
The Blind Billionaire's Fatal Deception
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The morning sun filtered through the sheer curtains of the master bathroom, casting a pale, unforgiving light on the white marble vanity. Clara Sterling stood absolutely still, her hands gripping the edge of the sink so tightly her knuckles were translucent.
Sitting on the marble counter, right next to her toothbrush, was a plastic stick with two bold, unmistakable pink lines.
Pregnant.
Clara touched her flat stomach, her mind violently oscillating between overwhelming joy and a sickening, suffocating dread. Under any normal circumstances, this would be the happiest day of her life. She and Julian had talked about starting a family before his accident. But the events of last night loomed over her like a suffocating dark cloud.
*His eyes tracked me,* Clara thought, her breath hitching as she stared at her own terrified reflection in the mirror. *I saw him track my movements. I saw him smirk.*
She had spent the entire night lying awake next to her sleeping husband, staring at the ceiling, analyzing every single variable. Clara was a brilliant engineer; her mind was trained to seek logic, to test hypotheses. Could the mirror have been warped? Could it have been a trick of the lightning? Was it a random, involuntary muscle spasm in his optic nerve?
*He is blind,* she had told herself repeatedly at 3:00 AM. *The world’s best neuro-ophthalmologists confirmed the optic nerve damage. He cannot see.*
And yet, her fiercely analytical mind couldn't erase the image of that smirk.
Clara picked up the pregnancy test, her thumb brushing over the two pink lines. A fierce wave of protective devotion swelled in her chest. She was going to be a mother. Julian was going to be a father. This changed everything. If Julian was secretly harboring resentment or anger over his disability, this news would heal him. This baby would be the light in his endless dark.
"I have to tell him," Clara whispered to the empty bathroom. "I have to know we're in this together."
She quickly wrapped the test in a tissue and tucked it into the pocket of her silk robe. Taking a deep breath to steady her racing heart, she exited the master suite and made her way down the sweeping staircase toward the east wing of the estate.
Julian spent his mornings in his private study. It was a massive, wood-paneled room where he supposedly listened to audio-briefings and dictated emails to Sylvia, managing Vance Innovations from the comfort of his home. Clara, meanwhile, did the actual heavy lifting—designing the tech, writing the patents, and quietly transferring the intellectual property to his name so the board of directors wouldn't oust him for incompetence.
As Clara approached the heavy mahogany doors of the study, she noticed they were cracked open about an inch.
She raised her hand to push the door open and announce her wonderful news, but a voice stopped her dead in her tracks.
"Section four, paragraph two, subsection C," Julian’s voice rang out. It wasn't the slow, hesitant tone he used when listening to audio-dictation. It was crisp, authoritative, and fast. "The undersigned hereby transfers full voting rights and equity dividends from the Sterling Family Trust directly into the Vance Innovations holding account, effective immediately."
Clara’s hand froze an inch from the wood. *The Sterling Family Trust?* That was her inheritance. Her safety net.
"You read that flawlessly, Julian," Sylvia’s voice chimed in. There was a low, seductive purr to her tone that made Clara’s skin crawl. "Your eyes are getting so much better at tracking the fine print. You didn't even stumble on the legal jargon."
Clara stopped breathing. The hallway seemed to tilt on its axis.
Slowly, carefully, Clara leaned forward and pressed her eye to the one-inch crack between the doors.
Inside the sunlit study, Julian was sitting behind his massive oak desk. He wasn't wearing his dark glasses. He wasn't staring blankly into space. He was holding a densely printed, twelve-page legal document in his hands, his eyes scanning the tiny text rapidly, darting left to right with perfect, undeniable visual acuity.
Sylvia was perched on the edge of his desk, her legs crossed, sipping a cup of coffee.
"My eyes have been perfect for six months, Sylvia," Julian said, tossing the legal document onto the desk with a dismissive flick of his wrist. He leaned back in his leather chair and rubbed his temples. "It’s not my vision I’m worried about. It’s the sheer volume of paperwork required to drain her accounts without triggering an audit."
Clara clapped a hand over her own mouth to stifle a gasp. The air violently rushed out of her lungs.
*Six months.*
He had been able to see for six months.
"Are you sure she won't notice the transfer?" Sylvia asked, leaning forward and trailing a manicured fingernail down Julian’s tie. "Clara isn't stupid. She’s the one designing all the tech that’s keeping your company afloat."
Julian scoffed, a harsh, ugly sound that Clara had never heard him make. "Clara is a brilliant engineer, yes, but she’s an absolute idiot when it comes to me. She’s completely blinded by her own savior complex. She’s too busy playing the devoted, tragic martyr to look at the bank statements. As long as I keep stumbling into walls and crying about how useless I am, she’ll keep signing whatever documents I put in front of her."
Tears sprang to Clara’s eyes, hot and stinging. The sheer malice in his voice was unrecognizable. This was the man she had loved since college. The man she had bathed when he was in a wheelchair. The man she had just decided to share a child with.
"It’s brilliant, honestly," Sylvia laughed, taking a sip of her coffee. "You get her to do all the R&D for Vance Innovations for free, and you get to slowly siphon her billionaire father's trust fund into your own pockets."
"I deserve that trust fund," Julian spat, his face suddenly twisting into an ugly mask of resentment. He stood up, pacing behind his desk with perfect balance, easily stepping over a stack of books on the floor. "Do you know what it’s like, Sylvia? Being married to her? Knowing that every single board member looks at me with pity because they know my wife is smarter than me? She thinks she’s being so gracious, handing me her patents in secret. It’s humiliating! It makes me feel like a child being handed a participation trophy."
"She’s an arrogant bitch," Sylvia agreed smoothly, setting her coffee down and wrapping her arms around Julian’s waist. "She thinks her natural elegance and her family's money make her untouchable. She doesn't respect you as a man, Julian. Not the way I do."
Julian sighed, his anger melting into a satisfied smirk as he wrapped his arms around the nurse. "You understand me, Sylvia. You know what it takes to survive in this world. Clara was born with a silver spoon. She doesn't know what it’s like to fight for dominance."
"So, what’s the timeline?" Sylvia asked, looking up at him. "How much longer do I have to pretend to be the hired help? How much longer do you have to pretend to use that ridiculous white cane?"
"Just a few more weeks," Julian promised, pressing a kiss to Sylvia’s forehead. "Once she signs this final transfer document, the Sterling Trust will be completely liquidated into my offshore accounts. She’ll have nothing. No patents, no money, no leverage. I’ll finally file for divorce, cite irreconcilable differences due to my disability, and we can take the company public without her hanging around my neck like an albatross."
Outside the door, Clara’s hand slowly slid away from her mouth and moved down to rest on her stomach.
The tears stopped falling.
The devastating heartbreak that had been paralyzing her chest suddenly crystallized, hardening into something cold, sharp, and entirely terrifying.
He didn't just cheat on her. He didn't just lie about his sight. He was systematically orchestrating the destruction of her life, her legacy, and her family’s wealth—all because his fragile, narcissistic ego couldn't handle the fact that his wife was more talented than he was.
"Just make sure you play your part today," Julian warned Sylvia, his tone turning businesslike. "After that little slip-up last night on the sofa, she’s going to be hyper-vigilant. I need you to act terrified of her. I need her to feel like she’s in absolute control of the household so she stays complacent."
"Don't worry about me," Sylvia laughed, a cruel, mocking sound. "I can play the victim perfectly. But Julian... what happens if she doesn't sign the papers? What if she gets suspicious?"
Clara held her breath, leaning closer to the crack in the door. She needed to know exactly what kind of monster she was dealing with.
Julian’s eyes darkened, and a chilling, sociopathic calmness settled over his features. "If she doesn't sign... we move to Plan B."
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