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Substitute Bride To The Blind Billionaire by Imran Sumayyah - Book Cover Background
Substitute Bride To The Blind Billionaire by Imran Sumayyah - Book Cover

Substitute Bride To The Blind Billionaire

Imran Sumayyah
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Introduction
“You think I wanted you?” Sebastian’s voice was cold, his blind eyes fixed on her trembling form. “You bought me,” Anastasia whispered, her heart cracking. “You married me only to punish me.” His lips curved into a cruel smirk. “Don’t flatter yourself. You’re nothing but a substitute, a stand-in for the woman I truly love.” Her hand shook as she clutched the ring he forced onto her finger. “Then why bind me to you at all?” “Because I’d rather rot in hell with a stranger than beg for scraps from the woman who betrayed me.” ****** Anastasia never dreamed her life would end up like this. Married to Sebastian, the ruthless billionaire heir whose world was ripped apart the night an accident left him blind and abandoned by his fiancée. To save her sick mother, Anastasia agreed to his cruel bargain: be his substitute wife, his shield in public, and his prisoner in private. But Sebastian is not a man who forgives and he never forgets. Every touch he denies and every word he spits is a reminder of the vow he made to destroy the woman bound to him. When the torment becomes unbearable, Anastasia makes the most painful choice of all. She divorces him and vanishes without a trace. What Sebastian never discovers is the truth she carries with her. His children. Not one, but four lives growing inside her. The quadruplets who become her greatest secret and her greatest strength. Years later, when fate forces their paths to cross again, Anastasia is no longer the weak woman he once broke. Winning her back will take more than apologies, more than confessions, and more than promises he failed to keep. But can a broken marriage and a hidden family survive the fire of betrayal? Or will the truth destroy them once more when Sebastian discovers that the children he never knew are his own?
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Chapter 1: I Surrender

Los Angeles, California

Hacienda Parrow

Sebastian Parrow carried guilt in his chest the way other men carried breath. It sat heavy, unshakable, pressing into his ribs day after day. He lived with it, woke with it, and went to bed with it. Even on days when the sun climbed high and warm light spilled into the gardens of the Parrow estate, the weight never left him.

That Saturday had been meant for joy. He and his father had worked for months preparing an event that would introduce a new line of Parrow wines. It was not just a business triumph, not just another addition to their legacy.

For Sebastian, it had been personal. He wanted to dedicate it to his mother, to see her eyes shine with pride as he stood beside his father and proved himself worthy of the Parrow name.

But destiny was cruel. The night that should have ended with champagne toasts and laughter ended in blood. A drunk driver lost control of his car, and the crash shattered the Parrow family forever. The vehicle was completely wrecked and his parents died instantly, while Sebastian was the only one who survived.

At first, he thought survival was a blessing. Then the doctors spoke the words that ended his world.

He would never see again.

The bruises healed, the cuts faded, but the blindness was permanent. Darkness claimed him completely.

He remembered screaming in the hospital bed, tearing at the sheets, begging for someone to tell him it wasn’t true. But no one could. He had lost his parents and his sight in one night. His world ended there.

Yet in that darkness, there had been one figure who stayed. Maria. His fiancée. His childhood sweetheart. The girl who had promised forever. She held his hand, whispered comfort, promised him that nothing had changed. That she would love him the same way. That she would guide him through the shadows.

He had believed her.

Now, months later, Sebastian sat in the wide garden of Hacienda Parrow. The estate was as grand as ever, but it felt like a tomb. The air was too still, the silence too sharp. The roses bloomed in neat rows, filling the air with their fragrance, but he could not see their beauty anymore. He only knew them by scent, and sometimes he wondered if even that was fading.

He sat at the dining table, upright as always, refusing to let blindness rob him of dignity. His other senses had sharpened. He knew when someone approached even before they spoke.

“Mr. Parrow, your breakfast,” a maid’s timid voice announced.

He gave a small wave of his hand, allowing her to place the tray. He could feel her hesitation, the way her eyes lingered but avoided his face, the pity she tried to mask.

“Anything else, sir?” she asked cautiously.

“Out,” he ordered flatly.

She hurried away. He reached for the coffee cup, his fingers steady despite the blackness that filled his world. He lifted it to his lips, savoring the bitter heat. He had always liked strong coffee, and that hadn’t changed. It was the one small comfort he allowed himself.

Then he heard it.

The sound of wheels scraping over stone. A suitcase.

He set the cup back on the tray, his brows furrowing.

“Sebastian…” Maria’s voice carried into the quiet. It was shaky, uncertain, and it made his chest tighten.

“What is it?” he asked softly. He tried to keep his tone gentle, afraid that his temper might push her away.

“I’m leaving,” she said.

Fear flashed through him. “Leaving? Are you traveling? Why didn’t you tell me?” His voice carried a mix of confusion and frustration. She knew he depended on her. She knew he needed her.

“No, Sebastian.” Her words came harder, sharper. “I’m leaving you.”

The air left his lungs. His heart thudded painfully. “What?”

“I can’t do it anymore,” Maria whispered. “I thought I could stay. I thought I could live like this. But I can’t.”

He stood abruptly, his hand reaching into the darkness, searching for her. “What have I done? Tell me. If it’s something I said—”

She cut him off with a cruel laugh. “Do you want to know the truth?”

“Yes!” His voice cracked with desperation.

“You’re blind, Sebastian. That’s the truth. You may be rich, you may be handsome, but I cannot spend my life tied to a man who will never see me again. I can’t be the woman who leads a blind man through every day.”

Her words hit like a knife to the chest. His body went rigid.

“You told me it didn’t matter,” he whispered, his voice breaking into anger. “You swore!”

“As if I care anymore!” Maria snapped. “Do you know what people say about me? They say I am pathetic and that I am wasting my life. I will not be the shame of my family, and I refuse to be the woman people whisper about. I’m not going to marry you.”

The sound of metal hitting wood echoed as she dropped the engagement ring on the table.

His heart cracked. He stumbled forward, searching blindly. “No. Maria, please. Don’t do this. We are days away from our wedding. You wanted this. You begged me to marry you, and now you throw it away?” His voice rose, desperate and raw. “I will give you everything. Anything you ask for. The wedding of your dreams. The life you wanted. I will put the world at your feet. Please, Maria, don’t walk away.”

Her footsteps moved, the sound cutting deeper than her words.

“Maria!” He lunged forward without his cane. His foot caught the chair leg, and he crashed to the ground, his palms scraping against stone. Pain shot through him, but he barely felt it. He reached out toward her voice, broken, pleading. “Maria, don’t leave me. Please. I can’t lose you too.”

She hesitated only for a second before her voice cut through his hope. “We can’t turn back time, Sebastian. I won’t waste my youth next to a man who doesn’t even know which way to walk.”

Then her heels clicked against the stone, moving farther away, until they disappeared completely.

“Maria!” His scream carried across the garden, raw and agonized, but she never looked back.

Sebastian’s childhood friend, Leandro, heard the crash of porcelain and hurried into the garden. He froze at the sight before him. Sebastian was on the ground, his cane tossed aside, his strong frame bent over as if the weight of the world had finally crushed him.

The expression on Sebastian’s face was a portrait of ruin. His eyes, once alive with fire and pride, stared blankly into the nothingness that now defined his life. His jaw was clenched so tightly the muscle trembled, and his lips parted in a soundless cry, caught between rage and heartbreak. Every line of his body radiated pain, disappointment, and disgust—disgust not just for Maria but for himself, for daring to believe she would stay.

Leandro’s heart ached. He had known Sebastian since they were boys, had seen him fight, laugh, win, and rise to every challenge. But this man on the ground was not the friend he knew. This was someone hollow, stripped of warmth, love, and even pity.

“Let me help you,” Leandro said gently, stepping closer, extending a hand.

“Leave me alone!” Sebastian roared, his voice jagged and raw. He shoved blindly at the air until he felt Leandro’s arm and pushed it away with a violent jerk.

Leandro hesitated. “What happened?”

The answer came in a broken, bitter cry. “She left me! Maria left me!”

Leandro closed his eyes, cursing under his breath. He had always suspected Maria’s affection was shallow, but he had never expected her to be this cruel. “She doesn’t deserve you, buddy,” he said firmly. “Let me help you up.”

“Damn the moment I lost my sight!” Sebastian shouted, his voice cracking as it echoed through the empty garden. He dug his nails into his palms until the skin threatened to break. “If I still had my eyes, she would be here. She would still want me.”

Leandro stood helplessly, listening to the way Sebastian’s voice shook, the way anger barely held back a flood of grief. His friend’s pride was crumbling, and all he could do was watch.

Sebastian clawed at the table beside him, gripping it tightly until his knuckles whitened. With effort, he pulled himself to his feet. His breath came hard, like a man barely containing the beast inside him. And then, with one sudden, furious motion, he swept his arm across the surface, knocking plates, cups, and cutlery to the ground. The crash of shattering porcelain rang out like thunder, sharp and final.

“She’s not worth it, Sebastian. You’re only hurting yourself,” Leandro said carefully, his voice low, as though speaking too loudly might push his friend further into despair.

“No woman is worth it!” Sebastian’s voice trembled with rage, though beneath it was something deeper, darker. “I swear, I will never have feelings for any woman again. They are all the same. Liars, betrayals and selfish to the core.” His hands shook as he gripped the edge of the ruined table, his knuckles pressing into the wood. “Never again.”

In the days that followed, Sebastian’s transformation was swift and merciless. Gone was the man who once smiled easily, who once carried warmth even in his arrogance. What remained was a shell—cold, expressionless and ruthless. He became sharper in darkness than he ever was in light. And through it all, Leandro stayed. He managed the estate’s affairs, ensured Sebastian’s empire continued to thrive, and stood as the only anchor in a life that had spiraled into bitterness.

***

One afternoon, as the car wound its way back toward the Parrow estate, Leandro slowed to a stop on a quiet street.

“Sebastian,” he said cautiously.

“What is it?” Sebastian’s voice was calm, too calm, his expression unreadable.

“I need to repay a debt. Just a quick matter. I promise it won’t take long.”

Sebastian’s jaw tightened. “You know I hate waiting.”

“I know,” Leandro sighed. “Just five minutes. I’ll park here. It’s safe.”

“The clock is already ticking,” Sebastian warned, leaning back against the seat.

Leandro gave a small, nervous laugh before opening the door and stepping out, leaving Sebastian alone in the back seat.

The silence pressed in on him. He could hear the faint hum of the engine, the ticking of the cooling metal under the sun. He settled into the familiar cocoon of darkness, focusing on the faint sounds beyond the car—distant footsteps, a dog barking, the rustle of leaves.

Then, suddenly, the back door opened.

Sebastian stiffened. “Leandro?” His tone was sharp, cold, already suspicious.

There was no answer.

“I do not want any pathetic surprises for my birthday,” he said irritably.

Still, silence.

And then it hit him. A fragrance drifted into the car, subtle at first but impossible to ignore. It was sweet and floral, carrying the delicate essence of roses, and the moment it reached him his entire body reacted. His senses sharpened instantly, and every nerve within him stood on high alert.

He gripped his cane tightly, every muscle coiled with tension. “Who are you?” His voice was a command, heavy and unforgiving.

For a moment there was only silence, broken by uneven breathing. Then came a soft, trembling whisper.

“Help me…”

The sound pierced through him. It was a woman’s voice, delicate but laced with fear. A voice so fragile it could shatter.

Sebastian’s heart thudded hard as he tightened his grip on the cane, caught between the warning in his gut and a strange feeling he thought had died the day Maria left him.

“Please help me…”

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