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The Silent Bride's Billion Dollar Contract

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 825    |    Released on: 05/02/2026

burned on her skin. Her heart was hammering so hard she thought he

"I really have to go. If Lydia

t look concerned. He looked bored, but in a

said. "Exa

h him?" He nodded toward the front of the café where Mr. Vane was now loudly complaining about t

from her face. The thoug

out a black card. It wasn't a credit card; it was a business ca

across the

shifted. The boredom vanished, replac

hen at him. "I don't under

quiet. You're desperate. And you

ng because th

ussing the weather. "The shareholders are nervous. They think I'm too volatile. T

ing on the table. "I need a wife.

"You want to hire

enti

"You could have anyo

drama. I want silence. I want someone who will stand next to me at galas, smil

ane was leaving. He stormed out, t

t he'll be back. Or Lydia will

re than the entire building Dawn lived in. "I have a me

e?" Dawn c

I will pay off your student loans. I will pay off Lydia's debt so she leaves you alone. I will provide you with hous

ngerous. This man was a stranger, and he ra

m. She thought of the red banner on her bankin

a shark, yes. But

for the card to take

ed her fingers down on the card

," sh

rner of his mouth tick

looked at his face-hard, unyie

she whi

nodded once. He pulled his p

ready. The standard pren

stood. He butto

go, Mis

mbling to grab her bag.

, turning toward the back

thout looking to see if she wa

to an alley where a sleek black sedan was waiting

tured for h

he interior of the car looked like a black h

softly. It was the first ti

hut with a heavy, expensiv

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The Silent Bride's Billion Dollar Contract
The Silent Bride's Billion Dollar Contract
“My bank account showed exactly $42.18, and my student loan notifications were flashing red. I lived in a sweltering Queens apartment with my Aunt Lydia, where the air was thick with the smell of stale frying oil and the constant threat of being homeless. Lydia handed me a grainy photo of a man twice my age and told me she had already "sold" me to him. He was a dry cleaner looking for a wife, and in exchange for my hand, he would pay off her credit cards and my debt. If I didn't show up for the date that night, my boxes would be on the curb by midnight. I arrived at the cafe in a state of panic, my selective mutism making it impossible to even breathe. In the crowded room, I accidentally sat at the wrong table. Instead of the man from the photo, I found myself facing Gerhard Holcomb-the cold, terrifyingly handsome billionaire whose family owned the very museum where I worked. He didn't send me away; instead, he studied my trembling hands and offered me a different deal: a two-year contract marriage, a two-million-dollar payout, and a strict clause forbidding any children. I signed the papers and moved into his Park Avenue penthouse, thinking I was finally safe. But when I went back to the old apartment to retrieve the only memento of my dead parents, Lydia lashed out, leaving me bleeding from a head wound. Gerhard's retaliation was absolute-he had her arrested and her building foreclosed on within hours, claiming he was simply "protecting his assets." As I recovered in his silent, glass-walled home, I saw a call from a famous socialite flash on his phone, and a cold truth settled in my gut. I wasn't just a wife; I was a placeholder, a silent shield used to fend off the women from his past. I looked at the massive pink diamond on my finger and realized the silence I had lived in my whole life was about to become my most expensive prison. I had traded a life of poverty for a high-stakes game of shadows, and now I had to survive the man who claimed to own me.”