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The Comatose Billionaire's Secret Genius Bride

The Comatose Billionaire's Secret Genius Bride

img Romance
img 40 Chapters
img Maui
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About

Arletta Lee was dragged out of rural Pennsylvania to be a sacrificial bride for the comatose billionaire heir, Josue Mcconnell. The moment she stepped into the massive estate, she became the prime target of a vicious, greedy family. Josue's stepmother and half-brother viewed her as cheap trash. They didn't just want her gone; they wanted Josue dead. Kyler broke into her room at night reeking of bourbon, and later sneaked into the medical wing with a lethal synthetic neurotoxin aimed right at Josue's IV line. His jealous cousin even tried to permanently disfigure her face with a thermos of boiling water. "She's just a cheap good-luck charm the old man bought. We can throw her out with the trash whenever we want." They relentlessly bullied her, thinking she was just a helpless, terrified country girl who would quietly take the blame for their murder plot. But what the arrogant Mcconnell family didn't know was that her pathetic, trembling demeanor was entirely manufactured. They thought they had trapped a frightened rabbit in a den of wolves. In reality, Arletta was a brilliant underground surgeon. Using ancient neural acupuncture hidden in a simple wooden hairpin, she flawlessly turned their traps against them, locking Kyler away and winning the ruthless patriarch's absolute protection. As the supposedly brain-dead billionaire finally twitched and locked his fingers in an iron grip around her hand, Arletta smiled coldly. It was time to wake him up and let him tear this rotten family apart.

Chapter 1

The black Cadillac SUV rolled past the towering wrought-iron gates of the Mcconnell estate in Connecticut. The heavy tires crushed the gravel driveway, sending a dull, rhythmic grinding sound through the floorboards.

Inside the back seat, Arletta Lee kept her head down. Her fingers dug into the frayed hem of her washed-out jeans, twisting the cheap fabric so hard her knuckles turned white. Her shoulders trembled. She looked exactly like what they expected: a terrified, pathetic girl dragged out of rural Pennsylvania to be a sacrificial bride.

In the rearview mirror, the driver caught her eye. He let out a low, sharp scoff. He didn't even try to hide his disgust. The air in the car felt thick and suffocating.

Arletta's old phone buzzed against her thigh through the thin canvas of her tote bag. The cracked screen lit up. It was a text from her stepmother, Dori Patton.

"Try to run, and your sister's tuition is cut off today."

Arletta stared at the glowing words. She lowered her eyelashes. Beneath the veil of her lashes, the manufactured fear in her eyes vanished, replaced by a cold, surgical sharpness. She pressed the power button, plunging the screen back into darkness.

The SUV jerked to a stop in front of the massive Victorian main house. The driver didn't get out to open her door. He just hit the unlock button. The loud metallic clack echoed in the quiet car.

Arletta took a shallow breath. She pushed the heavy door open and stepped out. She purposely caught the toe of her cheap sneaker on the doorframe, stumbling forward. Her knees hit the expensive Persian welcome mat on the front steps.

Evelyn Danvers, the head housekeeper, stood at the top of the stairs. Her eyes scanned Arletta from her scuffed shoes to her messy hair. Evelyn's lips curled into a sneer.

"Listen closely," Evelyn said, her voice flat and mechanical. "Do not touch the antiques. Do not wander the halls. You are here for one purpose. Act like you belong in a civilized house, or I will have you removed."

Arletta shrank back. She pulled her neck down into her shoulders like a frightened rabbit.

"Y-yes, ma'am," Arletta stuttered. She rubbed her sweaty palms against her shirt. "I understand."

Evelyn scoffed. She turned on her heel. The sharp clack of her stilettos against the marble floor sounded like a countdown.

Arletta kept her head bowed as she followed. But her peripheral vision was wide open. Her eyes darted to the ceiling corners, logging the position of every security camera and calculating the blind spots in the long, echoing corridor.

They stopped at the end of the second-floor east wing. Evelyn pushed open a heavy oak door. The smell hit Arletta instantly-a heavy wave of clinical antiseptic mixed with expensive cedarwood cologne.

In the center of the massive room sat a hospital bed. Josue Mcconnell lay there, pale and motionless. Clear tubes snaked from his arms. The heart monitor next to him beeped in a slow, monotonous rhythm.

"Do not touch the machines," Evelyn snapped. She stepped back into the hallway and pulled the door shut. It slammed with a heavy thud.

The lock clicked.

The second the sound registered, Arletta's hunched spine snapped straight. The trembling in her shoulders stopped completely. The pathetic, terrified girl melted away.

She walked to the edge of the bed. She looked down at the billionaire heir who used to rule Wall Street, now trapped in his own body.

Arletta reached out. Her fingers were steady. She peeled back Josue's eyelid and checked his pupillary response. Her movements were fast and clinical.

She pressed two fingers against his carotid artery. Beneath the slow, steady thumping, she felt a microscopic flutter. It was an abnormal rhythm, a sign of severe nerve compression that standard hospital machines often missed.

Arletta turned and walked to the windows. She grabbed the heavy velvet curtains and yanked them shut, blocking out the sunlight and any chance of the perimeter security seeing inside.

She unzipped her worn canvas bag. From a hidden bottom compartment, she pulled out a simple wooden hairpin.

She gripped the ends and twisted. With a soft click, the wood separated. Inside sat a row of ultra-thin, specialized medical acupuncture needles. As a brilliant underground surgeon, she had mastered not only Western surgical techniques but also the ancient Eastern art of deep neural stimulation. They caught the dim light of the monitors, gleaming like ice.

Arletta didn't hesitate. She located the precise nerve clusters at the base of Josue's skull and the side of his neck. She sank the needles into his skin.

She rolled the thin metal between her thumb and index finger. The line on the heart monitor spiked violently. A low, warning beep sounded from the machine.

Heavy footsteps suddenly echoed in the hallway outside. They were moving fast, heading straight for the door.

Arletta's eyes narrowed. Her hands moved in a blur. She pulled the needles out of Josue's neck, shoved them back into the wooden casing, and jammed the hairpin into her messy bun.

She threw herself onto the edge of the mattress. She buried her face in the white sheets and forced her shoulders to shake violently. She let out a loud, pathetic sob.

The oak door was shoved open. It hit the wall with a bang. The footsteps stopped right behind her.

"Are you mourning him already?" a male voice sneered from above her.

Arletta gasped and spun around. She forced tears to pool in her eyes.

Standing over her was Kyler Mcconnell, Josue's half-brother. His eyes dragged up and down her body, looking at her like she was a piece of meat on a butcher's block.

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