From Blood Bag To Billionaire Queen

From Blood Bag To Billionaire Queen

Liz Nozick

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For three years, I was the perfect, invisible wife to Bart Brown. On our third anniversary, I stood in the kitchen for four hours, preparing his favorite meal with imported truffles, only to receive a cold text command. "Crysta fainted again. Get to the hospital. Now." My rare Rh-negative blood was the only thing the Brown family valued. Bart didn't want a wife; he wanted a walking blood bank for his "sick" best friend, Crysta. While I was fainting from chronic anemia, Crysta was smirking in her hospital bed, clutching Bart's hand and mocking my "peasant" lifestyle. Even his mother treated me like a servant, demanding I vacuum the floors after I'd already offered my veins for the hundredth time. When I finally reached my breaking point and signed the divorce papers, they didn't let me go quietly. They filed a false police report, accusing me of stealing a multi-million dollar diamond necklace just to watch me crawl. I didn't understand how a family could be so heartless. I had cooked their meals, cleaned their house, and literally bled for them, yet they were determined to ruin my life the moment I stopped being useful. Did they really think I was a nobody with nowhere to go? Standing outside the hospital with a bruised wrist and nothing to my name, I didn't cry. I simply took off my cheap wedding ring and dialed a secure line I hadn't touched since the day I married him. "It's me, Dad," I whispered as a fleet of black Maybachs rounded the corner. "The extraction is a go. I'm coming home."

Chapter 1 1

The truffle oil smelled like earth and money. It was a heavy, cloying scent that clung to the back of Aleigha's throat.

She stood in the center of the kitchen, the marble island cold against her hip. The knife in her hand moved with a mechanical rhythm. Slice. Chop. Slide. The black truffles, imported from Italy just this morning, fell into perfect, paper-thin discs.

The clock on the wall ticked. Seven o'clock.

She had been standing here for four hours. Her feet throbbed inside her house slippers, a dull ache that radiated up her calves.

It was their third anniversary.

The Beef Wellington, Bart's favorite, sat prepped and ready for the oven. The pastry lattice was a work of art, woven with the kind of patience only a desperate woman possessed.

The phone on the counter buzzed.

The sound was aggressive against the marble. The screen lit up, illuminating the dim kitchen with a harsh, artificial glow.

Hubby.

A reflex, ingrained over three years of conditioning, made her heart jump. A small, pathetic flutter of hope rose in her chest. Maybe he was on his way. Maybe he remembered.

She wiped her damp hands on her apron. She slid the screen unlock.

The hope died instantly, replaced by a physical blow to her stomach.

Crysta fainted again. Low hemoglobin. Get to St. Luke's. Now.

No hello. No anniversary wish. Just a command.

Aleigha stared at the words. The letters seemed to blur, swimming in a pool of sudden, hot moisture that filled her eyes. Her breath hitched, catching in her ribs like a jagged stone.

Another buzz.

Crysta Farmer: So sorry, Aleigha. Bart is just so worried about me. We need your Rh-negative blood again. He won't calm down until you're here.

An image loaded below the text.

It was a photo taken from a low angle, likely from a hospital bed. It showed a man's hand-Bart's hand, with the platinum watch she had bought him for his birthday-clasping a pale, slender female hand against white hospital sheets.

The intimacy of the grip was nauseating. It was tender. Protective.

Everything he never was with her.

Aleigha dropped the phone face down. The clack echoed in the silent kitchen.

A wave of nausea rolled through her. She gripped the edge of the counter, her knuckles turning white. It wasn't just emotional pain anymore. It was physiological. Her body was rejecting this reality.

The front door downstairs slammed open.

High heels clicked sharply against the foyer floor. The sound was distinct, aggressive.

"God, what is that smell?"

Dorla Brown walked into the kitchen, her nose wrinkled as if she had stepped into a sewer. She was carrying an orange Hermès Birkin bag, swinging it carelessly.

She scanned the kitchen, her eyes landing on the tray of prepared food.

"Are we eating this heavy trash tonight?" Dorla asked, tossing her keys onto the counter, dangerously close to the truffles. "It smells like wet dirt. I told you I wanted light salads this week, Aleigha. Are you deaf or just stupid?"

Aleigha looked up. Her voice felt rusty, like she had not used it in days. "It's Beef Wellington. For the anniversary."

"Anniversary?" Dorla laughed. It was a dry, barking sound. "Oh, honey. You're still counting? Bart isn't coming home for this peasant food. He's with someone who actually matters."

Dorla walked over to the refrigerator, opened it, and frowned.

"The maid called out today," Dorla said, not looking at Aleigha. "The carpet in the living room has lint on it. Go vacuum it before you go to bed. And get rid of this smell."

Aleigha looked at her mother-in-law. She looked at the perfectly coiffed hair, the expensive jewelry, the sheer disdain etched into every line of the older woman's face.

For three years, Aleigha had bowed her head. She had cooked, cleaned, and offered her arm for needles until she nearly passed out, all to buy a scrap of affection from this family.

Something inside her chest made a sound. It was a quiet snap, like a dry twig breaking in a winter forest.

The tether was gone.

Aleigha didn't move toward the vacuum cleaner.

Instead, her hands went to the knot behind her back. She untied the apron strings. The fabric fell away from her body, landing in a heap on the floor.

She picked it up.

She walked to the trash compactor, pressed the pedal, and dropped the apron inside.

Dorla turned around, a bottle of water in her hand. Her eyes went wide.

"What are you doing?" Dorla screeched. "Did you just throw that away? Pick it up!"

Aleigha ignored her. She walked past the woman, her movements calm, fluid, and terrifyingly silent. She left the kitchen, the scent of truffles, and the uncooked Wellington behind.

She climbed the stairs.

Her legs didn't hurt anymore. The adrenaline flooding her system numbed everything.

Inside the master bedroom, the air was cold. The air conditioning was always set to Bart's preference.

She walked to the wall safe hidden behind a generic landscape painting. Her fingers punched in the code. 0-9-1-2. September 12th. Crysta's birthday. Bart was too obsessed to change the factory setting to anything else. Even his secrets were dedicated to her.

Inside, nestled between stacks of cash she wasn't allowed to touch, lay a manila envelope.

She pulled it out. Divorce Agreement.

She had drafted it six months ago, on a night when Bart had called her by Crysta's name in his sleep. She hadn't had the courage to sign it then.

She walked to the nightstand. She picked up a pen.

There was no hesitation this time. No trembling. She pressed the tip into the paper, carving her signature into the line. Aleigha Brown.

She stared at the surname. It felt like a shackle she was agreeing to wear for just a few more hours. Soon, it would be gone.

She looked at her left hand.

The diamond was modest. Bart had bought it at a chain store in the mall because he "didn't see the point in wasting capital on jewelry."

She twisted it off. Her finger felt instantly lighter.

She placed the ring on top of the paper.

She pulled her Louis Vuitton carry-on from the closet. She didn't pack the designer dresses Dorla had bought her to "make her look presentable." She didn't pack the jewelry.

She packed two pairs of jeans, three t-shirts, her passport, and a small, velvet-wrapped object from her underwear drawer-her mother's locket.

That was it.

She zipped the bag. The sound was final.

Dorla burst into the room, her face flushed with rage.

"You ungrateful little leech!" Dorla shouted, pointing a manicured finger. "I told you to vacuum! Where do you think you're going?"

Aleigha turned.

She looked at Dorla. Really looked at her. For the first time, she didn't see a matriarch to be feared. She saw a sad, bitter woman with too much filler in her cheeks.

"I'm leaving, Dorla," Aleigha said. Her voice was low, steady, and cold as ice water.

Dorla blinked, taken aback. She stepped back instinctively. "Leaving? Hah! And go where? The gutter you crawled out of? You won't last a day without Bart's money."

Aleigha gripped the handle of her suitcase.

"Tell Bart," Aleigha said, walking toward the door, forcing Dorla to scramble out of her way, "that I don't owe the Brown family a single drop of blood anymore."

"You're crazy!" Dorla yelled after her. "You'll be back crawling on your knees by tomorrow!"

Aleigha walked down the grand staircase. She didn't look at the chandelier. She didn't look at the portraits of Bart's ancestors.

She walked out the front door into the cool Manhattan night.

The wind hit her face, tangling her hair. It felt like oxygen. It felt like life.

Her pocket vibrated again.

She pulled out the phone. Bart calling.

He was probably calling to yell at her for being late to the hospital. To ask why she wasn't currently bleeding into a bag for his precious Crysta.

Aleigha looked at the screen for one second.

She tapped the red button. Then she tapped Block Caller.

She stood under the streetlamp, the yellow light casting a long shadow behind her. She dialed a number she hadn't called in three years. It was a secure line, one she had memorized since childhood but never dared to use.

It rang once.

"It's me," she whispered, her voice finally breaking. "Initiate extraction. I'm done."

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