the night.

The gates opened, and the vehicles pulled up to the West Wing.

Ana's heart hammered against her ribs.

Chapter 9

Ana followed C. J. Stone down the thick, navy-blue carpet of the West Wing hallway.

Staffers in suits rushed past them, clutching folders.

No one looked at her.

It was a silent, terrifying ecosystem of absolute discretion.

C. J. stopped in front of a solid mahogany door.

A Marine guard in full dress uniform stood at attention.

He opened the door.

C. J. gestured for Ana to walk in alone.

Ana took a shaky breath and stepped over the threshold.

She was standing in the Oval Office.

The iconic Resolute Desk sat in the center of the room.

Auguste was standing by the bulletproof windows, staring out at the Rose Garden.

He had discarded his suit jacket. The sleeves of his crisp white shirt were rolled up to his forearms, revealing thick, corded muscles.

Hearing her footsteps, he turned around.

His gaze hit her with the force of a physical blow.

Ana instinctively took a half-step backward.

Her face burned as she remembered her behavior in the clinic.

"Mr. President," she stammered, her voice trembling. "I... I want to apologize for my conduct at the hospital."

Auguste raised a hand, cutting her off.

"I don't care about your apologies."

He walked over to his desk and pressed a button on his intercom.

"Status?" he asked.

A voice crackled back. "He's still refusing to eat, sir. He's throwing things."

Auguste released the button and looked at Ana, his eyes dark and exhausted.

"Do you know how to manipulate a child into eating?"

Ana felt a spark of professional indignation cut through her fear.

"I don't manipulate my patients. I provide care and comfort."

Auguste let out a harsh, cynical scoff.

He walked around the desk, closing the distance between them.

"I don't care about your methods. I need results. Make him stop crying and make him eat."

Ana remembered Hayes's words. You have a golden ticket.

She had been dragged here like a prisoner, stripped of her dignity and threatened with her mother's life. Panic had been squeezing her lungs for hours. But as she looked at the most powerful man in the world demanding her help with that arrogant, entitled tone, the fear suddenly burned away, replaced by a desperate, reckless clarity. He needed her. She was the only one who could calm his son. She had absolutely nothing left to lose, and for the first time tonight, she held the only weapon that mattered.

She forced her spine straight and met the President's intimidating stare.

"And if I do, what do I get in return?"

A flicker of genuine surprise crossed Auguste's face.

He clearly hadn't expected a hospital doctor to extort the President in the Oval Office.

He slipped his hands into his trouser pockets, his posture lazy but dangerous.

"How much hush money do you want?"

Ana bit her lip, tasting blood again.

She named a figure. An astronomical sum that would cover three years of her mother's specialized care.

The room fell silent.

Auguste looked at her like she was a piece of trash on his shoe.

"Done," he said coldly. "But you are on call twenty-four hours a day."

Ana let out a breath of relief.

"However," Auguste continued, his voice dropping an octave. "Your medical duties at the hospital are suspended indefinitely. You are nothing but a nanny now."

Ana's eyes widened in outrage. "You can't do that! I am a trained urologist!"

Auguste stepped into her personal space.

He leaned down, his lips brushing against the shell of her ear.

His breath was hot, smelling of mint and dark coffee.

"Since you are so deeply fascinated by prostates, Dr. West," he whispered, his tone dripping with dark mockery, "do a good job as a nanny before you try to study mine."

Ana's face exploded in heat.

The blush rushed from her collarbones all the way to her hairline.

She was completely paralyzed by the sexual tension and the brutal humiliation.

Auguste stepped back, his face a mask of stone.

He pressed the buzzer on his desk.

"C. J. , get the nanny out of my sight."

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