[BL] Bound to My Enemy: The Billionaire Who Took My Girl-Chapter 192: Invitation (A puppet)
NICK
My assumption was simple: this was either more soul-crushing paperwork, a PR cleanup from some resident’s botched bedside manner, or the usual hospital optics nonsense that required my face to be present so everyone else could feel important.
My eyes scanned the room with the professional habit of a surgeon assessing a trauma bay. I read the power dynamics before the door even clicked shut behind me.
This was not normal.
Seated around the polished mahogany table were the heavy hitters.
Dr. Marianne Voss, the Chief of Surgery, looking as sharp and unforgiving as a scalpel. Gregory Walsh, the Hospital Director, who looked like he’d been born in a suit. Amanda Chen, the Head of Public Relations, already had her tablet out.
There was a legal liaison I recognized as Mark, a quiet, observing shark, and two senior attendings, including Raymond Carmichael, who looked like he’d swallowed something bitter.
They were all already seated. They were all waiting for me.
My eyes landed on the single folder resting on the table. It was clean, white, and had my name printed on the tab in a font that felt entirely too permanent. Dr. Nicholas Bennett. It looked less like a file and more like an indictment.
"Dr. Bennett, please, sit," Walsh said, gesturing to the only empty chair.
It was positioned at the head of the table. A deliberate, ceremonial placement that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
I sat smoothly, leaning back just enough to appear relaxed, while internally, every sense I possessed was screaming on high alert.
The atmosphere was formal, almost reverent, which in hospital politics usually meant I was about to be sold something expensive.
"First, we want to thank you for making time, Nicholas," Walsh began, looking around the table for consensus. "We know your schedule is demanding."
"Of course," I said, offering the polite, shallow smile that served as my armor. I waited.
Marianne Voss took over, her voice steady. "What you did that day—the intervention with the Governor’s wife—was nothing short of extraordinary."
She began a recitation of my "heroics." She spoke about the emergency, the quick thinking, the "surgical precision under extreme pressure."
She praised my judgment as if she hadn’t been the one questioning my bypass technique six months ago.
"A credit to this institution," Walsh added. "An exemplary representation of our values. The kind of excellence we strive for at this hospital."
I noted the framing. It was sanitized. It was about the "institution." It was about the "values." It was never really about me, it was about the brand I currently represented.
I felt the familiar itch of irritation. Get to the fucking point, I thought. Tell me what the price tag is.
Walsh slid the folder across the table. It glided over the polished wood like a puck on ice. "We have something we’d like to discuss."
I looked at the folder. I didn’t open it immediately. I let it sit there, forcing them to wait, exerting the only bit of control I had in a room full of people who technically owned my time. Then, I pulled it toward me and flipped it open.
The paper was heavy, cream-colored, embossed, and expensive.
DINNER IN HONOR OF MEDICAL EXCELLENCE
In recognition of Dr. Nicholas Bennett’s life-saving intervention.
Hosted by the Office of the Governor in partnership with the Hospital’s Principal Stakeholders.
I scanned the details. One week from today. 7:00 PM. The Metropolitan Club. Black tie. "Media presence anticipated." And then the line that made my stomach turn: Attendance is requested. In the language of the board, "requested" meant "compulsory."
I kept reading, my eyes moving to the bottom of the invitation where the sponsors were listed. My breath caught in my throat, a delayed recognition that felt like a physical blow.
The Wolfe Family.
They were listed first. Principal Stakeholder and Patron.
Everything shifted. The tone of the meeting, the excessive praise, the presence of the COO, it all made sense now.
The Wolfes didn’t just donate; they owned fifty percent of this hospital. They controlled the board. Walsh didn’t work for the hospital; he worked for them.
I knew the names. Preston Wolfe, the older one, the face of the dynasty. And Cassian Wolfe, the younger one, the one who had recently returned from a mysterious disappearance that the papers had picked up and then mysteriously dropped.
I’d never met them, but in these circles, their power was the air we breathed.
This wasn’t a dinner. It was a stakeholder optics maneuver. I wasn’t being honored; I was being positioned.
"The Wolfe family will be in attendance," Walsh said, his tone careful, his eyes searching my face for a reaction. "Along with several other prominent figures."
"This is a significant opportunity," Amanda Chen added, her PR brain already churning. "For you, Nicholas, and for the hospital. It’s a chance to reinforce the trust the public has in our care."
The legal liaison, Mark, leaned forward. "We want to ensure everything goes smoothly. No surprises."
The unspoken message was deafening: Behave. Don’t embarrass the Wolfes. Don’t embarrass us. You are a symbol now, Nicholas. Act like one.
I kept my expression pleasant, a mask of professional gratitude.
Internally, the arrogance I usually used to protect myself was being crowded out by a cold realization.
I was being paraded like a prize dog. They wanted a clean face, a good headline, and a controllable narrative to present to their masters.
A part of me, the part my father had raised, felt a sickening jolt of ego satisfaction. The Wolfes had noticed me. The most powerful family in the city wanted me at their table.
I matter, that voice whispered. They see my value.
But beneath that was a sharp, biting unease. Wolfe money never came for free. It came with strings that could turn into a noose if you weren’t careful. I was being used, and I knew I wouldn’t say no. I couldn’t say no.
"Any questions from the media should be redirected to hospital PR," Mark said firmly. "No exceptions."
"Of course," I replied, nodding. "I understand."
I’m a puppet, I thought. And I’m agreeing to the strings.
"You’re welcome to bring guests," Walsh said, his voice taking on a generous, fatherly quality. "Up to two. Family, if you’d like. We think the family optics would be particularly strong."
The implication hit me like a bucket of ice water. They wanted the perfect family. The perfect doctor son with his perfect parents.
My father would love this. He would live for this. He would take one look at the Wolfe name on that invitation and lose his mind.
The performance would extend beyond the hospital walls and right into my own family dinner.
"Thank you," I said, my voice tight. "I’ll let you know."
Walsh stood up, signaling the end of the meeting. "We’re very proud of you, Nicholas." He used my first name, a possessive, familiar touch that made my skin crawl.
The handshakes followed. One by one, they filed out. Voss gave me a firm, approving nod. Chen flashed a bright, artificial smile. Carmichael shook my hand with a grip that was entirely too tight, his eyes burning with envy. They got what they came for: my compliance.
Finally, the room was empty.
I sat there for a long moment, the heavy silence of the conference room pressing in on me.
I let out my first real breath since walking in, my shoulders sagging as the mask slipped, just an inch.
I rubbed my face with both hands, feeling the grit of the day behind my eyelids.
I looked at the invitation again. The Wolfe Family. This was going to drag my family into a spotlight that was already too hot.
It would invite scrutiny I wasn’t ready for. My mother would worry about the thread count of her dress and whether her smile was "prestigious" enough.
And my father...
He would make this about himself. He would use the Wolfe connection to bolster his own standing amongst his fellow lawyers, to secure his own legacy in the legal system.
He would take ownership of my achievement as if he’d been the one holding the scalpel.
I pulled out my phone. My thumb hovered over the screen. I dreaded the conversation, but I knew if he heard it from anyone else first, the fallout would be catastrophic.
To: Dad
Got invited to a dinner with the Governor. Hospital PR thing.
I hit send. I regretted it instantly.
The response was immediate. The three dots appeared before I’d even locked the screen. He was waiting. He was always waiting for a reason to claim a win.
Excellent news! the reply came. When is it? Your mother and I will attend. This is a significant opportunity. We need to discuss appropriate attire. And talking points. Call me tonight.
He wasn’t asking. He was telling. He was already framing the evening, already taking ownership. There was no "I’m proud of you," no "How are you feeling?" Just strategic planning. Just the cold, hard mechanics of appearance.
I locked the phone and set it face down on the table. It sat there next to the folder, two objects that felt like the bars of a cage.
One week. Seven days until I had to stand in a tuxedo and pretend I was a hero for the Wolfes and a "good son" for the man who saw me as an investment. No cracks. No mistakes. Just a perfect, five-hour performance.
I felt the hatred rising again, a dark, oily tide. I hated them for using me. I hated my father for his parasitic pride. And I hated myself for sitting here, carrying this folder like a death sentence, and knowing I would do exactly what was expected of me.
I stood up slowly, picking up the folder. The conference room was dark now, the city lights beginning to reflect in the windows. I walked out into the empty hallway, the sound of my footsteps echoing against the linoleum.
One week. And my life was about to get even smaller. Even more controlled. Even less mine.
I walked toward the elevators, the mask already sliding back into place as a nurse passed me in the hall.
"Goodnight, Dr. Bennett," she said.
"Goodnight," I replied, the smile perfect and empty.







