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The Billionaire's Captive Golden Blood Bride Novel Cover

The Billionaire's Captive Golden Blood Bride

Karley thought marrying billionaire architect Kevon Mcconnell was a fairy tale come true. But at their wedding reception, a heavy crystal chandelier collapsed. Kevon abandoned her in the falling glass to shield his sister, Devora. At the hospital, he dropped to his knees, begging Karley to save Devora's life with a direct blood transfusion. That was when Karley discovered the horrifying truth. Kevon hadn't married her for love. He had meticulously selected her because she possessed the exact same rare Rh-null golden blood as his chronically ill sister. Drained and feverish from the massive transfusion, Karley was locked inside his remote, high-tech mansion. Kevon's mother slapped her and forced foul medicine down her throat to replenish her blood supply. Even Devora called to mock her. "You're just a temporary solution. A medical resource until something better comes along." Karley lay bruised and infected on the floor of her gilded cage. The realization crushed her: the whirlwind romance, the pre-marital medical checks, even the secret GPS tracker he used to stop her from running away—it was all a calculated trap. She had lost her job, her friends, and her freedom to a man who only saw her as a walking blood bank. When Kevon finally returned, he cut off her contact with the outside world and locked the bedroom door with a cold, perfect smile. "Don't try to leave. You're my wife, and I always know where you are." But as the smart home dimmed the lights to keep her docile, Karley closed her eyes in the dark and began to plan her escape.
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Chapter 5

The phlebotomy room was white. White walls, white cabinets, white sheets on the narrow bed where Karley lay with her arm extended and a tourniquet tight above her elbow.

The needle was larger than she'd expected. Industrial, almost. She watched it slide into the blue vein at her inner elbow, felt the cold sting, then the strange pressure as her blood began to flow.

The machine beside her beeped steadily. Each tone marked another fraction of a liter leaving her body. She counted them, focusing on the numbers to avoid thinking about what came next.

Kevon stood at the foot of the bed. He hadn't touched her since the embrace in the corridor, since the moment her consent had been secured. Now he watched the blood bag with an intensity that might have been medical concern or might have been something else entirely.

"How much?" she asked. Her voice sounded distant, underwater.

"Four hundred milliliters," the nurse answered. "Standard donation volume. You're small, so we'll monitor closely for dizziness or nausea."

"I'm fine."

She wasn't fine. The room had begun to tilt slightly, colors bleeding at the edges. She closed her eyes and thought of the gallery, of the Rothko she'd been studying before Kevon appeared in her life. Color as emotion. Emotion as color. Right now she felt gray. Exhausted, drained, gray.

"Kevon." She opened her eyes. He was still watching the blood bag, not her. "Kevon, look at me."

His gaze shifted. For a moment, she saw something flicker-guilt, perhaps, or irritation at being distracted. Then his face softened into the expression she knew, the one that had made her fall in love with him.

"I'm here," he said. "I'm right here."

"Why?" The word came out rough, desperate. "Why her? Why like that?"

She didn't need to explain. They both knew what she meant. The running. The abandonment. The way he'd looked at Devora like she was the only thing in the world that mattered.

Kevon's hands found the bed rail. He gripped it hard enough that his knuckles whitened.

"I've never told anyone this," he said. "Not fully. Not completely."

He looked at the nurse. "Give us a moment."

The woman hesitated, glancing at the half-full blood bag, then at Karley's pale face. But Kevon Mcconnell's voice carried the weight of donations and board memberships, and she retreated to the corridor with a murmured warning about not disturbing the line.

When the door clicked shut, Kevon sat on the edge of the bed. His weight made the mattress dip, rolling her slightly toward him. He didn't touch her. He stared at his hands, at the blood still dried beneath his fingernails, at the wedding ring that suddenly looked like a mockery.

"I wasn't born a Mcconnell," he said. "I was born in a place called St. Agnes Home for Children. In Queens, actually. Not far from where you grew up."

Karley said nothing. She watched his face, the way his jaw tightened, the way his eyes went distant with memory.

"I was five when they found me. Maybe six-records from that time are unclear. I don't remember my birth parents. I don't remember anything before the home." He laughed, a harsh sound. "I remember the home, though. I remember every day of it."

He looked at her. His eyes were wet, but no tears fell. They never did, she realized. He performed grief, performed love, but the actual tears were always carefully controlled.

"Devora found me," he said. "She was eight. Her parents had brought her to the home for some charity event, some photo opportunity. She slipped away from the group. She found me in the corner of the playroom, where I always hid, and she sat down beside me."

His hand moved, finally, finding Karley's where it lay on the sheet. His fingers were ice-cold.

"She gave me her cookie," he said. "Her fancy, expensive cookie from the fancy, expensive bakery her mother had taken her to. She sat with me until the staff found her, and when they tried to make her leave, she screamed. She screamed and cried and said she wouldn't go without me." He squeezed Karley's fingers. "She made them adopt me. A five-year-old girl changed my entire life because she decided I was worth saving."

The machine beeped. The blood bag was nearly full, dark and heavy with her life.

"She's the only reason I'm here," Kevon continued. "The only reason I'm anything. My parents-they tolerated me. I was their daughter's project, their tax deduction, their proof of charity. But Devora..." His voice cracked, and this time it sounded real. "She's the only person who ever loved me without wanting something in return."

Karley felt tears on her own face. She wanted to pull her hand away, to reject this story and the manipulation she could feel woven through it. But she was weak, and bleeding, and his pain was so visible, so raw.

"That's why," he said. "That's why I ran. That's why I couldn't-if she dies, Karley. If she dies, there's nothing left. No reason for any of it."

He leaned closer, his voice dropping to a raw whisper. "What you just did... you didn't just save her. You saved me. You saved everything. You're part of that now, Karley. You're the one who saved our family. You're a hero."

The nurse knocked and entered, checking the bag, adjusting the flow. Kevon fell silent, watching with hooded eyes as the final milliliters drained from Karley's vein.

When the needle was removed, when the cotton ball was pressed to her arm, he spoke again, his voice thick with emotion.

"I'll never forget this," he said, his hand covering hers, his thumb stroking her knuckles. "Never. I promise I will spend the rest of my life making this up to you. Making you feel as safe and loved as you've made me feel today."

The door opened. A nurse in scrubs appeared, breathless, excited.

"Mr. Mcconnell? She's stable. The transfusion worked. She's asking for you."

Kevon was on his feet before the sentence finished. He moved toward the door, then paused, looking back at Karley where she lay on the white bed, pale and bleeding and trapped.

"Thank you," he said. "For everything. Get some rest. I'll have a car take you to the estate. I'll be there as soon as she's settled."

Then he was gone, following the nurse toward his sister's recovery room, leaving Karley alone with the machines and the blood bags and the slow, dawning understanding that she had married a man who saw her as a savior, a solution, a piece of a puzzle she was only just beginning to see.

She closed her eyes. The room spun. When she opened them again, a different nurse was checking her vitals, frowning at the numbers, murmuring about rest and fluids and observation.

Karley stared at the ceiling and thought about escape.

But her body wouldn't move, and her phone was in her purse somewhere, and her husband had just crowned her the hero of a story she didn't want to be in.

She pulled the thin hospital blanket higher and cried silently until sleep took her.

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