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My Groom Kept Me Blind to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover

My Groom Kept Me Blind to Protect His Mistress

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.
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Chapter 2

The laughter of Victoria King scraped against my eardrums like jagged glass. I couldn't breathe. The stained glass above fractured into a kaleidoscope of mocking colors, the sensory overload of my newly restored sight colliding with the sheer, crushing weight of my public humiliation. I spun around, my heel catching the hem of the custom silk gown. The fabric tore—a sharp, violent sound that finally broke my paralysis.

I ran.

Bursting through the heavy oak doors of the cathedral, the brutal reality of New York City hit me. For ten years, the city had been nothing but a symphony of distant horns and rushing wind. Now, it was a terrifying explosion of yellow cabs, towering steel, and gray skies bleeding into a sudden, icy rain. I sprinted down the wet pavement, my bare feet slapping the concrete as I kicked off my restrictive heels.

Every desperate gasp for air tore the locked vault in my mind a little wider. The emotional shockwave was shattering the dam of my repressed trauma.

*Flash.* A silver-haired man with kind eyes handing me a wooden puzzle, his deep voice calling me his little bird.

*Flash.* Three teenage boys, their shoulders squared, standing like a fortress between me and a snarling dog.

*Flash.* A heavy platinum ring pressing into my small palm, engraved with a twisting wind—the crest of a storm.

My lungs burned like they were filled with acid. I collapsed against the rough brick of a narrow alleyway, the rain pasting the ruined, muddy remnants of my wedding dress to my shivering skin. I slid down to the wet asphalt, pulling my knees to my chest. The world was too bright, too loud, too unspeakably cruel.

Then, the guttural roar of heavy engines swallowed the sound of the rain.

Tires screeched. Blinding white LED headlights trapped me against the brick. Three massive, matte-black SUVs formed an impenetrable wall across the alley's exit. My pulse hammered violently against my ribs. I pressed myself flat against the wall, bracing for Bentley’s men to drag the "charity case" back for more entertainment.

The doors swung open in unison. Three men stepped into the downpour. They moved with a synchronized, predatory grace, their dark, impeccably tailored suits absorbing the dim alley light.

The tallest one walked forward. He didn't rush, but the air around him seemed to crackle, bending to his sheer gravity. His jaw was a sharp line of tension, but his eyes—dark, intense, and painfully familiar—locked onto mine with a devastating softness.

He stopped three feet away, ignoring the rain ruining his suit. He knelt slowly, his movements deliberate, unthreatening.

"Kendra," he said. His voice was a low, resonant rumble that bypassed my ears and vibrated directly in my chest. "Kendra Evangeline Peterson."

My breath hitched. Nobody knew that middle name. Bentley only knew me as Kendra.

"Who..." My voice cracked, raw and pathetic.

The man behind him, possessing warm, analytical eyes, stepped closer, his fingers automatically adjusting a silver cufflink. "We’ve been looking for you for a decade, little sister," Abner said, his voice thick with a restrained, heavy emotion.

The third, younger with a ghost of a reassuring smile, nodded. "You're safe now," Miller added softly.

The man kneeling before me reached out, his hand hovering inches from my trembling shoulder. "I am Darius," he murmured, his gaze sweeping over my torn dress, his jaw tightening imperceptibly at the sight of my bare, scraped feet. "We are your brothers. And we are taking you home."

I couldn't fight. The sheer exhaustion anchored my bones to the pavement. Darius slipped his suit jacket off, draping the heavy, silk-lined wool over my shivering shoulders. It smelled of cedar, rain, and an intoxicating, dark power. He guided me into the cavernous, heated back seat of the lead SUV.

The leather was buttery soft. The tinted windows instantly muted the chaotic city. Darius sat beside me, leaving a respectful distance, though his posture remained rigidly protective.

"Bentley..." I choked out the name, the betrayal reigniting the fire in my throat. "He left me. He used me as a decoy for his real girlfriend."

Darius’s knuckles turned bone-white where they rested on his knee. A dangerous, lethal shadow crossed his face before he smoothed it away into a mask of terrifying calm. "Bentley King is a dead man walking," Darius stated. It wasn't a threat; it was an absolute fact. "But he is no longer your concern."

I clutched his jacket tighter, staring at my dirty hands. "I have nothing. He drained my trust funds. I'm just a blind charity case—"

"Look at me, Kendra."

The command was soft but undeniable. I turned my head. My newly functioning eyes traced the platinum signet ring on his finger—the twisting wind. The crest from my memory.

"You are not blind," Darius said, his gaze dropping to my eyes, a flicker of profound awe breaking his stoic facade. "And you are certainly no one's charity. Your grandfather is Russell Peterson. You are the sole blood heiress to The Zephyr Syndicate."

The name hit me like a physical shockwave. Zephyr. The global conglomerate that owned half the city's skyline and controlled the ruthless shadows beneath it.

"The trust funds Bentley stole were pennies," Darius continued, his voice steadying my erratic heartbeat. "Pocket change from a fake identity we couldn't track. Your true inheritance eclipses the entire King empire tenfold."

I stared out the window as the towering, black-glass monolith of the Zephyr headquarters pierced the stormy sky ahead. The terrified, dependent girl who had stood at the altar was dead. She had drowned in the tears of her own humiliation.

I pulled Darius's jacket tighter around myself, the scent of cedar grounding me. I wasn't a decoy. I was the storm. And Bentley King had just left the wrong woman at the altar.

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