She Married an Unconscious Billionaire, Then His Hand Moved-maimoc

My name is Emma Carter, and I became a wife in a chapel where nobody expected the groom to answer for himself.

The first thing I remember is the smell.

Lilies, floor polish, and expensive perfume sat heavy in the air, sweet enough to make my stomach turn.

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Sunlight came through the stained-glass windows in soft bands of red, blue, and gold, striping the aisle like something holy was supposed to be happening there.

But nothing about that day felt holy.

It felt purchased.

It felt arranged.

It felt like I had walked into my own future and found someone else’s signature at the bottom.

Beside me sat Ethan Thornton.

Billionaire heir.

Thirty years old.

Unconscious for nine months.

A private nurse stood behind his wheelchair with one hand near the handle, watching his breathing, his posture, the still angle of his head.

His dark hair had been combed neatly.

His tuxedo jacket was fitted across his shoulders.

Someone had folded a white pocket square into the shape of a point, as if the details could make the rest of it normal.

His face was calm.

Too calm.

There was no nervous groom’s smile, no glance down the aisle, no hand reaching for mine when the minister began.

There was only a man everyone in that chapel had agreed to treat like a legal problem.

My father stood beside me.

He was wearing the same black suit he had worn to my mother’s funeral two years earlier, though this time he had polished the shoes.

When the minister paused, my father leaned close enough that I could feel his breath against my ear.

“Say it,” he whispered.

Not gently.

Not like a father comforting his daughter.

Like a man afraid the deal might fall apart.

I swallowed so hard my throat clicked.

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“I do.”

The words did not sound like vows.

They sounded like a lock turning.

The minister smiled with the tired professionalism of someone who had been told not to ask questions.

A few people in the pews clapped softly.

Not joyfully.

Politely.

The way rich people clap when they do not want to admit something ugly has happened in front of them.

There was no kiss.

No first dance.

No whispered joke at the altar.

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