Beggar Husband is now a Quadrillionaire Heir
Beggar Husband is now a Quadrillionaire Heir
Author: I.khalid
Chapter 1
Author: I.khalid
last update2026-02-22 14:36:14

Joshua Hart stood in the dimly lit hallway of the Cavesh mansion, his phone pressed against his ear as the hospital administrator's words echoed through his mind like a death sentence.

"Mr. Hart, your mother's condition has deteriorated rapidly. We need to perform emergency surgery within the next two hours. The cost will be one hundred thousand dollars."

His hands trembled. "I—I understand. I'll get the money."

For three years, Joshua had endured his position as the Cavesh family's live-in son-in-law. He had accepted the sneers, the contempt, and the treatment that made him feel less than human. All of it—every humiliation—was bearable because Natalie paid his mother's hospital bills each month. That small mercy kept his critically ill mother alive.

But one hundred thousand dollars? He had no authority to access that kind of money.

Joshua dialed Natalie's number with shaking fingers. The phone rang once, twice, three times before going to voicemail. He tried again. And again. Each time, the same result.

"Come on, Natalie. Please," he whispered desperately.

On his fifth attempt, a different voice answered—smooth, smug, and dripping with disdain.

"Stop calling." Mark Sullivan's voice was sharp with irritation. "Mrs. Cavesh is in an important meeting. Whatever pathetic emergency you think you have can wait."

Joshua's jaw clenched. Mark was Natalie's personal assistant, a man who seemed to take particular pleasure in reminding Joshua of his place. The way Mark looked at Natalie, the way he stood too close to her, the private jokes they shared—it all made Joshua's stomach turn. But he had no right to object. He had no rights at all.

"Mark, please. My mother—she's dying. She needs emergency surgery, and I need to speak with Natalie about the money."

"Dying?" Mark laughed, a cold, mocking sound. "Your mother's always dying, isn't she? That's your whole shtick—playing the devoted son with the sick mother. It's getting old, Joshua."

The words hit like physical blows, but Joshua forced himself to stay calm. "I'm not lying. The hospital just called. If she doesn't get this surgery in the next two hours—"

"How much?" Mark interrupted, his tone suggesting he was already bored with the conversation.

"One hundred thousand dollars."

The silence that followed was heavy with contempt. When Mark finally spoke, his voice was laced with cruel amusement. "One hundred thousand? Are you out of your mind? Do you think Mrs. Cavesh is running a charity? You're nothing but a burden she took on out of pity, and now you want to bleed her dry?"

"It's not like that," Joshua said through gritted teeth. "My mother needs—"

"I don't care what your mother needs," Mark snapped. "If you want this money, you'll follow protocol. Get me official documentation from the hospital—medical reports, cost breakdowns, doctor signatures. Everything. And it better be legitimate because I'll be verifying every single detail."

Joshua's heart sank. "That'll take time. She doesn't have time—"

"Then you'd better hurry, hadn't you?" Mark's voice was syrupy with false sympathy. "Oh, and Joshua? Stop calling Mrs. Cavesh directly. You want something, you go through me. That's how this works. You're staff, not family. Learn your place."

The line went dead.

Joshua stood frozen for a moment, rage and desperation warring inside him. Then he moved, sprinting from the mansion to his car—Natalie's old car that she'd "generously" allowed him to use. He drove to the hospital like a man possessed, his mother's face filling his mind.

At the hospital, he pleaded with the administrator, who reluctantly provided the documentation. Medical reports, surgical proposals, itemized costs—everything Mark had demanded. Joshua's hands were sweating as he clutched the papers, racing back to find Mark.

He found him in Natalie's office building, lounging in the reception area like he owned the place. Mark's eyes flickered with annoyance when Joshua approached.

"Here." Joshua thrust the documents forward. "Everything you asked for. Now please, contact Natalie. My mother—"

Mark took the papers with exaggerated slowness, barely glancing at them before looking up with a sneer. "These could be fake."

Joshua felt his blood run cold. "What?"

"Fake. Forged. Fabricated." Mark enunciated each word slowly, as if speaking to a child. "You think I'm stupid? You could've paid someone to mock up these documents. For all I know, your mother's fine, and you're trying to scam one hundred thousand dollars out of my boss."

"Are you insane?" Joshua's voice rose despite himself. "Why would I—my mother is dying! Call the hospital yourself if you don't believe me!"

"Watch your tone," Mark said coldly, standing up to his full height. He was taller than Joshua, and he used it to his advantage, looking down his nose with pure contempt. "You're nothing but a leech who married into money. A pathetic excuse for a man who can't even provide for his own family. And now you have the audacity to raise your voice at me? Mrs. Cavesh was right about you—give someone like you an inch, and you think you deserve a mile."

Something inside Joshua snapped. His mother was dying—dying—and this arrogant bastard was playing power games. His hand shot out, grabbing Mark by the collar of his expensive shirt.

"My mother is dying," Joshua said, his voice low and dangerous. "I need that money. Now."

"Get your hands off me!" Mark's eyes widened, but there was a calculating gleam in them.

"Joshua!"

The sharp voice cut through the tension like a knife. Joshua's head snapped toward the doorway, where Natalie Cavesh stood, her expression carved from ice. She was beautiful—her dark hair perfectly styled, her designer suit immaculate—but her eyes held no warmth, no compassion. Only cold judgment.

"Natalie, I can explain—" Joshua released Mark immediately, but it was too late.

"Mrs. Cavesh!" Mark stumbled backward dramatically, one hand going to his collar as if he'd been brutally attacked. "Thank God you're here. Joshua's been trying to extort money from you. When I asked for verification, he became violent!"

"That's not true!" Joshua protested. "He's lying! My mother needs emergency surgery, and he's been stalling—"

"Enough." Natalie's voice was arctic. She didn't even look at Joshua directly, as if he were beneath her notice. "Mark, are you alright?"

"I'm fine, Mrs. Cavesh. Just shaken. I was only trying to protect you from being scammed." Mark's voice was perfectly calibrated—wounded but brave.

"Scammed?" Joshua felt his world tilting. "Natalie, please. Look at the documents. Call the hospital. My mother—"

"I said enough." Natalie finally turned her gaze on him, and Joshua felt the full weight of her contempt. "You've gone too far this time, Joshua. Harassing my assistant? Attempting to assault him? All because you couldn't get your way?"

"That's not what happened!"

"I saw you with my own eyes," Natalie said coldly. "Your hands were on his collar. Or are you going to claim I'm lying too?"

Joshua opened his mouth, then closed it. What could he say? She had seen that part—she just hadn't seen what led to it.

"This is exactly why I limit your spending," Natalie continued, her voice cutting. "People like you—you don't understand consequences. Give you access to money, and you lose all sense of reality. You think you're entitled to whatever you want, whenever you want it."

"My mother is dying," Joshua said quietly, desperately. "Please."

"If your mother truly needs surgery, you'll submit a proper request through the appropriate channels. With verification. After you've apologized to Mark for your behavior." Natalie's eyes narrowed. "Until then, I'm suspending all payments for your mother's treatment. Including her regular medications."

The words hit Joshua like a physical blow. "You can't—"

"I can do whatever I want," Natalie said flatly. "You seem to forget that everything you have—the roof over your head, the food you eat, your mother's treatment—it all comes from my generosity. And I'm tired of your ingratitude."

She turned to leave, Mark following with a triumphant smirk on his face.

"Natalie!" Joshua's voice cracked. "Please! She'll die without treatment!"

Natalie paused at the doorway, not turning around. "Then perhaps you should have thought of that before you laid hands on my assistant. Admit your mistake, Joshua. Apologize properly. Then we'll talk."

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  • Chapter 67

    In truth, Mark didn't really know much about Joshua's visits to the hospital.He knew about the mother — Elizabeth Hart, ICU ward, chronic condition, the medical bills that had been the central leverage point of Joshua's entire existence in the Cavesh household for three years. That part was established fact, documented in the household accounts he had managed and manipulated for longer than he cared to calculate precisely.But the recent hospital activity — the visits, the movements, whatever Joshua's connection to Mercy General had become in the last two weeks — that was the part Mark had been filling in with inference rather than intelligence. He had said significant portion of his time has been spent in the vicinity of Mercy General with the smooth confidence of someone citing verified tracking data, and what he had actually been citing was a two-day-old observation from a source he no longer had.The source was Jennifer.Jennifer had been a nurse on the ICU floor — not Patricia W

  • Chapter 66

    Mark told Natalie that Monica was working at Galaxy for a reason.He said it with the smooth, unhurried confidence of a man delivering the final piece of a puzzle he had assembled himself — which was, though only he knew this, precisely the problem. He had assembled it himself. From fragments. From the surface-level records that had survived his contact's access being revoked, from reasonable-sounding inferences he had dressed in the language of verified fact, from the particular skill he had developed over years of managing information flows — the skill of making incomplete pictures look complete.What he was telling Natalie was approximately fifteen percent verified and eighty-five percent constructed. The construction was good. It held together. It had the texture of research rather than invention.He knew this. He continued anyway."She didn't walk into Galaxy Tech on merit," Mark said, his voice carrying the flat certainty of someone reading from a confirmed source. "She was plac

  • Chapter 65

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  • Chapter 64

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  • Chapter 63

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  • Chapter 62

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