From Captive Fake Daughter To Untouchable Billionaire Heiress
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, Olivers 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 wasnt 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 wearit 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 Olivers 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 Greenvilles 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 Olivers "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.
"Shes just the hired help," he announced to the room. "A greedy opportunist who blackmailed her way into this house. Shell be serving the drinks tonight."
The crowd erupted into quiet, mocking laughter.
I heard every whisper. I saw the triumphant smirk hiding behind Beatrices innocent eyes. I felt the crushing weight of Olivers 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."
Did you honestly believe a few drops of marrow could make you his real wife?
Beatrices voice was a sickly sweet whisper, meant only for my ears.
I had turned away from the grand hall, leaving my faded coat on the marble floor, but Beatrice had followed me into the quiet, dimly lit corridor. She blocked my path, swirling a glass of red wine, her eyes gleaming with a vicious sort of triumph.
Oliver only keeps you around because Julians body is failing, she sneered, stepping closer. To him, you arent a person. Youre just a medical supply.
I didnt argue. I didnt have the energy to fight her. I just wanted to walk out the door and never look back.
But as she leaned in, the dim light caught the silver necklace resting against her collarbone.
My breath stopped.
It was a silver locket. The metal was slightly warped, the intricate floral engraving blackened at the edges.
It was my locket.
Ten years ago, I had dragged a teenage Oliver out of a burning warehouse. The smoke had scorched my lungs, and the falling debris had left a permanent scar on my shoulder. I had lost my locket in the ashes that night.
When Oliver woke up in the hospital, Beatrice was the one sitting by his bed. She had found my locket, claimed it as her own, and took all the credit for saving his life. That was why Oliver loved her. That was why she was his untouchable "White Moonlight," while I was just the greedy opportunist who forced him into marriage.
I stared at the warped silver. You stole that.
Beatrice noticed my gaze. Her hand flew to the locket, her smirk widening into a wicked grin.
So what if I did? she whispered. He believes me. He will always believe me. You could scream the truth until your throat bleeds, Carmella, and he would still look at you with nothing but disgust.
She was right. I had tried to tell him once, early in our marriage. Oliver had looked at me with such profound revulsion, accusing me of trying to steal Beatrices heroism, that I never brought it up again.
Keep it, I said, my voice dead and flat. You two deserve each other.
I stepped around her to leave.
But Beatrice wasnt finished.
Her eyes flashed with sudden malice. She raised her crystal wine glass and slammed it hard against the marble pillar beside us. The glass shattered into jagged shards.
Without a second of hesitation, she dragged a sharp piece across her own forearm, slicing the skin.
Blood welled up instantly, spilling bright red over her custom gown.
Then, she threw herself to the floor and let out a blood-curdling scream.
Ah! Carmella, please! Why would you do this?!
The music in the grand hall stopped abruptly. Footsteps echoed like thunder as the party guests rushed into the corridor.
Oliver was the first to arrive.
When he saw Beatrice on the floor, bleeding and crying, all the color drained from his face. He dropped to his knees, pulling her into his arms with a frantic, desperate panic I had never once seen him display.
Beatrice! What happened? he demanded, his hands trembling as he pressed his handkerchief to her bleeding arm.
I I just wanted to talk to her, Beatrice sobbed, burying her face in his chest. She was so angry, Oliver. She pushed me into the glass. She said I didn't deserve to be here.
Olivers head snapped up. His eyes locked onto me, burning with a hatred so intense it felt physical.
You vicious, jealous bitch, he spat.
I didnt touch her, I said calmly. My voice didnt shake. I was too tired to panic. She cut herself.
Shut up! Oliver roared. He scooped Beatrice up in his arms. Doctor! Get the estate doctor right now! Beatrice has a delicate constitution. She loses blood too quickly!
The medical team, always on standby for Julian, rushed into the corridor.
Oliver turned his furious glare back to me. Take her to the clinic room immediately. Draw her blood for Beatrice. As much as she needs.
The guests gasped, but no one intervened.
I stared at the man I had called my husband for three years.
No, I said, my voice steady. I just had a marrow extraction two hours ago. My red blood cell count is critically low. If you take my blood now, I will die.
Olivers expression didnt soften. There was no hesitation, no flicker of concern for my life.
Then die making yourself useful, he said coldly. Take her.
Two burly security guards stepped forward to grab my arms. I struggled, my weakened body screaming in pain, but I was no match for them.
Stop! Let her go!
A rough, panicked voice broke through the crowd.
I looked up and saw my father. Arthur Vance.
He was wearing a stained, gray janitors uniform, holding a heavy wooden mop cane. He had taken a job at Olivers estate to keep up his "destitute" act, pretending to scrub floors while secretly buying fifty-million-dollar yachts.
For a split second, a foolish, desperate hope flared in my chest. My father is here. Hes going to stop them. Hes going to save me.
Arthur pushed through the crowd. He looked at Beatrice, bleeding in Olivers arms, and his face twisted in horror.
Then, he turned to me.
There was no love in his eyes. Only sheer panic that his precious adopted daughter was hurt, and absolute terror that Oliver might blame their family.
To appease the billionaire, and to protect Beatrice, my father raised his heavy wooden cane.
He didn't aim for the guards. He aimed for me.
Crack.
The thick wood slammed into the back of my knees. My legs gave out instantly, and I crashed hard onto the marble floor.
Before I could even process the pain, the cane came down again, striking my back with brutal, sickening force.
You ungrateful monster! my father screamed, his face red with performative rage. How dare you hurt your sister! We raised you to be humble, and you turn into this jealous, vicious snake!
Crack.
Another blow hit my ribs. The air was knocked from my lungs.
Mr. Sterling, please forgive her! my father begged Oliver, panting as he stood over my broken body. She has always been a bad seed! Take whatever blood you need from her to save my Beatrice!
The crowd watched in silence. Oliver looked down at me with cold satisfaction. Beatrice hid a smirk against his chest.
I lay on the cold marble floor, my vision swimming. A sharp, metallic taste filled my mouth. I coughed, and bright red blood splattered across the pristine white stone.
The physical pain was agonizing, but it was nothing compared to the absolute, hollow silence in my chest.
My husband wanted me dead to save his fake savior. My father beat me to protect the daughter he actually loved.
My entire life was a cruel, elaborate joke.
I didn't cry. I didn't beg. I just closed my eyes, letting the darkness pull me under, knowing that the Carmella who loved them had just died on this floor.
My ribs were tightly wrapped beneath the stiff, suffocating fabric of the black chauffeurs uniform.
Every breath I took was a sharp, jagged stab of agony. It had been exactly one week since my father broke his wooden cane across my back on the marble floor of the estate.
I hadnt fully healed. I was still severely anemic, still coughing up blood into the bathroom sink, still struggling to stand upright.
But Oliver didnt care. He had deemed me "unfit" to attend the Greenville Charity Gala by his side. Instead, he had tossed the keys to the extended Maybach at my feet.
"You want to act like a vicious, low-class servant?" he had sneered, his eyes filled with contempt. "Then do a servant's job. Drive us."
So, I drove.
The rain was a solid, unrelenting wall of water, hammering against the windshield.
The wipers slashed back and forth frantically, but the road ahead was barely visible.
In the rearview mirror, the scene was entirely different. The back of the Maybach was a warm, luxurious cocoon. Beatrice was draped in a glittering silver gown, her head resting gently on Olivers shoulder.
He was whispering something to her, his hand softly stroking her hair. They looked like a magazine cover. They looked like soulmates.
I kept my eyes on the slick, dark road. My hands gripped the leather steering wheel, my knuckles white.
I felt nothing looking at them. The beating last week had shattered my ribs, but it had also shattered the pathetic, lingering illusion that Oliver would ever look at me with anything other than disgust. I was numb. I was just waiting for the right moment to disappear completely.
We approached the main intersection at the edge of the city. The traffic light above us glowed a steady, bright green.
I pressed the accelerator to pass through.
Then, the blaring horn ripped through the sound of the rain.
A massive, eighteen-wheel freight truck came barreling out of the darkness from the intersecting street. It was moving too fast, completely ignoring the red light. The driver was drunk, asleep, or both.
The blinding glare of the trucks headlights flooded the cabin of the Maybach.
Time slowed down to a crawl.
I saw the trajectory of the massive steel grille. It wasn't aiming for the front of the car. It was hurtling directly toward the rear passenger door.
Straight for Oliver.
I had spent the last week realizing I meant absolutely nothing to him. I knew he would gladly watch me die if it meant saving Beatrice a drop of blood. I knew he hated me.
But ten years of ingrained muscle memorythe exact same instinct that had made me drag his unconscious body from a burning warehouse when we were teenagershijacked my brain.
I didn't think. I didn't weigh the pros and cons.
I just reacted.
I yanked the steering wheel violently to the right, slamming my foot on the gas.
The heavy luxury car swerved sharply, the tires screeching against the wet asphalt. I threw my side of the car directly into the path of the speeding truck, using the driver's seat as a steel shield.
The impact was apocalyptic.
The sound of tearing metal and exploding glass was deafening. The airbag deployed, punching me in the face, but it wasn't enough to stop the crushing force of the truck.
The driver's side door caved inward like a crushed tin can.
The steering column snapped and pinned my chest, driving my already fractured ribs deep into my lungs.
The Maybach spun wildly across the wet intersection, metal sparking against the pavement, before finally slamming into a concrete traffic pillar and coming to a violent halt.
Darkness flickered at the edges of my vision.
The pain was absolute. It was a blinding, suffocating agony that radiated from my crushed chest down to my trapped legs. A warm, thick liquid poured down my forehead, blinding my left eye.
The engine hissed, smoking in the heavy rain.
For a long moment, there was only the sound of the storm.
Then, a groan from the back seat.
"Beatrice?"
Oliver's voice. It was frantic. Terrified.
"Beatrice, are you okay? Talk to me!"
"Oliver... my arm," Beatrice whimpered, her voice trembling. "It hurts. I'm scared."
I tried to speak. I tried to make a sound, to let them know I was crushed, that I was bleeding out in the front seat. But when I opened my mouth, a thick wave of blood bubbled up my throat, choking me.
I heard the heavy, desperate thud of Oliver kicking his jammed door open. The hinges screamed, and the door gave way. The freezing rain poured into the ruined cabin.
Through the shattered remnants of the rearview mirror, I watched him.
He unbuckled Beatrice with shaking hands. He carefully, gently lifted her into his arms, wrapping his expensive suit jacket around her shoulders to shield her from the rain.
"I've got you," he whispered to her. "The ambulance is already pulling up. You're going to be fine."
He stepped out into the storm.
I lay pinned against the steering wheel, my blood soaking into the leather seat. My right hand twitched, reaching slightly toward the back.
Look at me, I thought. Just look at me once.
Oliver didn't look forward. He didn't check the front seat. He didn't ask if the driverhis wifewas alive.
He didn't even glance at the crushed, mangled metal that was currently suffocating me to death.
He turned his back to the wreckage and walked away, carrying Beatrice toward the flashing red and blue lights of the arriving paramedics.
I watched his broad shoulders disappear into the rain through the shattered windshield.
The cold seeped into my bones, replacing the pain. My breathing grew shallow, the blood filling my lungs.
As my eyes slowly fluttered shut, a strange, profound sense of peace washed over me.
I had saved his life ten years ago, and I had just saved it again tonight. My debt to him, my foolish, unrequited love, was finally paid in full.
The Carmella who loved Oliver Sterling died in that crushed driver's seat.
When I woke up, I would never look back.
Your body is completely shutting down. At best, you have three months to live.
I woke up to the steady, hollow beep of a heart monitor. I wasnt in the VIP wing of Greenville General, where Julian was kept in a state-of-the-art suite.
I was in a cheap, unheated trauma ward on the outskirts of the city. The paramedics who pried me from the crushed metal of the Maybach had dropped me at the nearest public clinic.
Oliver hadn't bothered to arrange a transfer. He hadn't even called.
The doctor stood at the foot of my thin, stiff bed, holding a clipboard. His eyes were full of a heavy, uncomfortable pity.
"Late-stage leukemia," he said, his voice quiet.
The irony was almost suffocating. The woman who had been kept as a human blood bag, whose bone marrow was endlessly harvested to keep a billionaire alive, was dying of poisoned blood.
"Your system is entirely depleted," the doctor explained, flipping through my charts. "Years of severe malnutrition. Unhealed physical trauma. And the excessive, unregulated marrow extractions... they destroyed your body's ability to regenerate. There is nothing we can do."
Three months.
I didn't cry. I didn't ask for a second opinion. I just nodded, pulled the IV needle out of the back of my hand, and swung my bruised legs over the side of the bed.
"You can't leave," the doctor protested, stepping forward. "You have fractured ribs, internal bleeding"
"I have to go get my dog," I interrupted, my voice flat and hollow.
I walked out of the hospital in the thin, paper-like scrubs they had put me in. The storm from the night of the crash hadn't stopped. The freezing rain plastered the thin fabric to my skin, but I didn't feel the cold. I didn't feel the agonizing pain in my chest. I felt absolutely nothing.
I walked for three miles in the pouring rain.
My only thought was Barnaby. He was a stray golden retriever I had found shivering in an alley two years ago. I had smuggled him into the servant's quarters of Oliver's estate.
He was the only living creature in that massive, sprawling mansion who was happy to see me. He was the only one who didn't look at me with absolute disgust.
When I finally reached the towering iron gates of the Sterling estate, my bare feet were bleeding.
The head of security stepped out of the guardhouse, holding a large black umbrella. He looked at my soaked, battered state with a familiar sneer.
"Where is Barnaby?" I asked, my voice raspy.
The guard crossed his arms. "The mutt? Mr. Sterling ordered us to throw it out last night."
My breath hitched. "Out? Where?"
"Out on the street," the guard replied carelessly. "Miss Beatrice was startled when she came home from the hospital. The dog barked at her. She said it gave her a fright. Mr. Sterling was furious. He told us to kick it out the gates and make sure it didn't come back."
Thrown out. Into a freezing, blinding storm.
I didn't argue. I didn't scream at the guard. I turned around and began to walk down the winding, unlit mountain road that led away from the estate.
I searched the dark, wet ditches. I called his name, my voice cracking and fading into the heavy rain.
"Barnaby."
I walked for another mile.
Then, I saw a patch of gold resting against the cold, gray asphalt.
He was lying on the side of the road, just past a sharp curve. The rain was washing over his matted fur. A passing car had hit him and didn't even bother to stop.
I slowly walked over to him. My knees finally gave out.
I collapsed into the thick, freezing mud beside his body. I reached out with a trembling hand and touched his head. He was completely cold. The soft, warm eyes that used to watch me with such pure, unconditional love were closed forever.
Because he barked at Beatrice.
Because my husband wanted to comfort the woman who stole my locket.
I knelt in the mud, the freezing rain beating down on my back, my hands buried in Barnaby's wet fur.
In the past, I would have broken down. I would have screamed at the sky, sobbing until my throat bled, asking God why I was being punished. I would have run back to the mansion, demanding an explanation from Oliver, begging him to show just an ounce of humanity.
But as I knelt there, staring at the only thing I had left in the world, something inside me quietly snapped.
It wasn't a loud, dramatic break. It was a silent, absolute death.
I didn't shed a single tear. I didn't scream.
The obsessive, desperate love I had harbored for Oliver Sterling for ten long yearsthe love that made me endure the marrow extractions, the abuse, the humiliation, the crushed ribsevaporated into thin air. It was gone. Erased.
I looked down at my hands, stained with mud and Barnaby's cold blood.
I had three months left to live.
I wasn't going to spend them crying over a man who treated me worse than dirt. I wasn't going to spend them being a blood bag for a family of parasites.
I gently picked up Barnaby's heavy, lifeless body. I held him close to my chest, ignoring the sharp agony of my fractured ribs.
I stood in the cramped, windowless room at the end of the servants hall that had been my bedroom for three years. I packed a single, small duffel bag with two changes of faded clothes.
Before leaving, I walked up the grand staircase to Olivers private study. Sitting in his top drawer were the divorce papers he had drafted a year ago to keep me obedient.
I pulled the thick stack of documents out, picked up his expensive fountain pen, and signed my name.
When I reached the section for the billion-dollar compensation clause, I drew a single, hard line through the empty boxes.
I folded the papers, left them dead center on his mahogany desk, and walked out of the estate forever.
My last stop was Greenville General Hospital. I bypassed the chaotic emergency wing and took the private elevator up to the VIP floor. Julians room was quiet.
"Live well, Julian," I whispered to his sleeping form. "My debt to your brother is paid in full."
I turned and walked out of the hospital, stepping into the freezing, overcast courtyard. I had three months to live, and I planned to spend them as far away from Greenville as possible.
"Where do you think you're going?"
The sharp, mocking voice made me stop.
Beatrice was standing alone beneath the hospital awning. Oliver was nowhere in sightlikely inside settling her discharge paperwork or retrieving the car.
She wore a pristine designer coat, her arm wrapped in a delicate bandage from the crash. When she saw the cheap duffel bag in my hand, a cruel smirk spread across her face.
"Running away?" Beatrice sneered, stepping into my path. "Finally realized Oliver will never love a pathetic blood bag? Good. It saves me the trouble of having him throw you out."
"I left the signed divorce papers on his desk," I said, my voice completely dead. "You can have him."
I tried to step around her, but my absolute apathy infuriated her. Beatrice was used to me crying. She was used to me begging.
"Don't you walk away from me!" she hissed, lunging forward and grabbing my arm with her good hand. Her perfectly manicured nails dug into my bruises. "You don't get to leave on your terms, Carmella! You leave when we say you're done!"
"Let go of me," I warned, my voice dangerously low.
"Or what?" she taunted, raising her hand to slap me. "You're nothing! You're a stray"
I didn't think. I just reacted.
I violently ripped my arm out of her grip and shoved her backward. I didn't push hard, but Beatrice stumbled in her designer heels and fell hard onto the wet pavement, scraping her knees.
"You bitch!" she shrieked, her eyes wide with fury. "I'm going to tell Oliver you attacked me! He'll kill you!"
I didn't wait for Oliver to walk out those hospital doors. I wasn't going to let him drag me back to that mansion.
I turned and ran.
I sprinted out of the hospital gates and into the freezing rain. My fractured ribs screamed in agony with every step, and my lungs burned, but I didn't stop.
I ran down the slick, gray sidewalk, desperate to disappear into the city.
I reached the busy main intersection. The pedestrian light was red, but I couldn't wait. I just needed to get to the other side. I needed to be free.
I stepped off the curb and bolted into the street.
I didn't hear the screeching tires over the sound of the pouring rain. I only saw the sudden, blinding glare of headlights to my left.
A massive, pitch-black Maybach was hurtling through the intersection.
Time froze. I turned my head, staring directly into the chrome grille of the armored car.
Smash.
The impact was devastating. The heavy steel shattered my remaining strength, throwing me violently through the freezing air.
I hit the wet asphalt with a sickening thud. My duffel bag skidded away, spilling my faded clothes into the muddy puddles.
The world instantly tilted on its axis. A high-pitched ringing drowned out the sound of the rain. I lay on the freezing road, completely paralyzed, my blood pooling onto the street.
Through my rapidly darkening vision, I looked back toward the hospital gates.
Beatrice was standing on the sidewalk. She wasn't screaming or faking a cry anymore. The delicate, victimized mask had completely slipped. As she stared at my broken body bleeding out in the street, a slow, chilling smirk spread across her face.
The sleek black Maybach skidded to a halt just a few feet away. The heavy, armored doors flew open.
I couldn't move. I couldn't breathe.
The last thing I saw before my eyes rolled back was a pair of immaculate, expensive leather shoes stepping out of the black car and rushing toward me.
Then, everything went pitch black.
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