
After My Groom Gave Me to His Business Partner
After My Groom Gave Me to His Business Partner Chapter 1
The champagne flute trembled in my hand as the string quartet's melody faded to silence. Five hundred of Manhattan's elite turned their gazes toward us, their jewels catching the light like predatory eyes in the darkness. Something was wrong. Caden's fingers pressed against mine with unusual force, his palm damp with sweat.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Caden's voice carried across the Plaza Hotel's grand ballroom, smooth as aged whiskey. "I have an announcement to make."
My heart fluttered. This wasn't part of our plan. We'd rehearsed nothing beyond the customary toast to our future—a future I'd dreamed of since we were children running through Central Park, collecting fallen leaves and promises.
"I stand before you tonight not just as your host, but as a man who has made a difficult business decision." His voice hardened, each syllable landing like a stone in still water.
Business decision? My gaze darted to Phoebe, who stood near the champagne fountain in a crimson gown that hugged her curves like a second skin. Her lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.
"After careful consideration," Caden continued, "I've decided that the merger between Evans Industries and Montgomery Holdings will be best secured through a strategic alliance."
The room spun slightly. Strategic alliance? What was he talking about?
"Zelda will be marrying Elijah Bennett tonight."
The words hit me like ice water. Marrying... Elijah? The intellectually disabled heir to the Bennett fortune who stood awkwardly near the cake table, clutching a blue teddy bear?
Gasps rippled through the crowd. I felt hundreds of eyes boring into me, waiting for my reaction. My throat closed, unable to form words.
Caden leaned close, his breath hot against my ear. "It's temporary, sweetheart. Just for show. Phoebe insisted the board needed reassurance about our commitment to the merger."
His hand found mine, lifting it toward Elijah, who approached with hesitant steps.
"This is just business," Caden whispered, but his eyes wouldn't meet mine. "We're still engaged. You know that, right?"
Phoebe materialized at his side, her arm snaking possessively around Caden's elbow. "Congratulations, sis," she purred, her voice dripping false sweetness. "You're about to become a Bennett."
I watched in horror as Caden placed my hand in Elijah's. The young man smiled up at me with innocent eyes, his grip gentle but firm.
"I'm sorry," he whispered, as if he understood my pain.
---
"The papers are straightforward," Marcus Thompson, the Bennett family attorney, explained as he spread the documents across the antique desk in the hotel's private drawing room. "A standard marriage contract."
Standard? Nothing about this was standard. My engagement ring bit into my palm as I clenched my fist.
"Just sign here," Caden pointed impatiently to a line at the bottom of the page. "And here. It's all for show, Zelda. You know that."
I watched him check his watch, then glance toward the door where Phoebe waited. Their eyes met in silent communication.
"Is this what you want?" I asked quietly.
"It's what we need," he replied, not meeting my gaze. "The board meeting is tomorrow morning. We need this merger."
Something inside me cracked. The years of Phoebe's manipulation, Caden's emotional distance, the scars I carried—both visible and hidden—all surged to the surface.
"You wanted a merger?" I grabbed the pen from his hand. "You got one."
With deliberate strokes, I signed my name. Not as part of a charade, but as a declaration. If Caden could discard me so easily, I could damn well choose my own path.
"Zelda," Caden hissed, realizing too late what I'd done. "What are you doing?"
I met his eyes, seeing genuine panic there for the first time. "What you asked me to do."
---
The Bennett estate sprawled before us, all stone towers and manicured gardens. I expected to feel like a prisoner entering a dungeon. Instead, as the car doors opened, I felt something unexpected—relief.
Mrs. Bennett rushed down the steps, her silver hair gleaming in the afternoon sun. To my shock, she embraced me tightly, tears glistening in her eyes.
"Thank you," she whispered. "For saving my son."
Save him? I'd done nothing but sign a piece of paper.
Elijah appeared beside his mother, his blue eyes wide with concern. Without a word, he pressed something cool and smooth into my palm—a small, polished stone.
"For sad times," he explained simply.
I stared at the stone, then at him. This man—this child in a man's body—had just offered me more genuine comfort than Caden had in years.
"It's pretty here," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
Elijah nodded solemnly. "It's safer too."
Safer? The word echoed in my mind as Mrs. Bennett led us inside. Perhaps this gilded cage would prove more sanctuary than prison. And perhaps the man everyone underestimated would become my unexpected salvation.
As we crossed the threshold, I glanced back at the waiting car. For the first time since Caden had shattered my world, I didn't look back with longing.
After My Groom Gave Me to His Business Partner of Contents
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