
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.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 6
The Mcconnell estate occupied five acres in Long Island's Gold Coast, a modernist fortress of glass and steel that Kevon had designed during their engagement. Karley had visited twice before the wedding, always with Kevon beside her, always with the comfort of knowing she could leave.
Now she stood in the entrance hall alone, listening to the door click shut behind the driver who had delivered her from the hospital.
"Welcome home, Mrs. Mcconnell."
The voice came from everywhere and nowhere, a pleasant female tone with the slight artificiality of advanced speech synthesis. Lights activated as Karley moved, sensors tracking her progress across the marble floor, illuminating her path with algorithmic precision.
She didn't feel welcomed. She felt observed.
Karley kicked off her shoes-hospital slippers, her wedding heels lost somewhere in the chaos-and walked barefoot to the living room. The space was forty feet long, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a manicured lawn that sloped down to a private beach. A painting dominated the far wall: the two of them, commissioned for the engagement, Kevon's arm possessive around her waist.
She looked at her painted smile and felt nothing.
Her phone buzzed. Siobhan, demanding updates, threatening to call the police if she didn't respond. Karley typed a lie with numb fingers: He's taking care of me. Everything's fine. I'll call tomorrow.
She turned the phone to silent and set it face-down on the coffee table.
The kitchen was spotless, the marble island bare except for a collection of bottles arranged in a neat row. Supplements, she realized. Iron, B12, folic acid, herbal extracts with labels in languages she couldn't read. A handwritten note in Kevon's precise script: For your recovery. Take as directed.
Karley opened the refrigerator. Organic juices, grass-fed beef, leafy greens in expensive packaging. Everything calculated to maximize her hemoglobin production.
She closed the door without taking anything.
The master bedroom was on the second floor, accessible by a floating staircase that Kevon had imported from Italy. The bed was made with red silk sheets, the traditional color for Chinese wedding nights, a detail that had seemed romantic when he'd explained it and now felt like a taunt.
Karley showered in the en-suite bathroom, standing under water hot enough to redden her skin, trying to wash away the smell of hospital antiseptic and her husband's desperation. She scrubbed until her arms ached, then stood in the steam and watched her reflection blur in the mirror.
When she emerged, wrapped in a robe that cost more than her monthly rent at her old apartment, the house was still empty.
She checked her phone. 11:47 PM. She checked Kevon's last message: Staying at hospital. Devora needs observation. Sleep well.
Karley lay on the red silk sheets and stared at the ceiling. The smart home system had dimmed the lights to a warm amber, simulating sunset, promoting circadian health. She could hear the distant hum of the HVAC system, the whisper of ocean through the open window, the absolute absence of another human being.
She thought about calling him. Dismissed the thought. Called anyway.
The phone rang four times. When he answered, his voice was thick with exhaustion and something else-irritation, maybe, at being interrupted.
"Karley. It's late."
"I know." She sat up, pulling her knees to her chest. "I just wanted to know when you're coming home. The house is so big, and I don't feel well, and-"
"Devora just fell asleep." His voice dropped to a whisper. "She's having nightmares. The accident, the blood. I can't leave her like this."
"But Kevon, it's our wedding night. We're married. Doesn't that-"
"She's my sister." The words came sharp as broken glass. "She was injured at our wedding. Because of us, our event, our-" He stopped. Took a breath. "Can you try to be less selfish? Just for tonight? She's the one suffering, Karley. Not you."
The line went dead.
Karley stared at the phone until the screen went dark. Then she threw it.
The device hit the wall with a crack that should have been satisfying. It fell behind the dresser, screen shattered, silent and useless as everything else in her life.
"Unusual noise detected," the smart home system announced. "Would you like to contact security?"
"Shut up," Karley whispered. "Just shut up."
The lights obeyed, plunging the room into darkness.
She lay back on the bed, shivering. The fever she'd been fighting since the transfusion spiked suddenly, her body finally surrendering to the trauma of blood loss and emotional shock. She was cold, then hot, then cold again, her teeth chattering against the silk pillowcase.
Somewhere in the darkness, her broken phone displayed a notification she would never see: Kevon Mcconnell has shared his location with you.
He was at Mount Sinai Hospital, four miles away.
He would stay there all night.
And Karley would lie alone in his smart house, burning with fever, and wonder if she'd made the worst mistake of her life.
You may also like

7.5
Five years of a fake marriage to a billionaire.
Christi thought she was a wealthy wife-until City Hall told her the truth.
No marriage license. No legal rights. Nothing but a lie.
Her husband cheated on her for four years.
His entire family mocked her, used her, and planned to trap her with a baby.
She was ready to ruin them all.
Then a secret changed everything:
Her late parents were DARPA elites. She is the sole heir to $50 billion.
There's only one catch-marry Cornelius Gregory, Wall Street's ruthless paralyzed tycoon.
She signs the contract in an instant.
Freeze their accounts. Destroy the Rivera family.
The game is over for them.
And the queen has just arrived.

9.5
Blaire's mother gave her a ruthless ultimatum: find a husband today, or never call her mother again.
Desperate to escape the suffocating control and disastrous blind dates, Blaire agreed to a fake marriage with a stranger she met through an old woman.
She thought she was marrying a dirt-poor salesman drowning in mortgage debt.
They lived in a rundown Queens apartment and split the living expenses fifty-fifty.
He drove a sputtering Toyota Camry, established extreme territorial rules, and treated her like a gold-digging biohazard.
When she accidentally tripped and spilled hot soup on him, he didn't help her up, instead accusing her of using pathetic tricks to seduce him.
Her own mother even crashed their apartment, ruthlessly mocking his pathetic financial state and calling him a total loser.
Blaire endured his coldness and extreme germaphobia, genuinely pitying him for his stressful, low-paying job.
She refunded his money and defended his dignity, refusing to take advantage of a struggling man.
But she couldn't understand why this supposedly broke guy possessed such a lethal, commanding aura, or why an incredibly expensive cashmere blanket mysteriously appeared on her when she was freezing on the couch.
Until her brother called with a shocking warning.
"Blaire, the name on your marriage certificate belongs to the notoriously secretive billionaire CEO of New York's top financial syndicate!"
Blaire laughed out loud, completely unaware that behind the bedroom door, her "broke" husband was frantically ordering his PR team to bury his true identity.

7.2
My family arranged my marriage to Silas Thorne, a Wall Street titan. There was just one problem: everyone, including my powerful new husband, believed I was a crippled, helpless girl from the countryside.
On the day of my physical therapy, my father called, not to ask how I was, but to demand I give up the marriage for his illegitimate daughter, Chloe.
"You can barely walk without a limp," he sneered. "You are going to embarrass the Vance family."
My new husband treated me with cold duty, carrying me like a fragile doll but refusing to share a bed, citing my ‘soft tissue injury’ as a pathetic excuse. The rejection was humiliating. To make matters worse, Chloe tracked me down while I was shopping, eager to mock me in public.
"Silas doesn't value you," she said, flashing a cheap ring from my father. "You’re just a crippled placeholder."
They all saw a weak girl they could push around, completely blind to the fact that my limp was a carefully crafted lie.
So I took the unlimited black card Silas gave me and bought a fifty-seven-million-dollar pink diamond, crushing her in front of New York’s elite. When I returned to our penthouse, Silas was waiting for me, a dangerous smirk on his face.
"I heard," he said, his voice a low rumble, "that you bought a star with my money today?"

9.1
For three years, I flew across the Atlantic for my fiancé, Dale. He was a brilliant tech CEO who swore he'd travel to the ends of the earth for me, saving a thousand airline tickets as "proof of his love."
But when I arrived a day early to surprise him, I overheard him confessing to our friends.
"Our relationship is exhausting me, and my love for her is draining away."
His words were just the beginning. I soon discovered his affair with a young intern, Jetta. When she drugged me, sending me into anaphylactic shock, Dale' s only punishment for her was docking half a day's pay.
He then took Jetta on a lavish vacation while I recovered alone in a hospital bed, his excuse being that I had "provoked" her.
The man who once showered me with diamonds and promises now defended my attacker. His love, once my bedrock, had become a poison.
As I stood at the airport gate, I sent him one last email with proof of everything. Then, I snapped my SIM card in half and boarded a flight to Iceland, disappearing from his life for good.

7.1
For seven years, I hid my identity as a wealthy heiress to be with my boyfriend, Ewing. I followed him across the country and made myself small so he could feel big.
On Thanksgiving, he ditched our celebration for his first love, Bree, who supposedly had a "burst pipe."
Later, she posted an intimate selfie with him, calling him her "hero."
Then she sent me a video of him at a bar, laughing with his friends.
"She's just being dramatic," he slurred, smirking at the camera. "A new necklace and she'll forget all about it. She's easy."
Easy. Seven years of my life, my love, my sacrifice-all reduced to that one word. I realized I was never his partner. I was just a placeholder.
I didn't cry. I packed my bags, booked a one-way flight to New York, and sent him one final text before blocking his number.
"Don't bother coming home. I'm getting married."

8.4
I had just been brutally fired from my corporate firm, stripped of my career and dignity in a matter of minutes.
Before I could even process the loss, I was handed a brown envelope that shattered my reality. My billionaire sister, who had ruthlessly cut me out of her life fifteen years ago, had committed suicide.
She left behind a fifteen-year-old son I never knew existed, a $300 million trust, and a $3 million stipend for me to act as his guardian. But her suicide note contained a terrifying, desperate warning scrawled in tearing ink.
"DO NOT INVESTIGATE MY DEATH. Accept what I've given you. Protect my son. Forget I existed."
I met the boy, Elon. He crashed his bike into me on the street, bleeding and crying, begging me not to abandon him. Pity and fifteen years of guilt overwhelmed me. I sat in the sprawling office of her elite estate lawyer and signed my life away to protect this innocent, grieving child.
Why did my sister suddenly reach out after a decade and a half of cold silence? What kind of monster was she running from that drove her to such a desperate end? I thought I was honoring her final wish by taking the boy in.
But as the elevator doors were closing, I caught their reflection in the polished steel.
My terrified, weeping nephew stopped crying instantly. He turned and exchanged a chilling, imperceptible nod with the lawyer.
That silent look said everything. The first move was complete.
I hadn't just inherited a child. I had walked straight into a meticulously planned trap.