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Contract Wife Discovered Husband's True Past Novel Cover

Contract Wife Discovered Husband's True Past

Billionaire Adrian Voss—secretly the homeless boy Seraphina once fed—engineers a twelve-month marriage contract to erase her father’s $200k medical debt and pay her $50k a month. She signs, moves into his marble mansion, and plays perfect society wife at a gala while he spies on her via security cams. When charming rival Daniel Collins flirts with her, Adrian drags her home, snarling that “fraternizing” breaches protocol; Seraphina erupts, asking if he bought a wife or a prisoner. Days later Adrian learns her father has suffered another cardiac episode and races to tell her.
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Chapter 3

The charity dinner at the Meridian Hotel was proceeding exactly as planned until Daniel Collins appeared at our table.

I watched him approach with the easy confidence of a man who'd never been denied anything, his smile practiced and charming as he greeted the other guests. When his eyes landed on Seraphina, something predatory flickered beneath the polished exterior.

"Adrian," he said, extending his hand. "Wonderful to see you again. And this must be the lovely Mrs. Voss I've heard so much about."

Seraphina offered her hand with the same polite grace she'd perfected over the past month. "Mr. Collins, isn't it? Adrian mentioned you work in acquisitions."

"Among other things." Daniel's grip lingered a fraction too long on her fingers. "I have to say, Adrian's been keeping you well hidden. A crime, really, when the rest of us could benefit from such charming company."

I felt my jaw clench, but kept my expression neutral. "Seraphina prefers privacy. We both do."

"Of course, of course." Daniel finally released her hand, but his attention remained fixed on her face. "Though I hope that doesn't mean you'll be a stranger to our social circle. It would be such a waste."

The conversation continued around us, but I found myself studying every micro-expression that crossed Seraphina's face as Daniel spoke. She laughed at his jokes—genuine laughter that I rarely heard directed at me. When he complimented her dress, a faint blush colored her cheeks. When he asked about her background, she answered with more warmth than she'd shown me in weeks.

"A food truck?" Daniel leaned forward with apparent fascination. "How wonderfully entrepreneurial. I'd love to hear more about that sometime."

"Oh, it's not very interesting," Seraphina demurred, but I caught the wistful note in her voice. "Just simple comfort food, really."

"Simple food made with passion is never simple," Daniel replied smoothly. "I have a feeling there's quite a story there."

Something cold and sharp twisted in my chest as I watched them. This was exactly what I'd feared—someone seeing past the careful facade to the woman underneath, the woman who'd once fed strangers with gentle hands and a generous heart. Someone who might actually deserve her.

The thought sent ice through my veins.

"If you'll excuse us," I said abruptly, standing and placing my hand on Seraphina's shoulder with more force than necessary. "We have an early morning."

Surprise flickered across her face, but she rose obediently. "Of course. It was lovely meeting you, Mr. Collins."

"The pleasure was entirely mine." Daniel stood as well, his smile never wavering. "I do hope we'll have the chance to continue our conversation soon."

I guided Seraphina through the crowd with my hand pressed firmly against the small of her back, nodding curtly at acquaintances who tried to intercept us. The valet brought our car around with practiced efficiency, and I helped her into the passenger seat with movements that were controlled but barely.

The moment the car doors closed, the careful facade I'd maintained all evening cracked.

"Fraternizing with business associates outside of scripted interactions is a breach of protocol," I said, my voice cutting through the silence like a blade.

Seraphina turned to stare at me, her eyes wide with disbelief. "Fraternizing? I was being polite. Isn't that what you wanted? The perfect wife who charms your associates?"

"There's a difference between charm and flirtation."

"Flirtation?" Her voice rose an octave. "I was having a conversation! A normal, human conversation with someone who actually seemed interested in what I had to say."

I gripped the steering wheel tighter, my knuckles white against the leather. "Daniel Collins is not someone you want to be interested in you."

"And why is that? Because he might actually treat me like a person instead of a piece of property?"

The words hit like a physical blow. "You signed a contract. You agreed to certain parameters."

"Parameters that apparently include never speaking to another human being without your express permission!" She twisted in her seat to face me fully, her composure finally cracking. "What exactly did you think you were buying, Adrian? A wife or a prisoner?"

The question hung in the air between us, heavy with implications I wasn't ready to examine. I kept my eyes on the road, my jaw clenched so tight it ached.

"I thought I was buying discretion," I said finally. "Professional behavior. Not... whatever that was back there."

"What that was," she said, her voice shaking with barely controlled fury, "was the first genuine conversation I've had in a month. The first time someone looked at me like I was worth listening to instead of just... displaying."

I pulled into our driveway with more force than necessary, the tires crunching against the gravel. "If you wanted genuine conversation, perhaps you should have considered that before signing the contract."

She was out of the car before I'd even turned off the engine, her heels clicking against the stone as she stalked toward the house. I watched her go, her shoulders rigid with anger, and felt something cold settle in the pit of my stomach.

This was what I'd wanted. This was what I'd planned.

So why did it feel like I was losing her all over again?

The next few days passed in a silence so thick it felt like a living thing. Seraphina moved through the house like a ghost, avoiding the common areas when I was present, taking her meals in her room. I threw myself into work with renewed intensity, but found my concentration fractured, my attention constantly drifting to the security monitors that showed her solitary figure moving through the mansion's halls.

It was on the third night that I found her in the kitchen.

I'd been working late in my office when the smell hit me—something warm and comforting that seemed to seep through the walls themselves. Following the scent like a man possessed, I made my way to the mansion's industrial kitchen, a space that had been installed for catering purposes but rarely used.

Seraphina stood at the massive stove, her back to me, stirring something in a large pot. She'd changed out of the designer clothes I'd provided into simple jeans and a worn sweater that looked like it had been with her for years. Her hair was pulled back in a messy bun, and she moved with the easy confidence of someone completely in her element.

I retreated to the doorway, hidden in shadow, and watched her work. There was something almost meditative about her movements—the way she tasted the broth, adjusted the seasoning, added ingredients with the intuitive knowledge of someone who'd done this a thousand times before. This was the woman from the food truck, the one who'd fed me with gentle hands and kind eyes.

This was the woman I'd fallen in love with.

She ladled the soup into a simple bowl, tore off a piece of crusty bread, and sat at the small prep table in the corner. As she ate, her shoulders finally relaxed for the first time in days. She looked peaceful. Content.

Alone.

I was about to retreat when my phone buzzed with an incoming call. The name on the screen made my blood run cold: Mercy General Hospital.

"Mr. Voss?" The voice was professional, urgent. "This is Dr. Martinez from Mercy General. We have your wife's father, Robert Vance, here. He's had another cardiac episode. Mrs. Voss is listed as his emergency contact, but we thought you should know as well."

I was moving before the doctor finished speaking, my feet carrying me toward the kitchen where Seraphina still sat, unaware that her world was about to fracture again.

"Seraphina." My voice came out rougher than intended.

She looked up, startled, her spoon halfway to her mouth. "Adrian? I didn't hear you come in."

"We need to go. Now." I held up my phone. "It's your father."

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