His Uncle's Priceless Jewel: Unmasking His Regret

His Uncle's Priceless Jewel: Unmasking His Regret

last updateTerakhir Diperbarui : 2026-04-14
Oleh:  OmaOngoing
Bahasa: English
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"You're mine, my jewel, and I do not share what's mine." Thalassa Miravel saved Cassian Deveraux from a life of darkness, restoring his sight with her unparalleled surgical skill. But the moment he saw her face, he recoiled because she was ugly. When his first love, the beautiful Eulalie, reappeared, Cassian cast Thalassa aside without a second thought and divorced her. What he didn't know: his "ugly" wife was the world's most sought-after miracle doctor, a bestselling author whose face remained a mystery, and a woman far beyond his reach. Now free, Thalassa crosses paths with Alaric Deveraux, Cassian's enigmatic uncle, a man who sees past surfaces to the brilliance beneath. As their connection deepens into something undeniable, Cassian discovers the devastating truth: the wife he discarded was never ugly at all. But by then, she's already found a love worthy of her and revenge has never looked so elegant.

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Bab 1

The Invisible Wife

Thalassa POV:

I woke up the same way I did every morning, which was to say I woke up alone in a big king bed, in a room that was technically mine but never really felt like it, in a house so big you could get lost trying to find the kitchen if you weren't paying attention.

The Deveraux mansion. Home to the family that owned half the city and acted like they deserved the other half just for breathing with them.

I stretched my arms above my head and stared at the ceiling, which had these hand-painted little angels on it that some Italian guy spent six months creating back when the house was built. Cassian's great-grandfather had commissioned them. Now they just looked down at me every morning with their blank little eyes, judging me for still being here.

My phone buzzed. Six thirty in the morning. No messages, of course. There was never anyone to message. My mother had passed when I was seventeen and my father had followed her three years later, like he couldn't figure out how to exist in a world that didn't have her in it. I had no siblings, no cousins who remembered my name, no friends from medical school who still reached out after I'd disappeared into this marriage like a ghost slipping through a wall.

Just me. And the angels. And the incredibly comfortable but also incredibly lonely bed.

I swung my legs over the side and padded barefoot to the bathroom. The floors were heated, because of course they were. Everything in this house was designed to make you feel like you'd accidentally wandered into a five star hotel and nobody had realized you didn't belong there yet.

The bathroom mirror was enormous, the type with lights around it like you were a movie star getting ready for a premiere. I stood in front of it and looked at myself.

Or rather, I looked at the mask.

White porcelain, hand painted with delicate little flowers along one edge, covering everything from my forehead to just below my nose. My eyes peered out from behind it, brown and ordinary, and my mouth was visible below it, which meant I could eat and drink without taking the whole thing off, a design feature I'd insisted on when I'd had it made five years ago. The scars underneath were bad, I knew that. The fire had taken most of the skin on the left side of my face and left behind this angry, twisted landscape that made people flinch when they saw it. The mask was easier. For everyone.

I'd gotten really good at brushing my teeth around it.

Downstairs, the house was already awake even though the sun was barely up. The Deveraux staff operated on some kind of military schedule, moving through the halls with quiet efficiency, polishing things that didn't need polishing, arranging flowers that were already arranged, generally making sure the place looked like nobody actually lived in it.

Mrs. Higgins, the housekeeper, passed me in the hallway without saying good morning. She never said good morning. She'd decided the first day I arrived that I wasn't worth the effort, and five years of me existing in this house hadn't changed her mind. I was Mrs. Deveraux in name only, and everyone here knew it.

The kitchen was warm and smelled like fresh bread. Cook was already there, a round woman named Margaret who was the only person in this house who treated me like a human being. She looked up when I came in and gave me a small smile.

"Morning, dear. Tea's on the counter."

"Thank you, Margaret." I poured myself a cup and leaned against the counter, watching her work. She was making Cassian's breakfast, because even though he was a grown man who could theoretically pour his own cereal, the Deveraux men didn't do things like that. They had people for that. People like Margaret. People like me, I guessed, except I didn't even get paid.

"Big day today," Margaret said, not looking up from the eggs she was whisking. "Doctor's coming at ten to check on Mr. Cassian's eyes."

I nodded, even though she couldn't see me. "I know."

The doctor was a specialist from the city, someone Cassian's father had hired after the last specialist had failed to make any progress. Cassian had been blind for eight months now, ever since the accident at the warehouse, and the family was getting impatient. They wanted their golden boy back, the one with the perfect vision and the perfect smile and the perfect future ahead of him. They didn't have much use for the blind version, the one who snapped at everyone and threw things when he got frustrated and generally made life miserable for anyone who got too close.

I understood, sort of. If I'd gone from being Cassian Deveraux, heir to the Deveraux fortune, most eligible bachelor three years running according to some magazine nobody actually read, to being someone who couldn't see his own hand in front of his face, I'd probably be angry too. Didn't make it easier to live with, but I understood.

"I'll be out of the way," I said, which was what I always said when important people came to the house. The family didn't want me around for things like this. I was an embarrassment, the ugly wife they'd let their son marry under mysterious circumstances that nobody talked about, and the less people who saw me, the better.

Margaret made a noise that could have been agreement or could have been sympathy. Hard to tell with her.

I took my tea and went upstairs to my favorite hiding spot, which was a little room on the third floor that nobody used anymore. It had been a nursery once, back when the Deveraux had more children, but now it was just storage for old furniture and boxes of things nobody wanted to throw away. I'd cleared out a corner and set up a desk, and that was where I did my real work.

Because here was the thing about being the invisible wife, the one nobody noticed, the one everyone ignored: it meant I had a lot of free time.

Free time that I used to save people's lives.

I pulled out my laptop and logged into my secure server, the one that routed through fourteen different countries and made it impossible for anyone to trace anything back to me. The messages were waiting, as they always were.

Dr. Miravel - Patient 7342 showing concerning vitals post surgery. Requesting consultation.

Dr. Miravel - The board has approved your protocol for the pediatric wing. When can you review the implementation plan?

To the Miracle Doctor - My daughter is dying. The doctors here say there's nothing they can do. Please. I'm begging you. We'll pay anything.

That last one was from a new patient, a desperate parent somewhere in Eastern Europe based on the routing. I opened the file attached and started reading. Twelve year old girl, rare autoimmune disorder, three failed treatments, prognosis of six months if nothing changed.

I could help her. I knew I could. I'd seen this exact case four years ago, back when I was still practicing openly, back before the fire, back before everything fell apart. The treatment was risky and experimental and no reputable hospital would touch it, but it would work.

The question was whether I could do it without anyone finding out who I was.

I started typing my response, outlining the initial steps, requesting more detailed test results, setting up a secure video consultation for later that week. The parents would never see my face, never know my name, never be able to thank me in person. But their daughter would live, and that was enough.

That had to be enough.

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