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My Billionaire Husband's Deadly Betrayal

My Billionaire Husband's Deadly Betrayal

img Modern
img 16 Chapters
img Gavin
5.0
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About

My husband, tech billionaire Amir Carter, was a god in Chicago. For five years, he was the perfect husband, and I, a pediatric doctor, believed I had finally tamed the infamous playboy. But when my brother Keon needed an urgent heart transplant, everything fell apart. The donor Amir found was a young singer-exactly his type. On the day of the surgery, as my brother was dying, I found my husband comforting her. "Don't pressure her, Blake," he said. "She's delicate." Then the call came. My brother was dead. Amir didn't even notice, annoyed that I was stressing out his new project. He pushed me down a flight of stairs, crashed his car into my taxi to protect her, and gave her the last gift my brother ever made for me. He saw me bleeding on the floor and walked right past, his only concern for the woman who let my brother die. My fairy tale was a lie. I was just another one of his seasonal projects, now completed and discarded. He took everything from me. So I signed the divorce papers, refused his millions, and vanished. Now, he's left alone with the truth: he killed my brother, and he didn't even know it.

Chapter 1

My husband, tech billionaire Amir Carter, was a god in Chicago. For five years, he was the perfect husband, and I, a pediatric doctor, believed I had finally tamed the infamous playboy.

But when my brother Keon needed an urgent heart transplant, everything fell apart. The donor Amir found was a young singer-exactly his type.

On the day of the surgery, as my brother was dying, I found my husband comforting her.

"Don't pressure her, Blake," he said. "She's delicate."

Then the call came. My brother was dead. Amir didn't even notice, annoyed that I was stressing out his new project.

He pushed me down a flight of stairs, crashed his car into my taxi to protect her, and gave her the last gift my brother ever made for me.

He saw me bleeding on the floor and walked right past, his only concern for the woman who let my brother die. My fairy tale was a lie. I was just another one of his seasonal projects, now completed and discarded.

He took everything from me. So I signed the divorce papers, refused his millions, and vanished. Now, he's left alone with the truth: he killed my brother, and he didn't even know it.

Chapter 1

My brother died because my husband chose another woman over him. That was the raw, unvarnished truth that clawed at my insides, a truth more brutal than any surgical incision I' d ever made.

Amir Carter was a god in Chicago, or at least, that' s what the headlines said. Tech billionaire, visionary, charisma that could charm the clothes off a senator. But beneath that polished veneer was a man who saw people as projects, particularly young, impressionable women with untapped talent.

He built them up, molded them, sometimes even loved them-for a season. Then he moved on, leaving a trail of broken dreams and shattered careers in his wake. I' d seen the whispers in financial rags, the hushed gossip at charity galas. There was the indie film director he' d bankrolled and then discarded, the fashion designer whose label he' d launched and then let crash. They all had the same wide-eyed ambition, the same youthful vulnerability that Amir seemed to gravitate towards. He called them "muses." I called them victims.

I was different, or so I thought. I was Blake Franklin, a pediatric resident with calloused hands and a heart full of empathy. My world was sick children and late-night shifts, a stark contrast to Amir's high-flying empire. We met when I was twenty-seven, just young enough, I now realize, to fit his pattern. But I wasn' t an artist. I was a doctor, grounded and practical.

He pursued me like a predator, relentless and charming. Flowers filled my tiny apartment until it smelled like a funeral home. Limousines appeared at the hospital entrance after my shifts, whisking me away to dinners where he knew my favorite dish before I even ordered it. He memorized my coffee order, the exact shade of blue I loved, the obscure medical journals I read. He saw me, truly saw me, or so he made me believe.

He was infamous for his fleeting attachments. But for me, he seemed to change. He started attending my medical conferences, sitting through hours of jargon just to be near me. He even donated millions to the children's hospital, funding a new wing dedicated to cutting-edge research. People whispered that I had "tamed the beast." I was the one who could finally anchor the restless tech titan.

Then came the night he proposed. A packed gala, a dazzling diamond, and a speech about "finding his forever" that brought tears to my eyes and hushed admiration from everyone present. I floated through our wedding, convinced I' d found my fairy tale.

For five years, he was the perfect husband. Attentive, generous, fiercely protective. His possessiveness, I now understand, was not love, but a desire to own. I mistook it for fierce devotion. His world was my oyster. My life, once so ordinary, was now gilded with luxury and adoration.

Then Keon, my bright, artistic younger brother, fell ill. A rare, aggressive cardiomyopathy. His heart was failing. We needed a transplant, and we needed it fast.

Amir, true to his public persona, mobilized his vast resources. He launched a global PR campaign, leveraging his influence to find a donor. And a miracle happened. A match was found.

Her name was Hailie Snider. A struggling singer-songwriter, barely twenty-one. Young. Raw. Undiscovered. And suddenly, my stomach dropped. This was his type.

I met her at the hospital. She seemed so fragile, overwhelmed by the weight of her brother's death and the decision she had to make. I pushed down the chill that snaked through me. My brother's life was at stake. I couldn't let my paranoia cloud my judgment.

Keon was prepped for surgery, his small body hooked up to a tangle of tubes and wires. His eyes, usually so full of life, were distant and weary. Every minute counted.

The day of the transplant, Keon' s vitals plummeted. His heart was giving out. The surgical team was ready, waiting for Hailie' s final consent. I called her phone, again and again. No answer. My heart hammered against my ribs, each beat a painful thud of despair.

Finally, she picked up, her voice small and trembling. "I... I don't know, Blake. It's just so much."

"Hailie, please," I pleaded, my voice cracking. "Keon is dying. There's no more time."

Then I heard his voice, low and intimate, in the background. "Don't pressure her, Blake. She's delicate."

My world tilted. It was Amir. He was with her.

I hung up, the phone a dead weight in my trembling hand. A sickening wave of nausea washed over me. I ran from the hospital, my scrubs a blur against the sterile white walls, my mind a storm of disbelief and rage. I knew where he kept his "creative sanctuary," a secluded loft downtown.

The elevator ride felt like an eternity. When the doors finally hissed open, the scene ripped through me. Amir, his arm wrapped around Hailie's slender waist, her head resting on his shoulder. They were laughing, a sound that pierced my eardrums like shards of glass. My husband, who should have been by my side, was comforting his new protégé.

"She just needs time, Blake," he said, pulling Hailie closer, his eyes devoid of any concern for me. "This is a big decision for her. We can't rush her unique emotional process."

My phone vibrated then, an icy dread creeping up my spine. It was the hospital. I already knew.

"Dr. Franklin," the voice on the other end was strained, "we... we lost him. Keon's heart gave out."

The phone slipped from my fingers, clattering to the polished concrete floor, the sound swallowed by the sudden, deafening silence in my head. My legs gave out. I crumpled to the ground, the cold biting at my skin.

Amir just looked down at me, a flicker of annoyance in his eyes. "Blake, what are you doing here? You know how Hailie gets stressed."

He didn't know. He didn't know Keon was gone. He was still talking about her stress. My fairy tale was a lie. I was just another season in his cycle, a project completed and forgotten, replaced by a younger, fresher canvas. I was nothing. And Keon was dead.

My vision blurred, the world dissolving into a hazy, painful kaleidoscope. The betrayal was a physical weight, crushing me into the ground.

Amir didn't even notice. He was still stroking Hailie's hair, completely oblivious to the crater his selfishness had just blown through my life.

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