PART 1 — The Night I Learned What I Married
On my wedding night, I ended up beneath the bed, my veil tangled in my hair, stifling laughter—one last childish prank before stepping into the role of a wife.
Then the door opened.
And everything changed.
I had planned to scare Daniel.
We used to do that to each other when we were dating—small, harmless surprises that made us laugh too loudly in quiet rooms.
I was still smiling when I heard his voice.
Low.
Tired.
“She drank it.”
My smile disappeared.
Then came another sound.
Sharp.
Measured.
High heels crossing the floor.
“Enough?” his mother asked.
Her voice didn’t rise.
It didn’t need to.
It cut clean.
“She’s about to pass out,” Daniel replied.
My throat tightened instantly.
The champagne I had sipped downstairs—the one that had tasted sweeter than usual—turned bitter in my stomach.
“Good,” Victoria Hale said.
“When she’s unconscious, bring the papers. Tomorrow morning… she wakes up with nothing.”
Their footsteps stopped.
Right beside the bed.
My fingers pressed into the carpet so hard it hurt.
Daniel exhaled slowly.
“Mother… she might notice.”
Victoria laughed.
Soft.
Controlled.
Cruel.
“Notice what?” she said.
“That she signed documents while intoxicated on her wedding night? Poor Elena. Emotional. Overwhelmed. No father. No brothers. No one to stand up for her.”
No one.
That was what they believed.
I stared at Daniel’s shoes.
Perfectly polished.
The same shoes that had stood in front of me just hours earlier while he promised to protect me.
“What about the clause?” he asked.
“She won’t understand it,” Victoria snapped.
“She inherited everything and still smiles like a child. Your grandfather should have left it to someone with sharper instincts.”
My body went cold.
So that was the truth.
Not love.
Not marriage.
An acquisition.
My inheritance.
The Varela Estate.
The textile company.
The buildings.
The land that developers had circled for years.
Victoria didn’t want a daughter-in-law.
She wanted control.
And Daniel—
Had delivered it.
Me.
I closed my eyes.
Forced my body to stay still.
To stay silent.
Because Victoria had made one mistake.
She thought I was fragile.
But my grandfather had raised me differently.
In conference rooms.
In negotiations.
In places where people smiled while planning to take everything from you.
“Pretty girls get underestimated,” he used to say.
“Let them. It makes the ending more interesting.”
Above me, Daniel moved.
“I’ll get the documents.”
Victoria’s voice softened with satisfaction.
“By morning, everything belongs to us.”
I opened my eyes.
Stared into the darkness beneath the bed.
No.
By morning—
I thought—
You lose everything.