icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The Silent Bride's Billion Dollar Contract

Chapter 8 No.8

Word Count: 695    |    Released on: 05/02/2026

t daylight stung her eyes. The blood was flo

ind her, waving a broom like a m

od on Dawn's face and his expression went dark. He stepped betwee

then at the giant man in the suit, then at the

ydia yelled, but her v

opened the back door.

rank slammed the door and got into the dri

tion. She's injured.

leather seat. She felt faint. She hear

eeched to a halt at the emergency

car-a silver sports car-roared up behind them a

rd go

sleeves were rolled up. His fa

Dawn's d

ed stain spreading on her white shirt-he stopped. H

" he b

walk. He reached in and s

. Dawn instinctively wrapped her arms around hi

spered. "I'm okay.

apped. He stro

didn't roar. His voice, when he spoke to the approaching nurse,

od. She saw the look in his eyes that p

room. Gerhard placed her gently on the g

leaning the wound. "It's a nas

ic stung the cut. Her grip

"Do it. Use the smallest gauge

d nervously and

looking at the doctor. He was looking a

aid. "We fought

ted iron box sitting on t

I have,"

red in his cheek. He pulled out his phon

nt the foreclosure process started today. And fil

ed. "Gerhard, you

looked at her, his eyes blazing. "She hurt

rial one. But in that moment, with her head throbbing and the adr

Gerhard aske

titches. Ke

ed. He helpe

you w

" Daw

d her up

watching," she murmur

rried her out to the car, the ir

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
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.”