The Private Nurse Who Found The Assassin Inside His Hospital Room-tessa

Kaylee Johnson took the private-duty contract because the number on the email made her hands stop shaking for the first time in months.

Triple pay meant three student loan payments, two late rent notices erased, and maybe one week where she did not stare at her grocery cart like every apple was a luxury.

The agency told her the patient was high priority, post-surgical, and assigned to the fourth floor of Kensington Private Institute, a wing most employees called the ghost wing because nobody admitted it existed until they were already inside it.

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Kaylee signed the nondisclosure agreement without reading every page.

That was the first thing she regretted.

The second was smiling politely when Mrs. Gable, the head matron, warned her not to speak to the family, not to make eye contact with the men in the hall, and not to ask why a recovering patient needed bulletproof glass behind his curtains.

Room 404 looked less like a hospital room than a rich man’s panic room with an oxygen line.

The patient lay under crisp white sheets, pale and still, with black hair swept back from a sharp face and heavy bandaging around his ribs.

The chart said hunting accident.

Kaylee had spent four years in trauma care, and she knew the clean geometry of a bullet wound.

Alessandro Romano, called Sandro by the guards and never by the staff, woke only in flashes during the first two days.

His eyes opened, tracked her hands, and closed again.

He spoke once, when she adjusted his IV and apologized for the sting.

“You have kind hands,” he murmured.

Kaylee told herself not to remember that.

On the third afternoon, Stefano Romano arrived with a cane that sounded like a judge’s gavel against the polished floor.

He was Sandro’s father, though the word father seemed too soft for a man whose guards stopped breathing when he entered.

He looked at his son with worry hidden under contempt and told him careless men did not lead.

Sandro rasped that he had been set up.

Stefano asked by whom.

“Someone talks,” Sandro said, eyes still closed.

Stefano left after giving Kaylee one flat warning: if his son was in pain, she would fix it.

That night, pain found him before she did.

The scream tore through the ghost wing just after the storm began.

Kaylee ran so fast her badge hit her throat, and the hallway guards reached the door behind her.

Sandro was arching off the mattress, both hands clawing at the back of his neck, breath breaking in short, animal sounds.

The monitor showed a pulse that climbed and climbed.

Kaylee called his name, checked his pupils, looked at the IV, and saw nothing that explained the terror.

“The pillow,” he choked.

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