
Fake Wedding Engagement:The Billionaire's Ruin
Chapter 2
The lilies ended up on the kitchen island, still wrapped, leaking pollen onto the marble.
Declan tugged his tie loose, draped his jacket over a barstool. Each gesture too casual. A man rehearsing normal.
"The rehearsal," he said. "I should explain."
I didn't look up. I was pulling a roast from the oven, the pan heavy between two mitts. Seared dark on the outside, pink at the center. Seasoned with the rosemary and garlic his mother taught me the first Christmas after our wedding.
"You don't owe me an explanation," I said.
That stopped him. I felt the pause, the recalibration. He'd walked in with a script. I was supposed to cry, yell, throw something. That was the old Nora. The one who made it easy.
"Her grandfather is dying, Nora."
I sliced the meat in clean, even strokes.
"Stage four. Doctors say he won't make it past the month. He has one wish — to see her married before he goes. She asked me. As a friend. None of it is real."
I arranged the slices on a white platter and garnished with thyme.
"Nora, are you listening?"
"Every word."
I carried the platter to the dining room. Two places already set. The good silverware. I'd done it an hour ago, while he was at the chapel pretending to marry another woman.
I sat. Unfolded my napkin. Smoothed it across my lap.
"You're not upset," he said. Not a question. An accusation.
"Should I be? It's charity. A dying man's last wish. What kind of wife would I be?"
He sat. His knife and fork hovered above the plate, suspended.
"This roast is good," I said. "The rosemary really came through."
"Nora."
"Hmm?"
"You watched the livestream."
"I did."
"And you're fine."
"I understand."
His fork came down with a small sharp clink. He leaned back, and I saw it — the thing he couldn't hide. Not anger. Not relief.
*Irritation.*
He wanted the fight. He needed it. The screaming, the tears, the part where I fell apart and he got to be the reasonable one, the patient husband managing his unstable wife. I spiral. He steadies. I beg. He forgives. The ugly machine keeps turning.
I cut another piece of meat.
"You seem very calm."
"I had a good day. Cleaned the house. Made dinner. Watched a little TV."
His jaw worked. He stabbed his roast without tasting it.
"There's something you should know," he said. "About the wedding. The ceremony itself is real — legally."
I set my fork down. Slowly.
"Maya's grandfather — the lawyers were specific. He wants to see her *married*. Signed paperwork. Witnessed. It's a technicality, Nora. The annulment is already drafted. Forty-eight hours after the ceremony, it's done. Like it never happened."
"You're going to legally marry another woman."
"For three days."
"While still married to me."
"It's not bigamy if the annulment is pre-filed. My lawyers checked."
I picked up my water glass. Took a sip. Set it down at a precise angle relative to the plate.
"Why are you telling me this now?"
"Because the press is going to find out. I need you to be ready."
"Ready how?"
"To stand by me. Publicly. One statement. One photo. After that, this all goes away."
I smiled. Soft. Warm. The way I used to smile when I still believed him.
"Of course, darling. Whatever you need."
The relief on his face was immediate, almost obscene. He reached across the table and covered my hand with his. His skin was warm. Mine was room temperature.
"I knew you'd understand."
"I always do."
He went back to his meal. He'd already moved on, already calculating press releases and photo angles. Already planning what came next.
He didn't notice me slip my phone from my lap and tap a single line into the burner number I'd memorized two weeks ago.
*Confirmed. He just told me himself. Move on Phase 2.*
The screen went dark.
I picked up my fork.
"More wine, Declan?"
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