From Captive Fake Daughter To Untouchable Billionaire Heiress Novel

From Captive Fake Daughter To Untouchable Billionaire Heiress Novel – Chapter 1 “Take as much marrow as Julian needs. If she faints, wake her up and keep drawing.” Those were the exact instructions my billionaire husband, Oliver Sterling, gave the head nurse over the phone before hanging up. I lay on the crisp, sterile paper of the examination table, staring at the ceiling as a thick needle pierced my lower back. The hum of the extraction machine filled the freezing room, pulling the dark, vital fluid from my bones. It was the only thing keeping Julian, Oliver’s sickly twin brother, alive. For three years, this was the entirety of my marriage. He married me because my rare bone marrow was the perfect, one-in-a-million match for his brother. To Oliver, I wasn’t a wife. I was a biological necessity. A blood bag he had legally bound to his family. “All done, Mrs. Sterling,” the nurse said. She slapped a thick piece of gauze over the puncture wound and turned away to label the blood bags.

I sat up slowly, gripping the metal edge of the table as the room violently spun. I was dizzy, pale, and completely drained Oliver hadn’t come with me. He never did. I pulled my faded, threadbare coat tight over my shivering shoulders and walked out of the private clinic into the biting wind. I dragged my exhausted body onto two different buses, heading toward the rundown, cramped neighborhood where my biological parents lived. They claimed to be destitute street sweepers. Ever since they found me and brought me back into their lives, they had preached one constant, unyielding lesson: Carmella, you must endure hardship to build character. They refused to take a single cent from Oliver, claiming they had pride, and forced me to live as though I were still scraping by in the gutters. My mother opened it, her face instantly pulling into a tight, irritated frown when she saw my pale, sweating face. “What do you want now?” she demanded, her body blocking the doorway. “Mom,” I whispered, leaning against the doorframe just to keep my knees from buckling. “I feel terribly ill.

I just had another extraction for Julian. Could you lend me a hundred dollars? Just to buy some iron supplements and a hot meal.” “A hundred dollars? Do you think money grows on trees?” she scolded, her voice sharp enough to cut glass. “Your father and I sweep streets from dawn till dusk! You are so materialistic, Carmella. Always asking for money, always looking for an easy way out. You need to learn how to suffer silently. It builds character.” She turned around, grabbed a greasy doggie bag from the cluttered kitchen counter, and shoved it hard against my chest. “Here. We brought this back from a cheap diner. Eat the marrow out of these leftover chicken bones. It’s good enough for you.” I looked down at the grease staining the cheap paper bag. Leftover bones. That was what my health, my actual life, was worth to my own mother. “Take the trash out on your way,” she added coldly, kicking a heavy black garbage bag toward my feet before slamming the door shut in my face.

I picked up the heavy trash bag and dragged it down the stairs to the alley dumpster. As I hoisted it up, the thin plastic snagged on a rusty metal edge and tore wide open. Trash spilled onto the wet, grimy pavement. I bent down to pick it up, my hands shaking from weakness. That was when a thick, glossy brochure caught my eye. It had slipped out of a pristine, high-end envelope that looked entirely out of place in this dirty alley. I picked it up. It was a custom brochure for a luxury yacht. Attached to the back was a finalized receipt. Paid in full. $50,000,000. Purchaser: Arthur and Martha Vance. Gifted to: Beatrice Vance. Beatrice. My parents’ precious adopted daughter. My “destitute” parents, who had just told me to suck the marrow out of leftover chicken bones to cure my severe anemia, had just bought a fifty-million-dollar yacht for their adopted daughter. The coldness that seeped into my bones suddenly had nothing to do with the marrow extraction. All these years, the poverty, the endless lectures on hardship, the ragged clothes they forced me to wear—it was all a lie. I dropped the receipt into the trash.

The last shred of hope I had for my family died right there in that dirty alley. I took a taxi back to Oliver’s estate. I just wanted to lie down in my small, dark room. I felt like my heart might stop beating from the sheer exhaustion. But when the heavy oak doors opened, I wasn’t greeted by the usual cold silence. The mansion was blazing with crystal chandeliers. A live string quartet played in the grand hall. Waiters in white gloves carried trays of expensive champagne through a crowd of Greenville’s elite. I stood in the entryway, wearing my cheap, faded coat, looking like a ghost who had wandered into the wrong world. Then, I saw her. Beatrice. She was wearing a stunning, custom-made red gown, standing at the very center of the room. And standing right beside her, holding her waist with a gentleness he had never once shown me, was my husband. Oliver. Beatrice wasn’t just my parents’ favored adopted daughter. She was Oliver’s “White Moonlight”—his untouchable first love. She had been abroad for three years.

The exact length of my marriage. “Oh, Oliver,” she whispered softly, but loud enough for the nearby guests to hear. “Is this… Carmella? Why does she look so dreadful?” The guests turned to stare at me all at once. Their eyes were filled with pity, amusement, and blatant disdain. “Don’t mind her, Beatrice,” Oliver said, his voice echoing clearly across the marble floor. He looked at me as if I were a piece of dirt staining his expensive rug. “She’s just the hired help,” he announced to the room. “A greedy opportunist who blackmailed her way into this house. She’ll be serving the drinks tonight.” The crowd erupted into quiet, mocking laughter.

I heard every whisper. I saw the triumphant smirk hiding behind Beatrice’s innocent eyes. I felt the crushing weight of Oliver’s hatred. In the past, I would have lowered my head. I would have felt the sting of tears, desperately trying to explain myself, begging for a scrap of dignity or a sliver of affection from the man I was legally bound to. But today, my marrow had been drained, my parents had fed me trash, and my husband had stripped away my name in front of the whole city.

I didn’t cry. Instead, I calmly took off my faded coat and dropped it onto the pristine marble floor. I looked straight into Oliver’s cold eyes, my voice steady and loud enough to cut through the laughter. “If I am the hired help,” I said, “then consider this my resignation.”

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