
Bound To The Billionaire's Cruel Contract
Carissa's son was dying in the ICU, and the bone marrow match had just failed.
The billionaire father, Guilford Gates, cornered her with a cruel ultimatum: naturally conceive a "savior sibling" to save their son. But what shocked Carissa more was his family's sudden accusation that she had heartlessly sold her baby to them three years ago.
"You sold your own flesh and blood to us for five million dollars, so your body belongs to the Gates family."
She was dragged into their gilded estate, treated like a filthy, rented womb. Guilford's new fiancée mocked her, the matriarch humiliated her, and Guilford looked at her with pure disgust. When she desperately tried to feed her sick son and accidentally made him vomit, Guilford violently shoved her away and banned her from the room.
Carissa was devastated and entirely confused. She had never seen a single cent of that five million. Driven by a desperate need for the truth, she investigated and uncovered a horrifying reality: her own father and stepmother had secretly trafficked her baby to the billionaire behind her back, leaving her to bear the ultimate blame.
Looking at the bank transfer record bought with her son's life, the last shred of Carissa's vulnerability died.
She signed the conception contract without asking for a single penny. She was going to use the Gates family's immense power to destroy the blood relatives who sold her, and she would survive this hell to take back her son.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 4
The next morning, Carissa sat in a glass-walled conference room on the top floor of a Manhattan skyscraper. The city sprawled below her, gray and indifferent. Guilford's private attorney sat across the table, a thin man in his sixties with a pinched mouth and eyes like cold pebbles.
He slid a thick document across the polished table. "Reproductive Cooperation Agreement." He placed an expensive Montblanc pen next to it.
Carissa opened the folder. She bypassed the medical clauses and flipped straight to the appendix labeled "Historical Debt Settlement."
There it was. A bank transfer record from three years ago. Five million dollars. The receiving account belonged to Isiah Molina. Her father.
Carissa's stomach cramped violently. Acid rose in her throat. Essie hadn't been lying.
"If you sign this new contract," the lawyer said, his voice flat, "the previous five million is forgiven, and you will receive substantial new compensation."
Carissa slammed the folder shut. She didn't touch the pen. "I have personal business to handle first." She stood up and walked out.
She rode the elevator down, her hands shaking so badly she could barely press the lobby button.
An hour later, Carissa walked down a trash-littered street in Queens. She stopped in front of a peeling, rundown townhouse with a sagging porch and dead plants in cracked pots.
She didn't knock. She pulled a spare key from her bag and shoved it into the rusted lock. The door shrieked open.
Inside the cramped, messy living room, Isiah Molina was slouched on a stained sofa, watching a baseball game on an old TV. He was a heavyset man in his late fifties, with a ruddy face, thinning gray hair, and small, mean eyes. Her stepmother Janey sat beside him, a plump woman with bleached blonde hair and dark roots showing, filing her nails with a face mask on.
Isiah jumped at the sound of the door. "What the hell are you doing here? Come to beg for rent money again?"
Carissa didn't speak. She marched forward and threw the crumpled photocopy of the bank transfer directly at his face.
The sharp edge of the paper sliced a tiny cut across Isiah's cheek. He roared, jumping up with his fists clenched. Then his eyes fell on the numbers printed on the paper. He froze.
Janey ripped her face mask off, her eyes wide with panic. She scrambled to grab the paper. "That... that was for an investment!" she stuttered.
Carissa stepped into Isiah's space, her eyes bloodshot. "Did you sell my sick baby to the Gates family for five million dollars?" Her voice came out raw, scraped clean.
Isiah's shock morphed into defensive rage. His face went red. "He was a burden! Selling him to rich people was the best thing for him!"
The sheer audacity turned Carissa's vision red. She swung her arm and slapped Isiah across the face with every ounce of strength she had.
The crack echoed in the small room. Janey shrieked and lunged at Carissa, grabbing a fistful of her dark hair.
Carissa, hardened by years of working double shifts, grabbed Janey by the shoulders and shoved her hard. Janey crashed into the glass coffee table. It shattered.
Isiah grabbed a wooden baseball bat from the corner. He raised it, his face twisted in ugly fury. "I'll break your legs, you ungrateful bitch!"
Carissa didn't flinch. She stepped directly into the swing path. She pointed a finger at her own forehead. "Do it. Kill me. Because if you don't, I'm going to the police, and I will watch you rot in prison for human trafficking."
Isiah's arms trembled. The look in her eyes terrified him. He slowly lowered the bat, spitting on the floor. "You're a monster."
Carissa looked around the room. A room paid for with her son's life. Every ounce of love she'd ever had for this man evaporated.
She picked up a pair of craft scissors from the side table. She grabbed a chunk of her own hair and sliced it off. The dark strands dropped onto the glass-covered rug.
She pulled out her cracked phone. The screen lit up with a photo of Isadore's pale, smiling face. She stared at it for a long moment. The violent tremor in her fingers slowly faded. Her eyes shifted from the wreckage of her past to the cold, undeniable reality of what she had to endure for her son's future. The fire of her vengeance cooled into hardened, unbreakable armor.
"I have no family," Carissa said, her voice dropping to a dead monotone. "If you ever come near me again, I will drag you to hell with me."
She turned and walked out, slamming the rusted door so hard the frame rattled.
Outside, she leaned against the brick wall. She tilted her head back, refusing to let the tears fall. She pulled out her phone and dialed the lawyer's number.
"I'll sign the natural conception agreement," she said, her voice steady.
She hung up. She was going to use the Gates family's power to take back everything that was hers.
You may also like

8.9
I returned to New York for my welcome-home party, expecting a warm embrace from Edwin, my devoted fiancé of twenty years.
Instead, his first words to me were a cold, public warning to stay away from his new girlfriend, Kacy.
He stood in my family's hotel, shielding a girl I had never even met, and painted me as a vicious, jealous bully.
"She is very sensitive, Kaitlyn. Her background is tough. Please, be gentle with her. Don't upset her."
He humiliated me in front of our entire elite circle, allowing them to mock me as the aggressive, discarded ex while he carried her away like a fragile princess.
For twenty years, I had been his loyal shadow, fixing his mistakes and loving him unconditionally.
I couldn't understand how decades of deep devotion could be instantly erased by a few crocodile tears and a manipulative damsel act.
He was absolutely certain I would throw a tantrum, cry, and eventually crawl back to beg for his attention.
But he was wrong.
He didn't know that Everett Rowe, a billionaire tech mogul, had been patiently waiting five years to marry me.
He also didn't know that during my three years abroad, I wasn't just studying art—I became "K.B.", the ruthless Wall Street predator who could swallow his family's empire whole.
I calmly pulled out my phone, ignored the mocking whispers around me, and typed a single message to Everett.
"Yes. I'll marry you."

8.1
Arnetta had been married to a wealthy man for three years, but she had never even seen his face.
After a wild night of drinking, she woke up in a hotel room next to a handsome, ruthless stranger.
He coldly kicked her out, mocking her as just another desperate woman trying to sleep her way to the top.
To her shock, she soon discovered the stranger was Brennan Kirkland—her firm's top-tier client and a legendary Wall Street billionaire.
Hiding her true identity as a corporate spy, she manipulated her way into becoming his executive assistant to steal his data.
During a business dinner, Arnetta received a humiliating text from her absent husband, demanding a divorce and calling her a greedy parasite.
"He is a deadbeat coward who thinks money solves everything," Arnetta spat in anger.
"A man who hides behind lawyers is weak," Brennan agreed coldly.
He had absolutely no idea he was insulting his own actions, nor did he realize the wild, gold-digging wife he despised was sitting right across from him.
The next day, her husband's legal team sent a brutal twenty-million-dollar settlement offer, threatening to ruin her if she didn't take the payoff and disappear.
Staring at the degrading ultimatum, Arnetta's hands shook with blinding rage.
She looked at Brennan, who was busy plotting to destroy his own wife, and a terrifyingly calm smile touched her lips.
She wasn't just going to take the money; she was going to completely destroy him.

7.2
I thought I was just marrying a middle-class commercial pilot who proposed to me in a Brooklyn cemetery to fulfill his grandmother's bizarre dying wish.
But when an arrogant pilot tried to harass me at the airport, my "ordinary" husband suddenly appeared, his eyes like chips of ice.
"Take your hand off my wife."
With that single cold command, he had the airline's top executives groveling and the man practically fired on the spot.
Everyone called him "Mr. Chandler." He handed me an exclusive black Centurion card, claiming it was just a standard "manager's perk." His retired parents, who supposedly ran a small business, visited me wearing Patek Philippe watches. I ignored all the glaring red flags, foolishly believing I had just lucked into a stable, caring marriage after a lifetime of disappointments.
Yet, despite his constant, suffocating generosity, he kept a physical wall between us. After a kiss so desperate and hungry it felt like he had been starving for it his entire life, he violently pushed me away.
"We should take this slow."
I couldn't understand why a man who looked at me with such intense, possessive devotion would treat our marriage like a sterile business deal. Why was he orchestrating every perfect detail of my life while refusing to even share a bed with me?
I had no idea that the man sleeping in the guest room wasn't a pilot at all. He was Harmon Chandler, the ruthless billionaire emperor of the Chandler Group. And he had been secretly monitoring my every move for ten years.

8.3
He laid me on the sheets, climbed over me, caged me with his arms. "Last chance to run," he said, voice low."I need the money," I whispered, feeling so tiny in his arms."You're soaking," he muttered. "Virgin or not, your pussy wants this."I moaned, looking away, couldn't help it,"Eyes on me, sweetheart," he pushed his tip in slowly."Fuck," he groaned. "So tight."He fucked me like he was claiming something. "Come for me," he whispered in my ears, moving faster."Damien," I cried out his name as I came."That's it," he growled. After a long minute he pulled out slowly. "One night," he said again, almost like a reminder....weeks later, I walked through the quiet hall of my school. A massive portrait stared back at me.Damien BlackwoodPrincipal Benefactor and OwnerColumbia University.Same man who'd just taken my virginity for money. My stomach dropped. "Oh fuck... what have I done?"

8.8
My fiancé, Knox, was the man I’d spent ten years building a life with, the one I’d poured my family’s fortune into. But then I found the lockbox. Inside, a photo of him smiling, his arm around a heavily pregnant woman, marked: *To my only wife Deana.*
I’d been looking for a charger in our Boston penthouse closet when I stumbled upon it. The faded Polaroid showed Knox, younger, beaming, with a heavily pregnant stranger. Its timestamp: "Ten years ago"—the exact year I funded his Ivy League PhD.
Flipping the photo, I saw Knox’s familiar handwriting: *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My world crumbled. The man I’d loved had a wife, making me the unwitting mistress. My opulent life was built on his lies.
His text, "Baby, I'm coming home to *our house*," twisted into a cruel joke. My tears froze. A decade of sacrifices, of family alienation—all for a man who used my money and trust—shredded in my mind. The fragile woman in me vanished; my eyes turned cold and clear. I relocked the box, smoothed the rug, and applied crimson lipstick. Practicing a flawless smile, I whispered, "Welcome home, my sweet liar."

9.3
Candice Luna thought her marriage to Julius Hansen was a lifeline to save her father's struggling company.
She didn't know it was a death sentence until Julius coldly slid divorce papers across his mahogany desk.
His true love, Amina Rowe, was nestled in his arms with a triumphant, mocking smile. The "merger" Julius promised had been a brutal, hostile takeover designed to bleed the Luna Group dry from the inside. Bankrupted and utterly broken, Candice's father stepped off the roof of their corporate tower. Meanwhile, Candice was publicly humiliated, stripped of her dignity, and mocked by all of Wall Street as a discarded stepping stone.
She died in a car accident, her final moments consumed by an agonizing, feral scream. She hated herself for letting her blind devotion destroy the father who had always believed in her.
But when Candice opened her eyes to the harsh fluorescent lights of a hospital room, she realized she wasn't dead.
She was twenty-two again. Three years before the wedding. Three years before her father's suicide.
When Julius's assistant walked in holding a bouquet of blue roses to discuss the preliminary merger, he expected a docile, desperate heiress.
Instead, Candice grabbed a glass of water from the nightstand and flung it directly into his smug face.
"Tell Julius Hansen to never, ever send his dogs to my door again."
This time, there would be no engagement. This time, the Hansen family would choke on her family's legacy.