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The Blind Billionaire's Hidden Genius Wife

Chapter 7 7

Word Count: 561    |    Released on: 07/02/2026

ng back,

ing. She was wearing a tailored black dress

ed. To the Qui

. My mother wore it every day. I

end a

hide it. I

coming

You never lea

into a den of vipers alone.

d. Right.

, it was a circus. Reporters were swarming

reporter shouted, shoving

ly here fo

. She walked around to the other side and o

put on his sunglasses. He looked like a

ard the door. The r

rling! L

was a small gesture, but it

, he

s parted lik

looked ten years older. Tiffany's fac

te time. Give m

d. We lost i

ffany. There was a silver chain peeking out fr

i

hed over

Tiffany shriek

ter and ripped it down. The silver pendan

neck and unclasped it. Tiffany tried to scra

Le

e, Sera sa

ard. That's enough!

d his cane on

ce bored. Do you want me to bu

me f

Harrison said. Wh

e metal was warm from Tiffany's skin, which made

to Harrison

porters were still ther

oove. She pressed it with her fingernail. The intricate silver filigree on the back shifted, a section slid

heard t

t? he

the key ti

e said softly

just hate it when peo

ed at him

idn't matter what he called he

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The Blind Billionaire's Hidden Genius Wife
The Blind Billionaire's Hidden Genius Wife
“My father didn't look at me like a daughter; he looked at me like a bad loan he needed to settle. After five years of being nothing but a monthly expense on his ledger, I was shoved back into the Quinn mansion, smelling the expensive lavender that masked the rot beneath the floorboards. He slammed a prenuptial agreement onto the mahogany table and gave me a heartless ultimatum. "Sign it and marry Harrison Sterling, or I call the care facility in ten minutes and tell them to pull the plug on your mother's life support." My stepmother Lydia told me I should be grateful for this "future," while my stepsister Tiffany kicked a bag with her old, hideous wedding dress at my feet. They told me I was born for nothing but to pay off their debts. I was shipped off in the rain to the Sterling estate, a stone fortress where the housekeeper treated me like a servant and locked me in a pitch-black room. Inside, my new husband-a man rumored to be a blind, unstable monster-hurled a crystal glass at my head and tried to strangle me with his bare hands. I could feel the tremors in his grip and the sickly-sweet smell of neurotoxins on his breath. I realized then that Harrison wasn't the master of this house; he was a specimen in a jar, being systematically poisoned by his own family while cameras watched his every move. My own father had sold me into a death trap, thinking I was just a desperate girl with nowhere else to go. But they didn't know I had been living a double life as a medical prodigy who graduated from Johns Hopkins at nineteen. I pinned my "monster" husband to the floor, pulled a set of silver acupuncture needles from the hem of my dress, and made him a deal. "I'll give you your eyes back, and in exchange, you help me burn both our families to the ground."”