
My Groom Kept Me Blind to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 1
Light. It wasn't just a concept to me anymore; it was a piercing, brilliant reality.
"Blink slowly, Kendra," Dr. Elena Rodriguez murmured, her skilled hands gently pulling the final layer of gauze from my face.
I blinked. The blurry, sterile white of the private clinic sharpened into crisp, undeniable lines. For ten years, my world had been a canvas of absolute black, defined only by the tap of my cane and the terrifying, repressed echoes of the Los Angeles warehouse where I was taken at fifteen. But now, at twenty-four, just days before my wedding, the darkness was gone.
Dr. Rodriguez guided a hand mirror into my trembling fingers. I stared at the stranger looking back at me. Pale skin, a delicate jaw, and eyes—striking, piercing eyes that belonged to the mother I could barely remember. The classified cornea transplant was a complete success.
"Perfect," Dr. Rodriguez whispered, an approving smile touching her lips.
I traced my cheekbone, my chest tightening with a giddy, desperate warmth. I wasn't going to tell him. Not yet. I would walk down the aisle on my twenty-fifth birthday, look into the eyes of Bentley King—the wealthy heir who had rescued me, sheltered me, and loved my broken pieces—and finally see the man I was giving my life to.
The King family estate was a sprawling labyrinth I had navigated by touch for a decade. Returning early that afternoon, I walked its arched, mahogany-paneled halls without my cane, my footsteps swallowed by the plush Persian runners. The visual opulence of the mansion was staggering, far colder and sharper than I had imagined in my mind's eye.
I approached the double doors of Bentley’s private study, eager to hear the familiar, comforting cadence of his voice. The heavy oak door was slightly ajar, spilling a slice of golden light into the dim corridor. I reached out to push it open, but a sound froze the blood in my veins.
A wet, breathless sigh. A woman’s throaty laugh.
I pressed my eye to the crack. My knuckles immediately turned bone-white against the doorframe.
Bentley—my savior, my fiancé—stood by his massive mahogany desk. He was devastatingly handsome, his tailored suit perfectly pressed, but his hands were buried in the dark hair of a woman I didn't recognize by sight. But the voice, I knew instantly. Adelina Foster. The so-called "family friend."
"You're cutting it dangerously close, Ben," Adelina purred, tracing the lapel of his jacket with a manicured nail. "Three days until you marry the charity case. Tell me again why we have to wait."
Bentley caught her hand, kissing her knuckles with a fierce reverence he had never once shown me. "Patience, Lina. The blind mouse has served her purpose perfectly. For ten years, every enemy of the King empire thought she was my weakness. They aimed all their fire at her, and they missed you."
A phantom hand wrapped around my throat, choking the oxygen from my lungs. A decoy. I was nothing but a human shield.
"And her trust funds?" Adelina pressed, her eyes gleaming with calculated greed.
"Almost completely drained," Bentley sneered, a cruel, arrogant smirk twisting his perfect features. "By the time the ink dries on the marriage certificate, the last of her accounts will be funneled into our offshore holdings. She won't see a thing. She never does."
He pulled her in for a bruising, passionate kiss. I didn't gasp. I didn't scream. I stood perfectly still, a ghost haunting my own life, as ten years of profound gratitude curdled into a toxic, burning ash in the pit of my stomach.
Three days later, the cathedral smelled of white roses and suffocating pity.
I stood at the altar in a custom silk gown that felt more like a burial shroud, staring blankly ahead. I had to maintain the facade. I had to pretend I was still his blind, helpless ward, even as the stained-glass light fractured across my vision. Hundreds of New York’s elite sat in the pews behind me, their hushed whispers buzzing against the back of my neck.
The organ music swelled, signaling the groom’s arrival. But the footsteps echoing down the marble aisle were entirely wrong. They lacked the sharp, confident click of Bentley’s Italian leather shoes. These were heavy. Scuffling.
A man stopped beside me. I kept my eyes deliberately unfocused, staring dead ahead, but in my periphery, I saw the cheap polyester suit of Bentley’s low-level chauffeur, Greg.
A sharp squeal of microphone feedback suddenly pierced the vaulted ceilings.
"Testing," Greg muttered, his awkward voice booming through the massive cathedral. He cleared his throat, pulling a crumpled piece of paper from his pocket. "Mr. King sends his regrets. He has, quote, 'found someone more worthy of the King name.' At this exact moment, he is exchanging vows with Miss Adelina Foster aboard his private yacht in the Mediterranean."
Silence slammed into the room like a physical blow. Then, the laughter started.
It began as a ripple in the front pews—Victoria King, Bentley's mother, hiding a vicious smirk behind her gloved hand. The ripple quickly swelled into a tidal wave of mocking chuckles and cruel, overlapping whispers.
"Left the blind girl at the altar."
"Did she really think a King would marry a charity case?"
"What a pathetic little pet."
The chauffeur dropped the microphone. It hit the marble floor with a deafening crack. I stood completely alone beneath the towering crucifix, the heat of a thousand staring eyes burning my skin. My hands trembled, catching the heavy silk of my skirt. I wasn't just broken; I was utterly, publicly annihilated. And as the laughter echoed around me, the sheer force of the trauma shattered a dam in my mind, and dormant, terrifying memories from a life I had forgotten began to flicker behind my newly restored eyes.
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