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Billionaire's Veins of Deception

Billionaire's Veins of Deception

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11 Chapters
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Elena Cruz has always led a quiet life fixing broken objects, including furniture, artwork, and occasionally people. When a DNA test for her sick sister reveals a connection to the Devereux family, one of America's richest and most enigmatic dynasties and the owners of a global empire based on scandal, luxury, and oil, her entire world falls apart. Elena accepts a restoration job at the Devereux estate in Massachusetts, a sprawling coastal mansion known as Blackstone Manor, where every hallway echoes betrayal, driven by her desire to learn the truth about her family and her need to find a cure for her sister. Every action is motivated by a mixture of fear and hope for her sister's survival. She meets Damian Devereux there, the icy but alluring heir who is troubled by his family's transgressions. What starts out as cautious curiosity turns into forbidden passion and obsession. Beneath the polished marble of the empire, Elena's quest for the truth reveals decades of deceit, stolen identities, and blood ties. However, Elena's love for Damian turns into both her salvation and her downfall when it is revealed that she may not only be related to the Devereuxs by blood but also may be the offspring of their darkest secret. Elena must choose between saving the man whose love is based on the very deception she has vowed to expose and exposing the family that destroyed hers in a world where power is defined by blood.

Contents

Chapter 1 The Portrait Beneath the Paint

The winter light slanted through the skylights of the Metropolitan Restoration Wing, casting a silver dust over the air. Every sound was careful here: brush bristles whispering against canvas, the faint tick of temperature regulators, the soft sigh of solvents. Elena Cruz thrived in that hush. Silence meant focus; focus meant she didn't have to think about overdue hospital bills or her sister's latest test results.

The canvas before her was almost as tall as she was, its surface veiled in age-darkened varnish. The Devereux Family, 1984. The plaque glimmered under her gloved fingertips, gold letters spelling a name that smelled of old money and unreachable worlds. She'd been hired to restore it for the upcoming "Dynasties of Power" exhibit. An easy contract, the museum had said. Three weeks, steady pay. Nothing more.

Yet something about the portrait unnerved her.

She bent closer, the magnifying lamp haloing her face. The patriarch Victor Devereux was rendered with the smug composure of someone who owned oceans. Beside him sat his wife, Vivienne, elegance sharpened to steel. A young boy stood between them, Damian, maybe seven, dark-eyed even then. And in the mother's lap rested an infant swaddled in ivory lace, nameless on the record. The brushwork around that small form seemed hurried, almost erased.

Elena dipped a cotton swab into the solvent and began clearing the amber film. Yellow turned to cream, shadows softened, and beneath the paint a faint, looping mark emerged. She blinked. The curve of the letters was unmistakable.

M Cruz. Her own mother's signature.

The swab trembled in her hand. No, she whispered. Maybe coincidence is a restorer's mark hidden beneath. But her mother, María Cruz, had been a nurse, not a painter. And she'd died when Elena was twelve, leaving behind only a locket with no photograph and a trail of unanswered questions.

She pressed her palm against the worktable to steady herself. The smell of varnish thickened. Somewhere deep inside, the past stirred like something waking.

By the time the museum closed, snow feathered the windows. Elena stayed, chasing logic through shock. She photographed the hidden signature, documented every stroke. Then she powered down the lamp and texted her sister.

ELENA: Still at work. How are you feeling?

LILA: Tired. The doctors want another round of tests. Don't freak out.

Elena pocketed her phone. Lila's illness, an inherited blood disorder, was the reason she'd taken extra contracts. Bills didn't stop because veins misbehaved.

She didn't know that tomorrow, those same veins would rewrite everything.

The next morning, the hospital smelled of antiseptic and rain. Lila waited on the bed, her face pale against navy sheets. They need more family markers, she explained, holding a sealed swab kit. They're trying new matching software.

Fine, Elena said, forcing brightness. Let's give them whatever they need. She swabbed her cheek, sealed the envelope, and forgot about it by afternoon, another errand ticked off life's unending list.

Three nights later, the email came.

Subject: Genetic Relation Detected – Confidential Notification

From: Lang Genetics Lab

Message: Significant kinship correlation found between donor samples (E. Cruz) and archived Devereux Family genome, Blackstone Line.

Elena reread the words until they blurred. Devereux, the same name etched on the portrait plaque. The same name beneath which her mother's signature had slept for forty years.

Her phone rang.

Miss Cruz? A man's voice, breathless. This is Dr. Marcus Lang from the genetics institute. You need to delete that email. Don't forward it. Don't

Wait, what are you talking about?

They monitor their archives. If they realize a non-family sample matched, they'll

The call fractured static, a distant shout, then nothing. The line went dead.

Elena stared at the screen. Outside her apartment, sirens rose and fell through the city's snow. She felt suspended between two worlds: the simple life she'd built from struggle, and a world of billion-dollar bloodlines whispering her name.

She opened her laptop, searching Devereux Family Genetics, but half the results were sealed corporate data. The rest were society articles, galas, mergers, and a son named Damian Devereux, who had inherited the empire after his father's mysterious death five years ago. His picture stared from the screen: tall, severe, dark hair swept back, expression unreadable. The same eyes from the portrait are older now, colder.

She closed the browser as if it were on fire.

At dawn, she returned to the restoration lab, craving the one place that made sense. The museum halls were empty, echoing her footsteps. She uncovered the portrait again.

I need answers, she murmured. And you're the only one talking.

Under the magnifier, the infant's face seemed almost alive. She traced the line of the brushwork, tiny lips, faint blush, then something else caught her eye: the corner of a folded paper wedged between canvas and frame. She pried gently with tweezers until it slid free a brittle envelope marked For Records.

Inside lay a single sheet: a faded medical certificate bearing a hospital stamp from Blackstone Medical, 1985, and a name partially smudged.

Infant Female – Eleanor Devereux.

Status: Deceased.

Her pulse thundered. The paper's edges were flecked with dried salt-as if once soaked by tears.

A door creaked behind her. Elena Cruz?

She whirled. The museum's director stood there, phone in hand. You have a visitor, he said carefully. From the Devereux Foundation. They'd like to speak with you about your work.

Already? Her voice cracked. The exhibit's weeks away.

He hesitated. They said it was urgent.

Minutes later, a woman in a charcoal coat waited by the marble staircase grace sculpted in silk and shadow. "Miss Cruz." Her accent carried wealth like perfume. I'm Mrs. Vivienne Devereux. My family has a special interest in that portrait you're restoring.

Elena's throat went dry. Of course. It's a beautiful piece.

Yes. Vivienne's gaze was cool. It holds history. She studied Elena as one might inspect a reflection too familiar. Tell me, do you often sign your restorations?

No. Only documentation labels.

Good. The faintest smile. We prefer discretion.

Before Elena could ask more, Vivienne handed her a cream envelope. The Devereux Foundation would like to extend a private commission. Restoration work at our estate, Blackstone Manor. Consider it an opportunity.

Elena accepted the envelope, fingers trembling. Why me?

Because, Vivienne said softly, you seem to have an eye for family.

Then she turned and walked away, leaving the scent of roses and the echo of something dangerous.

That night, Elena sat by the window of her apartment, the envelope unopened in her lap. The city hummed below, unaware that her life had just cracked open like old varnish. She finally slid a finger under the seal.

Inside was a formal letter embossed with the Devereux crest, travel arrangements, and a generous advance payment, more money than she made in months.

At the bottom, a single handwritten line:

Blackstone Manor awaits your touch. – D.D.

The initials carved a chill down her spine. Damian Devereux.

She looked at the hidden signature in the photo on her phone, M. Cruz, then at the letter, feeling two worlds collide inside her.

She whispered to the empty room,

Mother, what did you do?

Outside, the wind howled like the sea, and somewhere in the dark heart of Massachusetts, the Devereux estate waited in its halls lined with portraits, its walls bleeding secrets.

Elena didn't yet know that by uncovering one name, she'd awakened every ghost buried beneath the Devereux bloodline.

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