The Billionaire’s Wedding-Night Whisper That Exposed His Family-habe

The first time I heard someone say my marriage would not last until morning, I was still wearing the dress.

The lace was beautiful when I first stepped into it, all ivory thread and tiny covered buttons down the back.

By nine o’clock that night, it felt like a hand at my throat.

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The old Connecticut inn smelled of lemon polish, wet wool, gardenias, and champagne that had been sitting too long in crystal flutes.

Rain tapped softly against the windows.

Inside the ballroom, the band played a slow song that made the whole place look softer than it was.

The guests smiled the way rich people smile when they already know the ending.

I had stepped out for two minutes because I needed air.

That was all.

Two minutes away from the candles, the chandeliers, the polished silver, the staff moving like ghosts between tables, and Gregory’s family watching me as if I were a mistake that had been allowed to sit at the head table.

The library door near the end of the hallway was half-open.

Light poured through the crack in a narrow gold strip.

Then I heard a woman laugh.

“She won’t last the night,” she said.

I stopped walking.

The voice belonged to Celeste Hawthorne.

I had met her after the ceremony, when she kissed the air beside my cheek and told me my dress was sweet.

Not beautiful.

Not elegant.

Sweet.

The kind of word a person uses when they want to remind you that you are young, poor, and not quite invited into the room where decisions are made.

“Either Gregory scares her off,” Celeste said, “or she finds out why he really married her.”

Another voice answered her.

A man this time.

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