Follow
Chapters
Share
The Billionaire's Blind Bride: No Mercy Novel Cover

The Billionaire's Blind Bride: No Mercy

I married Clive Harrington, the coldest billionaire in Manhattan, under a strict contract that forbade any emotional burdens. When I needed a high-risk surgery to save my sight, I checked into the clinic alone, hiding the procedure from a husband who saw me as nothing more than a legal asset. I thought I could handle the darkness in silence. But while I was blind and bandaged in my hospital bed, my biological mother called, screaming that if I didn't produce a Harrington heir by the end of the fiscal year, she would cut off the life-saving treatments for my disabled sister. I was crawling on the cold hospital floor, desperately feeling for a cane I had dropped, when I touched a pair of expensive leather shoes. It was Clive. He was supposed to be in London closing a multi-million dollar deal, but there he was, watching his "contract wife" groveling in the dark like a beggar. He didn't walk away in disgust. He carried me to a five-thousand-dollar-a-night VIP suite and sat by my bed, listening in chilling silence as another voicemail from my mother filled the room, calling me a "useless broodmare" who was only worth the trust fund disbursements my marriage secured. I expected him to remind me of Clause 34B or hand me divorce papers now that I was "damaged goods." Instead, I felt his thumb brush a stray tear from my cheek, his presence shifting from a statue of ice into a predatory shield. "I thought I was just currency to you," I whispered, my voice trembling behind the gauze. "Just an investment." Clive didn't answer with words. He picked up his phone and called his head of legal with a single, terrifying command: "Kill the Douglas family’s credit lines. Every debt, every lien—trigger them all. If they want a war, I’ll give them a massacre." As he leaned down to kiss my bandaged forehead, I realized the contract was dead. My husband wasn't protecting an asset anymore; he was hunting the people who had dared to touch what belonged to him.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 10

Clive had been gone for twenty minutes.

Dahlia needed to pee. Again. The IV fluids were relentless.

She didn't want to call the nurse. She felt capable. She had the cane.

She got out of bed. She found the cane.

She walked toward the bathroom.

But the rug. The expensive, plush rug that Clive loved. It had a curled edge.

Her toe caught it.

Dahlia pitched forward.

She tried to catch herself, but the cane slid on the polished floor.

Crash.

She hit the ground hard. Her knee slammed into the tiles. Her wrist twisted under her.

Ow!

Pain shot up her arm. Tears sprang to her eyes instantly.

She lay there, gasping.

The door flew open.

Clive?

He'd made it to the lobby before an inexplicable dread coiled in his gut. He told the driver to wait and came back up, using the excuse of a forgotten pair of cufflinks he kept in his travel case.

He saw her on the floor.

Dahlia!

He dropped the cufflink box. It skittered across the floor.

He was by her side in a second.

Don't move. Where does it hurt?

My wrist, she sobbed. And my knee.

Clive swore. A string of colorful expletives she had never heard him use.

He scooped her up. He put her back in bed.

He pressed the call button. He kept his finger on it until a nurse ran in.

Check her wrist. Now.

While the nurse examined her, Clive paced the room. He looked like a caged tiger.

I leave for twenty minutes, he muttered. Twenty minutes.

I tripped, Dahlia said weakly. It's not your fault.

It is my fault, he snapped. I shouldn't have left.

The nurse confirmed it was just a sprain. She wrapped it. As she finished, Clive grabbed the call button again.

"Get Dr. Lin back in here. Now," he commanded, his voice dangerously low. "I want a full ophthalmic workup. Check the sutures, check for displacement. I don't give a damn what time it is."

He walked to the corner. He made a call.

Get me two private nurses. The best agency. I want 24-hour monitoring in this room. If she so much as sneezes, I want someone to hand her a tissue.

He hung up. He dialed again.

Arthur.

Yes, sir?

The Douglas credit line. The one pending approval for their Hamptons estate renovation?

Yes?

Kill it.

Sir?

Kill it. And call the bank. Tell them I'm pulling my personal guarantee on Don Douglas's business loans.

Clive... Arthur sounded terrified. That will trigger a margin call. They'll be forced to liquidate their summer property.

Good, Clive said. Let them feel the ground shift beneath their feet. This is just the beginning.

He hung up.

He walked back to the bed.

Dahlia was staring at him (or where she thought he was).

You didn't have to do that, she whispered.

Clive smoothed the hair back from her forehead. His hand was shaking slightly.

Yes, I did.

He kissed her forehead.

No one hurts you, Dahlia. Not gravity. Not your mother. Not even yourself. You're mine now. And I take care of what's mine.

Dahlia closed her eyes.

For the first time in her life, she felt safe.

And for the first time in his life, Clive Harrington felt fear. The fear of losing something that money couldn't buy.

He did not go to the gala. He sent a single, curt text to Arthur, canceling everything.

For the next three days, the VIP suite became his office and her sanctuary. He worked from the armchair, a silent, imposing sentinel in a suit, while a team of private nurses monitored her.

He was a tyrant about her medication schedule and the temperature of her tea, a quiet, constant presence that was both suffocating and profoundly comforting.

By the third morning, Dr. Lin cleared her for discharge. Clive had to attend a board meeting he could no longer postpone, but he made the arrangements.

第11章 11

The day of her discharge,Arthur Pendelton stood by the hospital curb like a sentry in a bespoke suit. The wind whipped at his coat, but he didn't flinch. In his gloved hands, he held the rear door of the black Rolls Royce Phantom open. The head nurse had just pressed a bouquet of champagne roses into Dahlia's arms. There was no card, just a heavy, sweet scent that made her dizzy. She assumed they were from Gia. Who else would send flowers that cost more than a week's groceries?

"Arthur," she said, her voice still raspy from disuse. "I can call an Uber. This is too much. People are staring."

They were staring. A Phantom parked outside a hospital entrance was a magnet for eyes. It screamed wealth, power, and secrets.

Arthur smiled, a tight, professional expression that didn't invite debate. "Mr. Harrington was quite specific, Mrs. Harrington. He insisted I handle your discharge personally. And he said that given your vision has not fully recovered, public transportation is medically non-compliant."

He threw the medical jargon at her like a shield. Dahlia knew when she was beaten. She slid into the backseat.

The interior was a different world. It was silent. The air was cool and smelled faintly of cedar and leather. Clive's smell. It wrapped around her, invasive and comforting all at once. She placed the flowers on her knees, careful not to let the thorns snag her cheap leggings.

Arthur slid into the driver's seat. The partition was down.

"Where to, Ma'am?"

Dahlia gave him the address in Brooklyn. She saw Arthur's eyes widen slightly in the rearview mirror as he punched it into the GPS. He didn't say anything. He just pulled the car into traffic, the engine purring like a large, tamed beast.

The drive was a study in contrasts. They left the clean, manicured streets of the Upper East Side. The buildings got shorter. The sidewalks got dirtier. The smooth asphalt gave way to potholes that even the Phantom's suspension couldn't entirely erase.

Dahlia stared out the tinted window. Her vision was still blurry, a watercolor painting of grays and browns. But she knew this neighborhood. She knew the graffiti on the bodega shutters. She knew the piles of trash bags that the sanitation trucks often skipped.

Arthur's knuckles were white on the steering wheel. He locked the doors with a loud click as they turned onto her street.

A group of young men were loitering on the stoop of her building. They wore hoodies and smoked cigarettes that smelled sharp and acrid. When the massive black car rolled up, they stopped talking. One of them whistled. Another pointed.

Arthur parked. He looked at the building. It was red brick, crumbling at the corners. The fire escape was rusted.

"Ma'am," he said, his voice strained. "The dossier listed this address, of course, but it failed to convey the... severity of the environment. You reside here?"

Dahlia felt the heat rise in her cheeks. "It's affordable, Arthur. And the light in the studio is good for painting."

Arthur got out. He opened her door, placing his body between her and the men on the stoop. He glared at them until they looked away, shuffling their feet.

"I will escort you up," he stated.

"Please, you don't have to-"

"Mr. Harrington would fire me if I left you on the sidewalk."

They walked in. The lobby smelled of stale beer and damp wool. The elevator had an Out of Order sign taped to it that had been there since Christmas.

"We have to walk," Dahlia apologized. "It's the third floor."

Arthur carried her duffel bag. His polished shoes made sharp, out-of-place sounds on the concrete stairs. On the second floor landing, a dog barked aggressively from behind a thin door, the sound echoing in the stairwell. Arthur flinched, his hand instinctively moving to his waist, though he carried no weapon. He moved in front of her.

When they reached her door, Dahlia fumbled with her keys. The lock was sticky. She had to jiggle it.

She pushed the door open.

It was small. A studio. A bed in the corner, a small kitchenette, and a wall of windows that rattled in their frames. It was clean, but the linoleum was peeling in the corner, and there was a water stain on the ceiling that looked like a map of Australia.

Arthur set the bag down on the only table. He scanned the room. His eyes lingered on the window latch that looked broken, the lack of a deadbolt, the sheer vulnerability of the space.

Dahlia went to the sink. She took a glass from the drying rack-a free promotional glass from a fast-food chain-and filled it with tap water.

"Water?" she offered.

Arthur looked at the glass. He looked at the tap.

"No thank you, Ma'am. I must return to the office."

He backed out of the room as if he were leaving a crime scene.

Dahlia locked the door behind him. She slid the chain across. She leaned her forehead against the painted wood and exhaled. She was home. It was ugly, and it was unsafe, but it was hers.

Arthur sat in the car for a moment before starting the engine. He pulled out his encrypted phone.

He dialed.

Clive answered on the first ring. "Delivered?"

"Yes, sir."

"How is she?"

Arthur paused. He looked up at the third-floor window. A silhouette moved behind the sheer curtain.

"Sir, her living conditions... even by the standards of a struggling artist, they are unacceptable. A security nightmare."

"A Harrington does not live in a security nightmare," Clive's voice was sharp. He was in a board meeting; Arthur could hear the low murmur of voices in the background.

Arthur described the loiterers. The smell. The dog. The window that wouldn't lock. "It is a profound liability."

Silence on the other end.

Then, Arthur heard a chair scrape against the floor. The background voices stopped abruptly. Clive's voice returned, low and lethal. "She is a Harrington. To have her live in squalor is an insult to me."

Arthur waited. "Shall I arrange for her to be moved to the estate, sir?"

Clive was silent for a long moment. Arthur knew what he was thinking. Moving her into the penthouse would violate the cohabitation clause of their agreement, and it would alert his grandmother, Sylvia, before he was ready. It was a premature move.

"No," Clive commanded, his tone cold and decisive. "Leave her there for now. But buy the building. Use the shell company in the Caymans. I want the deed in my safe by five o'clock."

"The entire building, sir?" Arthur confirmed, though he knew the answer.

"The entire building. Pay the tenants to leave, evict them, I don't care. Gut the other units. I want her to be the only resident. Hire a private security firm to man the lobby 24/7. Replace every lock, every window. I want that building turned into a fortress by morning."

Arthur sighed. "Very good, sir."

He hung up. He put the car in gear. As he drove away, he looked in the rearview mirror one last time. Dahlia Harrington had no idea she had just become the only tenant in the safest fortress in Brooklyn.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Search for “KWQM” on moboreader to read the full book.
Copy the code and search in the NovelShort app to continue reading.
KWQM
copy
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After Divorce:My arrogant ex-husband regrets Novel Cover
7.1
I sat alone at my long marble dining table, staring at a plate of cold truffle risotto. My husband, Jere, was late again, claiming he was stuck in a "war zone" of a board meeting for a multi-billion dollar merger. A single Instagram notification shattered the silence. It was a photo of a candlelit birthday dinner, featuring a man's hand resting on a white tablecloth. I recognized the slight veins, the jagged scar on the thumb, and the navy-faced Patek Philippe watch I had spent six months tracking down as a wedding gift. Jere wasn't in a boardroom; he was celebrating his ex-girlfriend Irina's birthday while texting me to "don't wait up." The next morning, I followed him to a VIP hospital wing. I watched through a cracked door as my husband cuddled a five-year-old boy and whispered tender promises to Irina. When he came home, he tried to buy my silence with a rare pink diamond bracelet, but I found the receipt: he had bought two identical ones. He had branded his wife and his mistress with matching jewelry, using hidden trackers to keep us both on a leash. When I confronted him, he didn't flinch. He coldly reminded me that he owned my father's massive debts and could send him to prison for insolvency fraud with one phone call. "Stop with the attitude, Deliah," he said. I felt like a ghost haunting my own life, trapped in a gilded cage by the man who paid for my mother's heart surgery while keeping a secret family across town. The humiliation peaked at our rescheduled anniversary dinner when Jere received a text, threw a stack of hundreds at me like I was a stranger, and abandoned me in a crowded restaurant to rush back to her. "Pay the bill," he commanded before walking out. Standing in the wreckage of a shattered crystal vase back at the penthouse, I realized my silence was the only thing keeping his empire standing. I pulled the crumpled divorce papers from my purse and signed my name with a steady hand. I wasn't just walking away; I was calling his sister to help me burn his perfect world to the ground.
Bound to the billionaire  Novel Cover
8.9
Elara’s life takes a drastic turn when a mysterious contract ties her to Julian Vane, a powerful billionaire with a guarded heart. As she navigates his world of luxury and secrets, Elara discovers that their connection is no accident. Hidden motives and a dark past threaten to shatter their growing bond. Caught between a dangerous truth and an undeniable attraction, she must decide if loving a man with so many enemies is worth the ultimate price.
Felix's Protection for Her Novel Cover
8.6
After a devastating betrayal by her fiance and half-sister, Sarah finds herself at rock bottom. However, a chance encounter with Felix, a powerful and reclusive billionaire, changes everything. Felix offers Sarah a marriage of convenience to protect her from her past and help her reclaim her dignity. As they navigate a world of high-stakes business and family secrets, Sarah must decide if she can trust the man who saved her or if his protection comes at too high a price.
His Accidental Heiress  Novel Cover
8.8
Elena's life has never been easy. She's 23, broke, and working long hours at a small café just to keep a roof over her head. Her best friend, Elizabeth, worries she'll work herself to death, so one night she drags Elena to a house party. Elena doesn't like parties, but she goes anyway. That night changes everything. Looking for the bathroom, she opens the wrong door and finds herself in the same room as a man-tall, handsome, and mysterious. They don't exchange names. They don't plan it. One thing leads to another, and they spend the night together. By morning, he's gone. No note. No name. Just gone. Elena tries to forget about it until weeks later, when she realizes she's pregnant. Panic hits her hard. She doesn't know the man's name. She doesn't have his number. She's broke and alone, but she decides to keep the baby and work harder. Around this time, Elliott, Elena's boss, starts visiting the café often. He's friendly, supportive, and becomes her closest friend. She has no idea Elliott is connected to her mystery man. When the café job can't cover her bills anymore, Elliott helps her find a better job as a secretary in a big company. She's relieved-until her first day on the job, when she sees him. Jaxon Thorn. The father of her baby. Jaxon is shocked too. He feels betrayed that she didn't tell him sooner. She feels hurt that he left without a word. Things get even worse when Khloe-the woman desperate to marry Jaxon-steps in to destroy Elena. One night turned their worlds upside down. Now, they have to face the truth: Can love really come from one mistake?
I Faked My Death to Escape My Husband's Cruelty Novel Cover
8.1
Trapped in a suffocating marriage to a cold and merciless billionaire, Elena realizes that her husband’s cruelty will never end. Desperate for a fresh start and a life free from his iron grip, she orchestrates a daring plan to stage her own demise. As the world mourns her passing, she vanishes into the shadows to reclaim her identity. However, hiding from a man with endless resources is a dangerous game. Will her new life hold?
My Escape From Two Tyrants Novel Cover
9.8
Trapped between two powerful and ruthless men, a woman finds herself caught in a dangerous game of obsession and control. These billionaire tyrants will stop at nothing to possess her, turning her life into a gilded cage. As their intense rivalry escalates, she realizes that her only hope for survival is to orchestrate a daring disappearance. She must navigate a web of desire and manipulation to reclaim her freedom before they consume her entirely.