
PART 2
“This isn’t my car,” she whispered.
Chapter 1

PART 2
“This isn’t my car,” she whispered.
“No,” he said.
His voice was low, calm, almost gentle.
“It isn’t.”
Bianca shot upright so fast her neck cracked.
“Oh my God.” Her hand flew to the door handle. “Oh my God, I’m so sorry. I thought—my app said black SUV, south entrance, and I worked a double, and I didn’t—oh my God.”
“It’s all right.”
“It is absolutely not all right.” Heat flooded her face. “I’m leaving. I’m so sorry. I’m going. I’m so sorry.”
The door opened. Cold air slapped her awake.
She stumbled out onto the sidewalk, almost tripped over her own bag, and ran.
Actually ran.
Three blocks. Then four.
Her cheap sneakers slapped wet pavement. Her coat flapped open. Her lungs burned. At a red light on Lexington, she stopped beside a brick wall, pressed her palm to the rough surface, and started laughing.
Not because anything was funny.
Because she was exhausted. Because
she had just climbed into a stranger’s luxury SUV and fallen asleep beside a man who looked like he owned half of Manhattan. Because she would never, ever have to see him again.
“Get it together, Bianca,” she muttered, tipping her face toward the washed-clean sky.
Three blocks behind her, Tristan Bellamy remained in the back of the SUV, staring at the empty space she had left.
The leather beside him still held the faint shape of her body. The air still carried amber and cedar, but now something else lingered beneath it.
Hospital soap.
Rainwater.
A sharp, clean sweetness that did not belong to his world.
Caught in the seam of the seat was one dark strand of hair.
Tristan picked it up between his fingers.
He did not know why he did not let it go.
“Sir?” the driver asked carefully. “Home?”
Tristan was still looking at the
door through which she had vanished.
After a moment, he closed his hand around the strand of hair, not tightly, just enough to keep it from being lost.
“Drive,” he said.
And somewhere inside him, quietly and without permission, something began.
Three days later, Bianca had almost convinced herself the whole thing had been a stress dream.
Almost.
It came back at the worst moments. While tying her sneakers. While waiting for the microwave in the break room. While reaching for a chart at the nurses’ station.
Dark eyes.
A low voice.
No. It isn’t.
Then she would shake it off and return to work because she had patients, and patients did not care about humiliating encounters with handsome strangers in expensive cars.
On Thursday morning, Room 412 had a new admit.
Eleanor Bellamy, sixty-eight. Post-op hip fracture. No allergies. Family contact: son.
Bianca skimmed the chart as she pushed
the door open with her shoulder, arms full of fresh linens.
“Good morning, Mrs. Bellamy.”
The woman in the bed lifted one hand with the elegance of someone who had spent her life making even weakness look intentional. Her silver hair was pinned back with a tortoiseshell clip. Her eyes were the color of warm honey.
“Please, dear. If you call me Mrs. Bellamy, I’ll look around for my mother-in-law, and trust me, neither of us wants that. Eleanor will do.”
Bianca laughed before she could stop herself.
“Eleanor, then. I’m Bianca. I’ll be with you this shift.”
“Bianca.” Eleanor tested the name and smiled. “Lovely. I do like a nurse with a pretty name. Makes the bad news easier to hear.”
“No bad news today.”
“We’ll see. My son is coming. That alone is questionable.”
Bianca was adjusting the pillow beneath Eleanor’s shoulder when the door opened behind her.
“Good morning,” Bianca said automatically. “I’ll be right with—”
She turned.
And stopped breathing.
The man from the SUV stood in the doorway.
Not in the dark blue suit now, but a charcoal one, no tie, a wool coat folded over his arm. For half a second, before he mastered it, his face showed the same shock she felt.
Recognition.
Then the smallest private laugh touched his eyes and disappeared.
“Tristan,” Eleanor said, oblivious. “Darling, come in. Don’t hover. This is Bianca. She’ll be taking excellent care of me.”
He stepped inside slowly.
“Bianca,” he said.
Her name sounded different in his mouth. Not casual. Not possessive. Careful.
Her professional self arrived like a lifeboat.
“Mr. Bellamy.” She adjusted her badge and reached for the IV line though she had already checked it twice. “Welcome. Your mother was just telling me about you.”
“Was she?” His eyes flicked to Eleanor. “Should I be worried?”
“Was she?” His eyes flicked toward Eleanor. “Should I be worried?”
“Deeply,” Eleanor said dryly. “Sit down before you loom yourself into a lawsuit.”
Bianca kept her attention fixed on the IV line with almost supernatural discipline.
Professional. Calm. Unaffected.
It would have worked better if her pulse were not climbing into dangerous territory.
Tristan Bellamy moved farther into the room, and somehow the air shifted with him. He carried no obvious arrogance, no theatrical display of wealth, yet everything about him suggested control. The expensive watch beneath his cuff. The polished shoes untouched by Manhattan weather. The quiet confidence of a man accustomed to being listened to.
And now he was looking directly at her.
Again.
“Well,” Eleanor said, studying them both with alarming interest, “this feels oddly tense for nine in the morning. Have you two met before?”
Bianca nearly dropped the chart.
“No.”
“Yes.”
They spoke at the same time.
A slow smile spread across Eleanor’s face.
“Oh, excellent.”
Bianca cleared her throat. “It was not a real meeting.”
Tristan’s mouth twitched faintly.
“She fell asleep in my car.”
Silence.
Then Eleanor burst into laughter so sudden she had to hold her side.
“Oh, Tristan,” she wheezed, “finally. A woman immune to your face.”
Heat rushed into Bianca’s cheeks.
“It was an accident,” she said quickly. “I thought it was my rideshare.”
“And instead,” Eleanor said, wiping tears from the corners of her eyes, “you accidentally kidnapped yourself into a billionaire’s SUV. Darling, this is the most entertaining thing that has happened since they removed my left hip.”
“Mother.”
“Oh, don’t Mother me. You’ve looked bored for six years.”
Bianca bit the inside of her cheek hard enough to hurt.
She absolutely could not laugh.
Unfortunately, Tristan noticed.
His eyes darkened slightly with amusement.
“Are you enjoying this, Bianca?” he asked.
“No, Mr. Bellamy.”
“Tristan,” Eleanor corrected immediately. “Anyone who’s napped beside him gets first-name privileges.”
Bianca escaped the room ten minutes later under the excuse of checking medication orders.
The moment the door closed behind her, she leaned against the wall.
“Oh my God,” she whispered.
“You look pale,” another nurse observed while passing by.
“I accidentally slept beside a billionaire earlier this week.”
The nurse blinked.
“…You know what? I’m too tired to unpack that.”
By noon, Bianca had regained enough composure to function normally.
Mostly.
Eleanor Bellamy turned out to be charming, demanding, hilarious, and impossible not to like. She flirted shamelessly with every doctor under forty-five, criticized the hospital coffee like a professional food critic, and insisted Bianca sit for exactly thirty seconds every hour because “nurses collapse dramatically and ruin everyone’s schedule.”
Tristan remained in and out of the room throughout the day.
Phone calls. Emails. Quiet conversations in the hallway.
But every time Bianca entered, she became aware of him instantly.
Not because he spoke.
Because he watched.
Not in a predatory way.
Not even flirtatiously.
Just attentively.
As if she were a puzzle he had not solved.
Late that afternoon, Bianca adjusted Eleanor’s blanket while the older woman pretended not to observe her son observing the nurse.
“Bianca,” Eleanor said casually, “are you seeing anyone?”
“Mama,” Tristan said at once.
“What?” Eleanor looked innocent. “I’m recovering from surgery. I deserve entertainment.”
Bianca fought a smile.
“No,” she answered. “I’m not seeing anyone.”
“Why not?”
“Because I work eighty hours a week.”
“A terrible reason. Tristan works constantly and still finds time to disappoint women.”
“Mother.”
“This one lasted longer than the blonde architect,” Eleanor continued to Bianca confidentially. “That was promising.”
“I’m still here,” Tristan reminded her.
“Yes, unfortunately.”
Bianca laughed before she could stop herself.
The sound changed something.
Tristan looked at her differently afterward.
More openly.
And for reasons she did not understand, that was far more dangerous.
Three days passed.
Then five.
Bianca learned Eleanor preferred tea over coffee, hated daytime television, and secretly slipped extra pudding cups to another patient down the hall because “hospital food is an act of war.”
She also learned Tristan Bellamy arrived every evening at precisely seven-thirty.
Always carrying fresh flowers.
Always asking detailed questions about his mother’s recovery.
Always thanking the staff by name.
That last part unsettled Bianca more than it should have.
Rich men in Manhattan often treated hospital workers like furniture.
Tristan never did.
On Tuesday night, Bianca exited Room 412 balancing charts against her chest when she nearly collided with him in the hallway.
Strong hands caught her elbows before the papers could fall.
The contact lasted less than two seconds.
Long enough.
“You should sleep more,” he said quietly.
Bianca blinked.
“What?”
“The shadows under your eyes are worse than last week.”
She stared at him.
No one noticed things like that.
Not usually.
“I’m fine.”
“You nearly walked into a wall five minutes ago.”
“That was one time.”
“Twice,” he corrected.
Her mouth opened.
Then closed.
The corner of his mouth lifted.
“You’ve been counting?”
“You’ve been noticing?” he returned.
The silence stretched.
Something warm and unsettling moved low in Bianca’s chest.
A pager beeped down the hall, shattering the moment.
She stepped back immediately.
“I should get back to work.”
“Bianca.”
She looked up.
“For what it’s worth,” he said softly, “I’m glad you got into the wrong car.”
Her breath caught.
Then she turned and walked away before he could see what those words did to her.
Two weeks later, Eleanor was discharged.
The entire nursing floor seemed genuinely sad to see her leave.
“You’ve all been wonderful,” Eleanor announced grandly while Tristan gathered her things. “If any of you quit medicine, call me. I know excellent lawyers and one very unethical interior designer.”
“Please don’t recruit hospital staff,” Tristan said.
“No promises.”
Bianca finished reviewing discharge instructions while trying not to think about how strangely empty the hallway would feel after today.
Ridiculous.
She barely knew them.
When everything was finally signed, Eleanor reached for Bianca’s hand.
“You took care of me beautifully,” she said warmly. “Thank you.”
“It was my job.”
“No,” Eleanor replied. “It was your character.”
Bianca swallowed unexpectedly hard.
Then Eleanor leaned closer.
“And for the record, dear, my son hasn’t looked alive in years.”
“Mother.”
“Oh, hush.”
Bianca glanced toward Tristan automatically.
Big mistake.
He was already looking at her.
The room suddenly felt too small.
Eleanor squeezed Bianca’s hand once before allowing Tristan to wheel her toward the door.
At the threshold, he paused.
“Bianca.”
“Yes?”
“I’d like to take you to dinner.”
Direct.
No games.
No performance.
Just certainty.
Bianca’s heart stumbled.
“I don’t think that’s appropriate.”
“Because I’m my mother’s son?”
“Yes.”
“What if I wait until she’s no longer your patient?”
“She’s being discharged right now.”
“Convenient timing, then.”
Eleanor looked delighted.
Bianca exhaled slowly.
Every sensible instinct told her no.
Men like Tristan Bellamy existed in a different universe. One with penthouses and private drivers and wine that cost more than her monthly rent.
Meanwhile, Bianca shared a Queens apartment with a teacher and a law student and considered laundry a major life event.
This ended badly in every version.
Still.
She remembered the way he thanked janitors.
The way he sat beside his mother’s bed long after she fell asleep.
The way he noticed when Bianca looked tired.
Dangerous details.
“Dinner,” she said carefully. “One dinner.”
His expression changed very slightly.
Relief.
Real relief.
“You make that sound like a hostage negotiation.”
“I’m a nurse. I like clear exit strategies.”
For the first time since she met him, Tristan laughed openly.
The sound hit her like unexpected sunlight.
And somewhere deep inside herself, Bianca realized she was already in trouble.
Dinner happened four nights later.
Bianca almost canceled twice.
The restaurant alone was intimidating enough to trigger a medical episode.
Soft gold lighting.
White tablecloths.
A pianist somewhere in the background.
The kind of place where nobody looked at prices because everyone could afford not to.
Bianca stood outside in a dark green dress borrowed from her roommate Sofia and seriously considered fleeing.
Then the restaurant door opened.
Tristan stepped out.
No suit tonight.
Dark sweater. Black coat. Wind catching slightly in his hair.
And the moment he saw her, he stopped walking.
Completely.
Bianca suddenly became very aware of her heartbeat.
“You came,” he said.
“You sound surprised.”
“I’ve spent the last twenty minutes assuming you’d realized this was a terrible idea.”
“It probably is.”
His eyes held hers.
“Yes,” he said quietly. “Probably.”
Neither of them moved for a second.
Then he offered his arm.
Inside, dinner should have been awkward.
Instead, it was easy.
Dangerously easy.
They talked about medicine and architecture and New York winters.
About the bakery Bianca loved in Queens.
About Tristan growing up surrounded by people who cared more about the Bellamy name than the Bellamy family.
About exhaustion.
Pressure.
Loneliness.
The strange cost of competence.
“You hide being tired well,” Bianca observed.
Tristan swirled amber liquid in his glass.
“I learned early that powerful men are allowed anger, ambition, confidence.”
“And exhaustion?”
“They smell weakness.”
Something about the way he said it made her chest tighten.
“And what do you smell?” she asked softly.
His gaze lifted slowly to hers.
“Honesty,” he answered.
The pianist shifted into a slower melody.
Outside the windows, Manhattan glittered in cold silver light.
For the first time in months, maybe years, Bianca forgot to check the time.
By eleven-thirty, snow had begun falling.
Small white flakes drifted across the streetlights.
“Come on,” Tristan said.
“Where?”
“You’ll see.”
“This sounds like the beginning of a true crime documentary.”
“You already got into my car once.”
“That was exhaustion, not trust.”
His smile flashed briefly.
Still, she followed him.
The SUV waiting at the curb was the same one.
Bianca stopped beside it.
“Oh no.”
“What?”
“This is the car.”
“Yes.”
“You kept the same car after my humiliation?”
“I considered burning it for your dignity.”
“Thank you. Very thoughtful.”
He opened the door for her.
This time, Bianca got in awake.
The city rolled past in silver and gold streaks while soft jazz played quietly through hidden speakers.
Neither spoke much.
The silence wasn’t uncomfortable.
That frightened her more than anything.
Eventually the SUV stopped downtown near the river.
“Why are we here?” Bianca asked.
Tristan stepped out first, then offered her his hand.
Cold air rushed around them.
The waterfront was nearly empty.
Snow dusted the pavement.
Across the dark water, Manhattan blazed with light.
“My father used to bring me here,” Tristan said.
Bianca looked at him in surprise.
He rarely volunteered personal things.
“He said the city looked honest at night. During the day everyone performs.”
“And at night?”
“People get tired.”
The wind moved through her hair.
Tristan stood beside her with his hands in his coat pockets, staring across the river.
For a long moment, neither spoke.
Then Bianca said quietly, “Why me?”
His eyes shifted to her.
“You don’t impress easily,” he answered.
“That’s your reason?”
“No.”
Snow gathered lightly on the shoulders of his dark coat.
“When you woke up in that car,” he said, “you weren’t trying to get something from me. You were embarrassed for inconveniencing a stranger.”
Bianca looked away.
“That’s a very low standard for attraction.”
“You’d be surprised.”
Something vulnerable flickered briefly across his face.
Gone almost immediately.
But she saw it.
And suddenly she understood.
Men like Tristan Bellamy spent their lives surrounded by people who wanted access.
Money.
Influence.
Advantage.
For one accidental moment in the back of an SUV, she had looked at him and seen only a man.
Nothing else.
The realization settled softly between them.
Then Tristan’s phone rang.
His expression changed the moment he saw the screen.
Sharp.
Controlled.
He answered immediately.
“Yes?”
Bianca watched his face grow colder with every passing second.
“What do you mean leaked?” he said.
Silence.
“No. Don’t release a statement yet.”
Another pause.
Then:
“Find out who has it.”
He ended the call.
The warmth of the evening vanished.
“Tristan?”
He stared out at the river.
“There’s a problem at my company.”
The words sounded simple.
His expression did not.
“What kind of problem?”
For the first time since she met him, hesitation crossed his face.
Then distant sirens echoed through the snow.
And across the street, a black sedan slowly pulled to the curb.
Bianca noticed Tristan notice it.
His entire body went still.
“Tristan?”
Very quietly, he said, “Get back in the car.”
The sedan doors opened.
Two men stepped out.
Not rushing.
Not speaking.
But purposeful.
Bianca’s stomach tightened instantly.
Snow drifted silently between them.
Tristan’s voice remained calm.
Too calm.
“Bianca,” he said without taking his eyes off the approaching men, “listen to me carefully. Get in the SUV, lock the doors, and do not come out unless I tell you to.”
Fear finally arrived.
Cold and sharp.
“What’s happening?”
One of the men called out from across the street.
“Mr. Bellamy.”
Tristan’s jaw tightened.
The man smiled without warmth.
“We need to talk.”
And suddenly Bianca realized the billionaire she accidentally met in the back of a luxury SUV might be far more dangerous than she ever imagined.
To be continued, Part 3 here: PART 3
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