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My Mother's Cruel, Blind Heart Novel Cover

My Mother's Cruel, Blind Heart

I sacrificed five years of my life for my comatose mother. When she finally woke up, she looked right through me. She embraced my estranged stepfather and a strange girl, calling her daughter. I was cast aside like trash, forced into the servant's quarters and left to eat from the garbage. My new "sister" even set her dog on me. As the dog tore at my arm, I locked eyes with my mother. She watched for a moment, then slowly pulled the curtains shut. In that moment, my hope shattered. I was nothing to her. A problem to be ignored. But as a social worker led me away to foster care, a black car screeched to a halt. My grandfather stumbled out, clutching a DNA report, his face ghost-white. His eyes, wide with shock, locked onto mine. "My God," he gasped. "Aisha... you're my son's real daughter. My granddaughter."
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Chapter 1

I sacrificed five years of my life for my comatose mother.

When she finally woke up, she looked right through me. She embraced my estranged stepfather and a strange girl, calling her daughter.

I was cast aside like trash, forced into the servant's quarters and left to eat from the garbage. My new "sister" even set her dog on me.

As the dog tore at my arm, I locked eyes with my mother. She watched for a moment, then slowly pulled the curtains shut.

In that moment, my hope shattered. I was nothing to her. A problem to be ignored.

But as a social worker led me away to foster care, a black car screeched to a halt. My grandfather stumbled out, clutching a DNA report, his face ghost-white.

His eyes, wide with shock, locked onto mine.

"My God," he gasped. "Aisha... you're my son's real daughter. My granddaughter."

Chapter 1

Aisha Henderson POV:

For five years, I was a ghost in my own life, a living sentinel to a mother who couldn't see me. Then she woke up, and in that instant, I learned what true invisibility felt like.

The sterile white walls of the private hospital room had been my world. My days blended into an endless cycle of monitoring machines, softly spoken prayers, and the constant, dull ache of hope. My mother, Deborrah Rose, lay before me, a beautiful, fragile statue. Her car crash had taken everything – my childhood, my future, and the vibrant woman I adored. I had given it all up without a second thought. My youth became a sacrifice, laid at the altar of her recovery.

I had been told, repeatedly, that she might never wake. But I never gave up. Not once. My hands, once soft, were now calloused from endless chores, from turning her, bathing her, feeding the machines that kept her alive. My voice, once bright, was now a low murmur, the only sound she' d heard for five long years. My reward, I believed, would be her eyes opening, her recognizing me, her saying my name. That was my plan. My only plan.

Then, one morning, it happened. Not with a dramatic gasp, but a quiet flutter of eyelids. Her eyes, the same shade of blue as mine, slowly opened. They blinked, unfocused, then widened.

"Mom?" I whispered, my voice raw with disuse. Hope surged through me, a dizzying, terrifying wave. This was it. This was everything.

Her gaze swept past me, as if I were part of the furniture, part of the sterile air. A deep, unfamiliar voice cleared its throat from the doorway.

"Deborrah?"

My head snapped towards the sound. A tall, impeccably dressed man stood there. His face was strong, chiseled, framed by dark, silver-streaked hair. He looked like he' d stepped straight off a magazine cover. A stranger.

Deborrah' s eyes fixed on him. A flicker of recognition, or something akin to it, crossed her face. Not for me, her devoted daughter, but for him. My heart, which had just soared, plummeted like a stone.

"Christopher?" she rasped, her voice weak but clear.

Christopher. The name hit me like a physical blow. Christopher Winters. My biological father. The man my mother had married after my actual father died. The man she' d divorced before the accident, disappearing from our lives, taking his vast wealth and influence with him. He had never known about the accident. Never knew Deborrah had been in a coma. Until now.

He moved quickly, crossing the room in a few long strides. He knelt beside her bed, taking her hand. His touch was gentle, yet possessive.

"Deborrah," he said again, his voice thick with emotion. Tears welled in his eyes. Tears for her. Not for the girl standing forgotten beside the bed.

A sharp, painful echo resonated in my chest. He was here. She recognized him. My mother, the woman I had sacrificed everything for, was looking at him with an emotion she hadn' t shown me in five years.

She squeezed his hand, a small, fragile smile touching her lips. Then she turned her head slightly, her gaze finally landing on me. There was no recognition. Only confusion. Her brow furrowed.

"Who… who are you?" she asked, her voice barely a whisper.

The world tilted. My heart wasn' t just plummeting; it was shattering into a million icy fragments. Five years. Gone. Forgotten. My very existence, erased.

Christopher looked up, startled. He followed her gaze to me, his eyes narrowing slightly. A flash of something-annoyance? confusion?-crossed his aristocratic features.

Just then, the hospital room door burst open again. A flurry of nurses, doctors, and what looked like a personal security detail flooded in. Behind them, flashbulbs erupted. The media. How had they known?

Christopher, startled, swore under his breath. He shielded Deborrah with his body, his eyes blazing at the reporters.

"Get them out of here!" he roared, his voice suddenly sharp and commanding. The security team moved in, forming a human wall.

One persistent reporter, pushing past a guard, caught sight of me. "And who' s this young woman? Is she related to Ms. Rose?"

Christopher' s head snapped towards me. His gaze was cold, assessing. A deep frown carved lines into his forehead. He saw me not as a person, but as a problem. A complication.

He grabbed my arm, his grip surprisingly strong. "She' s… family," he said, his voice flat, as if the word tasted sour in his mouth. Then he pulled me, roughly, behind him. "Get her out too. With us."

His tone was less an invitation, more an order. I stumbled, my mind reeling. Family? I was his daughter. Her daughter. But he said it like a burden, not a bond.

I was no longer the devoted caregiver. I was baggage. Unwanted luggage.

He led me out of the hospital, pushing past the clamoring reporters and flashing cameras. Deborrah, now sitting upright in a wheelchair, was being whisked away by other staff. She looked bewildered, but kept her eyes fixed on Christopher. Not on me.

We reached a sleek, black limousine. Its polished surface gleamed under the harsh hospital lights. Christopher opened the back door, practically shoving me inside.

The interior was a world away from the hospital. Supple leather, polished wood, soft lighting. It smelled of expensive cologne and old money. I sank into the plush seat, feeling utterly out of place in my worn clothes and disheveled hair.

Deborrah was gently eased into the seat opposite me. Christopher slid in beside her, his arm immediately going around her shoulders. She leaned into him, a soft sigh escaping her lips. She didn't look at me. Not once. It was as if I simply didn' t exist.

I tried to make myself smaller, to disappear into the luxurious upholstery. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. The silence in the car was heavy, suffocating. It pressed down on me, amplifying the sound of my own ragged breathing.

The car started moving, gliding away from the hospital. I could hear whispers from the front seats, from Christopher' s assistant and the driver.

"She looks… like her," the assistant murmured, her voice barely audible.

"Yes," Christopher' s voice was clipped. "A regrettable resemblance. Make sure this vehicle is thoroughly detailed. Better yet, sell it. I don' t want anything… contaminated with this mess."

My stomach lurched. Contaminated. That was me. The mess. I was the stain he wanted scrubbed away. The memory of a life he wanted to erase.

A wave of nausea crashed over me. My throat tightened. I swallowed hard, trying to fight it down. I couldn' t throw up in his pristine car. I couldn' t. It would make me even more of a problem.

But the stress, the shock, the agonizing betrayal… it was too much. My stomach rebelled. I leaned forward, a guttural sound escaping me, and vomited onto the plush carpet between my feet.

The driver slammed on the brakes. "Hey!" he snapped, his voice filled with disgust.

Christopher recoiled, pulling Deborrah even closer. His face, when he looked at me, was a mask of pure revulsion. "Disgusting," he muttered.

Deborrah merely turned her head into Christopher' s shoulder, her eyes closed. Not a word. Not a glance. Not a shred of the mother I remembered.

The car moved again, now slower, the air thick with unspoken anger and my own shame. When we finally pulled up to a massive, ornate iron gate, my eyes widened. This wasn' t just a house; it was a fortress. A sprawling mansion of stone and glass, surrounded by manicured gardens.

The gates swung open silently. As the car crunched up the gravel driveway, a young girl, no older than fifteen, burst out of the imposing front doors. She had long, blonde hair and a bright, dimpled smile.

"Mommy!" she shrieked, running towards the car.

Deborrah' s head snapped up. Her face lit up with a joy I hadn't seen in years. She practically launched herself out of Christopher' s embrace and into the girl' s arms.

"Kaylee, my darling!" Deborrah cried, hugging the girl tightly.

Kaylee? This was my mother, embracing another child, a stranger, as if they had always been together. The pain was so sharp, it stole my breath.

An older woman, regal and stern, emerged from the house, her gaze sweeping over the scene. Doria Winters. Christopher' s mother. My grandmother, though she would never claim me. Her eyes landed on me, still slumped in the car, and her elegant features twisted into a sneer.

"Christopher, who is that?" Doria demanded, her voice dripping with disdain. She gestured at me as if I were a stray dog.

Christopher sighed, running a hand through his hair. "Mother, this is… Aisha. Deborrah' s daughter. Apparently." He said "apparently" like it was a minor, unwelcome detail.

Doria' s eyes, cold as glaciers, darted between me and Deborrah, who was still clinging to Kaylee. "Her daughter?" Her voice climbed an octave in disbelief. "From that… first marriage? The one we scrubbed from Deborrah' s history?"

My heart stopped. Scrubbed from her history. That' s what I was. A stain. A mistake.

Doria marched over to the car, her gaze burning into me. "You will not be staying in the main house," she declared, her voice absolute. "Christopher, instruct the staff. Find her a place in the servant' s quarters. And keep her out of sight. I will not have her sullying this family' s reputation."

Her words hit me like physical blows, each one echoing the pain of my mother' s betrayal.

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