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The Billionaire's Blind Bride: No Mercy

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 734    |    Released on: 15/01/2026

on her hand

lattering across the linoleum floor of her room. She

Lint.

rward. Just a

struck

ne. It was a sho

eather toe cap. She could feel the qua

up. A crisp pant

hl

sn't a hallucination this time.

her balance and landed hard on h

a squeak. What... wha

ared dow

as bunching up. Her hair was a bird's nest.

as his

rrin

y. But at the image. At the Douglas family.

answer. He

Dahlia start

slid one arm under her knees

ifte

She felt fragile, like h

Put m

cking against his chest.

ordered. You're

ssed into the lapel of his suit. She smelled it

her out o

ople were looking. She could feel their e

isn't a closet,

andle the room and its contents, and carried her down the hall, pa

lia whispered. Thi

as embarrassing, he counter

, ignoring the waiting cro

Top floor. T

resh lilies and money. He deposited her on t

breathing slightl

n't you

her gown. She felt

34B. No emotional obligations

like punchi

sound. So you decided to have major surgery alone? What if th

rthur down,

. You put my lawyer as your emerge

re in

a jet,

hung in

She had never heard him raise his voic

d himself to exhale. He adjust

If he stayed close to her, he might do some

aid into the silence. It proba

Harrington. If the press found out you were in a standard recove

you care abo

e him, but he stared at her bandaged face. H

ut he didn't say what

intercom butt

of Medicine

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The Billionaire's Blind Bride: No Mercy
The Billionaire's Blind Bride: No Mercy
“I married Clive Harrington, the coldest billionaire in Manhattan, under a strict contract that forbade any emotional burdens. When I needed a high-risk surgery to save my sight, I checked into the clinic alone, hiding the procedure from a husband who saw me as nothing more than a legal asset. I thought I could handle the darkness in silence. But while I was blind and bandaged in my hospital bed, my biological mother called, screaming that if I didn't produce a Harrington heir by the end of the fiscal year, she would cut off the life-saving treatments for my disabled sister. I was crawling on the cold hospital floor, desperately feeling for a cane I had dropped, when I touched a pair of expensive leather shoes. It was Clive. He was supposed to be in London closing a multi-million dollar deal, but there he was, watching his "contract wife" groveling in the dark like a beggar. He didn't walk away in disgust. He carried me to a five-thousand-dollar-a-night VIP suite and sat by my bed, listening in chilling silence as another voicemail from my mother filled the room, calling me a "useless broodmare" who was only worth the trust fund disbursements my marriage secured. I expected him to remind me of Clause 34B or hand me divorce papers now that I was "damaged goods." Instead, I felt his thumb brush a stray tear from my cheek, his presence shifting from a statue of ice into a predatory shield. "I thought I was just currency to you," I whispered, my voice trembling behind the gauze. "Just an investment." Clive didn't answer with words. He picked up his phone and called his head of legal with a single, terrifying command: "Kill the Douglas family's credit lines. Every debt, every lien-trigger them all. If they want a war, I'll give them a massacre." As he leaned down to kiss my bandaged forehead, I realized the contract was dead. My husband wasn't protecting an asset anymore; he was hunting the people who had dared to touch what belonged to him.”