Follow
Chapters
Share
The Blood Bag's Billion-Dollar Revenge Novel Cover

The Blood Bag's Billion-Dollar Revenge

I was in the kitchen of the Vance mansion, slicing black truffles worth more than my car while my mother-in-law, Victoria, mocked my "backwoods" origins. My back throbbed from standing for six hours, and my head spun from the chronic anemia I’d developed since marrying into this family. Suddenly, my phone vibrated with a call from my husband, Julian. He didn't ask if I was okay or if I’d eaten; he simply ordered me to get to the hospital because his "fragile" friend Caroline needed another emergency blood transfusion. "Her hemoglobin is low, Seraphina. Get to St. Luke's now." I looked down at my left arm, which was a roadmap of bruises and needle marks hidden beneath my sweater. When I tried to tell him that the medical guidelines forbade donating again so soon, Julian’s voice turned dangerous. "I don't care about guidelines. She’s in crisis, and your anemia is manageable. Are you really going to be this selfish after the life we gave you?" Seconds later, a photo arrived from an unknown number. It showed Julian sitting on Caroline’s hospital bed, tenderly feeding her apples. The text underneath was a visceral slap in the face: "He wouldn't even eat dinner with you, but he's feeding me. Thanks for the refill, blood bag." At that moment, something inside me finally snapped. I realized that to the Vances, I wasn't a wife or even a human being—I was a biological spare part, a servant they kept around only to be drained dry for a woman who was faking her illness. I untied my apron, dropped it into the trash, and walked past a screaming Victoria toward the front door. I picked up the phone and dialed the one number I had been forbidden to contact since my wedding day. "Mr. Henderson, it's Seraphina Sterling. Prepare the divorce papers. And if they contest it... burn their entire empire to the ground."
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The truffle in Seraphina's hand was worth more than the transmission in her battered Honda Civic. It was a black, knobby lump of fungus that smelled like damp earth and money. Her fingers trembled as she sliced it, the razor-sharp mandoline shaving off paper-thin discs that fell onto the marble counter like dark snow.

Her lower back throbbed. She had been standing in this kitchen for six hours.

"Thinner, Seraphina. God, do I have to teach you everything?"

Victoria Vance swept into the kitchen, a cloud of Chanel No. 5 warring with the scent of the truffles. She was dressed in a silver gown that shimmered like fish scales, her face pulled tight by a surgeon's skillful hand. She pinched a handkerchief to her nose, eyeing the stove with disdain.

"The gala starts in two hours," Victoria snapped, tapping a manicured nail against the granite. "If the appetizers aren't plated by the time the guests arrive, don't bother coming out of the kitchen. Not that anyone would notice. You look like a ghost."

Seraphina didn't look up. She focused on the rhythm. Slice. Slice. Slice. If she stopped, she might scream. If she screamed, she wouldn't stop screaming.

"I'm going as fast as I can, Victoria," Seraphina said, her voice raspy. She hadn't had water since noon.

"'Mother'," Victoria corrected sharply. "Or Mrs. Vance. Though how my son ended up with a gold-digging nobody from the backwoods is still the family tragedy of the decade."

Seraphina's hand slipped. The blade nicked her thumb. A bead of bright red blood welled up, stark against the black truffle.

She stared at it. It was just a drop. But in this house, blood was currency.

Her pocket buzzed against her hip. Once. Twice. A persistent, demanding vibration that made her stomach clench. She wiped her thumb on her apron and pulled out the phone.

Julian Vance.

Her heart did that stupid, treacherous stutter it always did when his name appeared. For a split second, she hoped. Maybe he was calling to ask if she was okay. Maybe he was coming home early to help her. Maybe, just once, he was calling as a husband.

She slid her thumb across the screen. "Julian?"

"Get to St. Luke's. Now."

His voice was a splash of ice water. No greeting. No warmth. Just the tone he used for his executive assistant when a merger was going south.

Seraphina gripped the phone tighter. "I... I'm making the appetizers for your mother's gala. I can't leave."

"Leave it," he barked. "Caroline fainted. Her hemoglobin is critically low. She needs a transfusion. The driver is already downstairs."

The air left the room. Seraphina looked down at her left arm, covered by the long sleeve of her cheap gray sweater. Underneath the fabric, the skin was a roadmap of bruises and needle marks. Scar tissue on top of scar tissue.

"Julian," she whispered, turning away from Victoria, who was watching with a shark-like grin. "It hasn't even been eight weeks. The Red Cross guidelines say-"

"I don't care about guidelines, Seraphina," Julian interrupted, his impatience vibrating through the speaker. "Dr. Smith says you're compatible and she's in crisis. Your anemia is manageable; her condition is fatal. Do the math."

Silence on the other end. A heavy, judgmental silence that weighed more than his shouting.

"She could die, Seraphina," Julian said, his voice dropping to a dangerous, quiet register. "Are you really going to hold a grudge over a pint of blood? After everything we've done for you? After the life we gave you?"

The life you gave me.

A life of being a servant. A biological spare part.

"I'm not holding a grudge," she said, her voice shaking. "I'm holding onto consciousness. I can't do it."

"This is what you owe her," Julian cut in, sharp and final. "You signed the agreement. Don't make me send security up there to drag you down. Be at the hospital in twenty minutes."

The line went dead. The beep echoed in her ear, loud and mocking.

She lowered the phone, feeling the blood drain from her face. She felt light, untethered, as if gravity had suddenly decided she wasn't worth holding onto.

Buzz.

The phone vibrated again. A picture message. Unknown number.

Seraphina looked. She shouldn't have, but she looked.

It was a photo taken in a hospital room. Julian was sitting on the edge of a bed, his suit jacket off, sleeves rolled up. He was holding a slice of apple to a woman's lips. Caroline. She looked pale, fragile, ethereal-like a tragic heroine in a Victorian novel. But her eyes, looking straight at the camera, were dancing.

The text below it read:

He wouldn't even eat dinner with you, but he's feeding me. Thanks for the refill, blood bag.

Something inside Seraphina snapped.

It wasn't a loud snap. It was the quiet, dry sound of a dead branch finally giving way under the weight of snow.

She looked at the truffles. She looked at the blood on her thumb. She looked at Victoria, who was checking her reflection in the back of a spoon.

"Well?" Victoria demanded, not looking around. "What did he want? Is that poor girl sick again? You better get going. We don't need you fainting in the soup."

Seraphina set the phone down on the marble. She reached behind her back and untied the apron strings.

The knot came loose. The fabric fell away from her body.

She picked up the apron, balled it up, and dropped it into the trash can. It landed with a soft thud on top of the potato peelings.

Victoria spun around. Her eyes went wide, the Botox straining against the shock. "What do you think you're doing?"

Seraphina walked to the foyer table. Her keys were there. Not keys to a Mercedes or a Bentley, but to a battered Honda Civic she'd bought with cash three years ago, before she became a Vance. Before she became a ghost.

"I asked you a question!" Victoria shrieked, her voice climbing an octave. "If you walk out that door, Seraphina, don't you dare think about coming back! You ungrateful little peasant!"

Seraphina paused at the heavy oak door. She turned. Her spine was straight, her chin lifted. For the first time in three years, she looked Victoria Vance in the eye.

"That's the plan," Seraphina said.

She pushed the door open. The cold November wind hit her face, biting and raw, and it felt like a baptism.

She walked to her car, got in, and locked the doors. Her hands were steady now. The trembling had stopped.

She pulled out her phone and dialed a number she hadn't called since her wedding day.

"Mr. Henderson," she said when the voice answered. "It's Seraphina. Prepare the papers. I want a divorce. And if they contest it... burn them to the ground."

She hung up. Her fingers hovered over Julian's contact. She typed one last message.

On my way to the hospital. Bringing you a surprise.

She threw the phone onto the passenger seat and started the engine. The Honda sputtered, then roared to life. As she peeled out of the driveway, leaving the gilded cage of the Vance estate in her rearview mirror, she didn't feel fear.

She felt dangerous.

You may also like

Defying The Ruthless Billionaire Heir Novel Cover
7.6
Johana walked half a mile through a brutal blizzard just to secure a tutoring job with the elite Black family. But the very night she was hired, she received a terrifying call from the ER—her quiet roommate, Hazelle, had been drugged and severely traumatized at a Hamptons party. When Johana rushed to the hospital, she didn't find the police. Instead, she found a team of ruthless billionaires erasing the crime. Leading them was Dalton Black, the cold, arrogant older brother of her new student. Within minutes, Dalton's fixers wiped the hospital's security footage, deleted all digital evidence, and forcefully transferred Hazelle to a locked private psychiatric facility. "We are ensuring her privacy." Dalton's voice was devoid of emotion, treating the horrific assault like a minor PR glitch. His friends mocked Johana's powerlessness, while Dalton authorized a blank check to pay for the private ward, effectively burying the scandal and buying their silence. Johana stood in the sterile hallway, trembling with a mix of despair and absolute rage. How could they destroy an innocent girl's life and simply pay to make it disappear? Why was the truth so easily erased by money? She had no wealth, no connections, and no proof, but she refused to be a victim of their cover-up. Staring directly into Dalton's intimidating, icy blue eyes, Johana made a vow. "I don't want your money. I will find out what you monsters did to her." She thought the billionaire heir would crush her on the spot, but instead, he watched her walk away and quietly ordered his assistant: "Find out everything about Johana Neal."
He Saved His Mistress, Not His Wife Novel Cover
9.2
I was trapped under a massive oak bookcase, my leg shattered, dust filling my lungs. My husband, Dante, the Underboss of the Chicago Outfit, finally found me. But just as he lifted the heavy beam to free me, his earpiece crackled. It was news about Sofia, his childhood friend and the woman he truly loved. "She scratched her arm on the car door, Boss. She's hyperventilating. She won't board the jet without you." Dante froze. He looked at me, bleeding on the floor, secretly ten weeks pregnant with his child. Then he looked at the door. "It's just a broken leg, Elena," he said coldly, slowly lowering the crushing weight back onto me. "You are a doctor. You know it's not fatal. Sofia needs me." He ran to comfort a woman with a papercut, leaving his wife and unborn child to be buried alive in the rubble. I miscarried alone in the dark, tracing the number of a divorce lawyer on the floorboards in my own blood. Three days later, while he was peeling grapes for Sofia in a VIP hospital suite, I packed my medical degree and a single gym bag. I didn't go to a hotel. I boarded a military cargo plane to a war zone in South Sudan. By the time the Ice Prince realized his castle was empty, I was already thousands of miles away, and I wasn't coming back.
My Husband's Secret, My Silent War Novel Cover
7.5
On our third wedding anniversary, my husband's "best friend," Jade, told a room full of people about the night she spent kissing a scar on his hip. My husband, Julian, just laughed. He chose her, not me. That night, I found their secret group chat. They called me "the ball and chain." But the worst message was from Julian. He confessed he'd been swapping my birth control pills with placebos for a year, all while promising to be a sperm donor for her. He had held me while I cried over my "unexplained infertility," telling me I was all he needed. It was all a sick, calculated lie. The next morning, he left for her birthday trip, forgetting it was my birthday too. He told me to stay home. Instead, I got in my car and followed them. I was done watching my marriage die. It was time to burn his world to the ground.
Owned by the Devil King Novel Cover
8.2
Elara Voss runs from an arranged marriage-only to fall into the hands of the most dangerous man in the city. Nikolai Volkov is known as the Devil King, ruler of an underground empire built on fear, loyalty, and blood. Cold, ruthless, and untouchable, he has no weakness-until Elara crashes into his world carrying a family name tied to his darkest betrayal. Taken as leverage against her powerful father, Elara refuses to submit, even when trapped inside Nikolai's gilded cage. Her defiance fuels his obsession. What begins as captivity turns into a slow-burning, forbidden attraction neither of them can escape. But love built on lies always demands a price. As secrets unravel and enemies close in, Elara must decide whether to destroy the man who owns her-or become the woman who rules beside him. A dark, emotionally intense mafia romance filled with obsession, betrayal, redemption, and a love strong enough to challenge an empire.
Rebirth Over the Deep Novel Cover
9.1
I had thalassophobia, a condition rooted in an incident ten years ago when I saved Alec Johnson from a dangerous undertow. He once held my shivering body and swore he would never let me near the ocean again. Later, his first love, Rosalyn Martin, known as the "Mermaid Dancer," injured herself before a crucial underwater documentary shoot. Unable to find a stand-in, he turned to me. He locked me in a swaying cabin, his eyes bloodshot as he pleaded, "Maeve, your build is the closest to hers. Please, finish this last underwater ballet scene for her. This is her lifelong dream. I'm begging you." They forced me into a diving suit and pushed me into the dark, icy depths that had nearly claimed my life once before. When I surfaced, driven by sheer survival instinct, I saw him cradling a tearful Rosalyn, soothing her gently. "Rosalyn, don't cry. Your dream is complete." No one noticed I had nearly died down there. He didn't know that every investment in his thriving company came from me. What he was about to destroy wasn't just my love but his entire future.
SINFUL DESIRES 1 Novel Cover
8.3
In this high-stakes modern romance, dark secrets and intense action collide when two lives become irrevocably intertwined. As hidden truths surface, the protagonists must navigate a dangerous world where every choice carries a heavy price. Their growing bond is tested by external threats and internal conflicts that threaten to tear them apart. Forced to confront their pasts, they fight for a future where their deepest longings might finally be realized.