Follow
Chapters
Share
The Billionaire's Cruelty, My Secret Daughter

The Billionaire's Cruelty, My Secret Daughter

The thunder cracked over the Hamptons, but it was nothing compared to Elena Sharp's scream. She lay twisted on the marble foyer, accusing me of trying to kill her baby. My husband, Julian, walked in, saw the scene, and his eyes froze me out of his life forever. He didn't listen, shoving a separation agreement across the desk, accusing me of murder. Stripped of my name and home, I was thrown out, left with nothing but my clothes and a terrifying secret growing inside me. My accounts frozen, I ended up in a crumbling Philadelphia row house, forced to pawn heirlooms. During a fire, my water broke, and I delivered our premature daughter, June, whose lungs were damaged. I stole formula to feed her, facing massive medical bills. Accused of destroying an heir, I was exiled while carrying his true legacy, fighting for every breath. The injustice burned, but June's life was my only fight. Three years later, June needed life-saving surgery. Julian's dying grandmother called me back with the funds, forcing a cruel charade with the man who hated me, a man still oblivious to his daughter.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 7

Seraphina needed to clear her head. The mansion was suffocating. She told the staff she was going into the city to check on her "apartment." A lie. She didn't have an apartment in New York. She had a crumbling duplex in Philly and a daughter waiting for surgery. But she couldn't leave the grounds. Not really. She had no car, and taking a train would take too long. She found herself wandering to the old east wing. It was dusty, unused. She found the dance studio. It was exactly as she had left it. The barre, the mirrors, the piano in the corner. She locked the door. She needed to move. To burn off the anxiety. She stripped down to her underwear—a mismatched, cheap set. She didn't have dance clothes. She turned on the old sound system. A haunting cello melody filled the room. She began to move. Her body remembered the training she had abandoned for motherhood and survival. She spun, extended, leaped. As she pivoted, her back faced the large mirrors. The scars were visible. Jagged, pink and white lines of keloid tissue that ran from her left shoulder blade down to her hip. The brand of the fire escape. The mark of the night June was born. She closed her eyes, losing herself in the pain and the music. The door handle rattled. Seraphina froze. She had locked it. But this was Julian's house. He had the master key. The door swung open. Julian stood there. He had been looking for her to discuss the dinner seating chart. He expected to find her sulking. He didn't expect this. He saw the woman in the center of the room. He saw the grace of her line. And then he saw her back. His eyes widened. The file in his hand slipped, hitting the floor with a thwack. "What..." Julian stepped into the room, his voice losing its edge. "What is that?" Seraphina spun around, her arms flying up to cover her chest, backing away until she hit the barre. "Get out!" she screamed. Julian didn't leave. He walked toward her, his eyes fixed on the angry, twisted skin peeking out from behind her arm. "Who did that to you?" he demanded. His tone wasn't angry anymore. It was shocked. Horrified. "Is that why you look like a starved animal? Did someone hurt you?" "It's none of your business," Seraphina hissed, grabbing her shirt from the floor and frantically pulling it on. The fabric covered the scars, but the image was burned into his retina. "That looks like a burn," Julian said, stopping a few feet away. "A severe one. You didn't have that when you left." "A lot of things happened after I left, Julian," she said, her voice trembling. "Things you didn't want to know about. Remember?" He flinched. He had said that. I don't want to know. But seeing the physical evidence of her suffering... it cracked something in his chest. "Seraphina," he reached out a hand. "Don't touch me," she warned, stepping back. "You forfeited the right to care about my scars three years ago." She grabbed her jeans and bolted past him, running out of the room before he could see the tears threatening to fall. Julian stood in the empty studio, the music still playing. He looked at the mirror where her reflection had been. For the first time in three years, the ice in his veins felt like it was melting. And it burned.
Keep Reading
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to
Unlock All Chapters
Open the Official Website