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Forced into Marriage with A Secret Billionaire Novel Cover

Forced into Marriage with A Secret Billionaire

When Matilda Evans’ mother succumbs to cancer, she finds herself alone, broke, and trapped in a world that’s never truly cared for her. The last person she expects to hear from is her estranged father, Richard, who abandoned her and her mother years ago. But he isn’t calling to offer comfort—he’s calling to demand a marriage that could save his empire. Unable to escape from her father's evil command, Matilda is thrust into an arranged marriage with Luca Walker, a wealthy heir confined to a wheelchair after a tragic accident. As the wedding unfolds under the indifferent gaze of a crowd more interested in business than love, Matilda begins to see Luca not as a stranger, but as a fellow victim in a cruel game of power and sacrifice. Amidst family betrayal, corporate scheming, and public humiliation, Matilda must decide: will she let the so called family who abandoned her dictate her life—or will she forge a new future with the stranger she’s been forced to marry? In a world of power and privilege, can love bloom from the ashes of manipulation? --- The rain hammered against the hospital window—a relentless, furious noise that didn't manage to drown out the hollow echo inside me. Three days. That was how long it had been since I’d felt Mom’s hand go completely limp in mine, the last warmth fading, the long, grueling fight finally over. Cancer had won. I sat in the sterile, plastic chair of the waiting area, a small mountain of final paperwork spread on the table. Each form felt like a paper gravestone marking the end of everything. My savings account was already a ghost town, long drained by the medical bills. I’d quit my international marketing job a year ago, believing I was buying us more time. Now, I had only a worn suitcase, an empty account, and the terrifying silence of being utterly alone. My phone vibrated, skittering across the plastic surface. Unknown Number. I almost ignored it—grief felt too heavy to entertain strangers—but a desperate, automatic reflex made me answer. “Hello?” “Matilda.” The single word, spoken in a voice both deep and clipped, brought a dizzying sense of displacement. I recognized the low rumble, yet it was the voice of a man I didn't know. “It’s Richard, your father.” My breath hitched, turning instantly cold in my throat. Richard Evans. The name was a history lesson in a single, hated syllable. He was the man who’d vanished twenty-four years ago, taking my older brother, Oliver, and leaving Mom with nothing. He hadn’t looked back, building his business empire while we lived meagerly. “How did you get this number?” I asked, my voice thin and strange. ...
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Chapter 1

The rain hammered against the hospital window—a relentless, furious noise that didn't manage to drown out the hollow echo inside me.

Three days. That was how long it had been since I’d felt Mom’s hand go completely limp in mine, the last warmth fading, the long, grueling fight finally over.

Cancer had won.

I sat in the sterile, plastic chair of the waiting area, a small mountain of final paperwork spread on the table. Each form felt like a paper gravestone marking the end of everything.

My savings account was already a ghost town, long drained by the medical bills.

I’d quit my international marketing job a year ago, believing I was buying us more time.

Now, I had only a worn suitcase, an empty account, and the terrifying silence of being utterly alone.

My phone vibrated, skittering across the plastic surface. Unknown Number. I almost ignored it—grief felt too heavy to entertain strangers—but a desperate, automatic reflex made me answer.

“Hello?”

“Matilda.”

The single word, spoken in a voice both deep and clipped, brought a dizzying sense of displacement. I recognized the low rumble, yet it was the voice of a man I didn't know.

“It’s Richard, your father.”

My breath hitched, turning instantly cold in my throat. Richard Evans.

The name was a history lesson in a single, hated syllable. He was the man who’d vanished twenty-four years ago, taking my older brother, Oliver, and leaving Mom with nothing.

He hadn’t looked back, building his business empire while we lived meagerly.

“How did you get this number?” I asked, my voice thin and strange.

“That’s not important. I heard about your mother.” His tone was devoid of feeling, a corporate formality. “My condolences.”

Condolences? From a man who hadn’t sent so much as a Christmas card in two decades.

“Thank you,” I managed, my grip tightening on the phone until my knuckles were white. Richard Evans didn’t call after two decades of silence without a reason.

“I need you to come home, Matilda. To the family estate.”

Home. That word was a cruel mockery. Home was the cramped apartment smelling of Mom’s lavender candles, not some gilded cage.

“Why?” I demanded, the first spark of raw emotion cracking through my grief.

“We’re family,” he stated, as if that simple fact magically erased two decades of abandonment. “It’s time you returned to where you belong.”

Where I belonged.

The phrase was treacherous, igniting a flicker of foolish, orphaned hope. Maybe the loss had shaken him. Maybe he felt regret. Maybe I could finally, against all odds, find a place in the world again.

“I’ll text you the address,” he continued, already moving on. “Be here tomorrow.”

-

The next afternoon, I was standing in front of the Evans estate with my worn suitcase and a simple black dress.

A sprawling fortress of glass and cool grey stone, the mansion was a monumental testament to power.

I rang the bell, my heart hammering out a frantic, uneven rhythm.

The door was answered by a crisply uniformed housekeeper whose eyes swept over my exhausted appearance with immediate, barely concealed scorn.

The housekeeper stepped aside.

“Mr. Evans is expecting you in the study,” she instructed, her voice flat.

I followed her through an icy maze of pristine white halls. The walls were adorned with huge, abstract canvases—splashes of color that I knew cost more than Mom’s entire course of chemotherapy. The house was immaculate, stunning, and utterly devoid of soul. It was a museum of privilege.

The housekeeper tapped once on a heavy, mahogany door and announced, “The young lady, sir.”

“Enter.”

The study was vast, dominated by a formidable black mahogany desk.

Richard Evans sat behind it, looking exactly as he did in the rare, silver-haired, impeccably tailored photos I’d sometimes glimpsed. He did not rise.

Beside him, rigid and cold, stood Oliver Evans, the brother I barely remembered. His eyes, the exact cold grey of Richard’s, narrowed as they raked over me.

“Matilda,” Richard said, his gaze critical. “You look exactly like your mother.”

I swallowed, the comment stinging like an accusation. “Thank you for inviting me, Richard.”

“Sit,” he commanded.

I sat, my purse clutched in my lap, and risked a cautious, hopeful glance at Oliver. “It’s good to finally meet you,” I offered, attempting to build a fragile bridge across the years.

Neither of them answered.

The silence that followed was a crushing weight. I shifted, my attempt at a warm reunion withering under their cold scrutiny.

“I appreciate you reaching out now,” I made another attempt, my voice a little shaky. “I know it’s been a long time, but perhaps we could get to know each other…”

Richard interrupted me, his tone slicing through my earnest words. “Matilda. Let’s dispense with the sentimentality. I called you here for a very specific, financial reason.”

The temperature in the room seemed to drop further.

I swallowed before I replied. “Yes?”

Richard leaned forward, resting his hands on the desk. “Evans Industries is facing an immediate liquidity crisis. Frankly, we are days away from total collapse.”

I blinked, confused. “I… I don’t understand.”

What did he mean? Was he asking for money from me? But… Wasn’t that ridiculous? Calling a daughter after her mother’s funeral just to talk about money?

“The Walker Group has agreed to an investment that will save the company. But they have made their terms clear,” he ignored my expression and went on. “They demand a marital alliance.”

I felt the blood drain from my face. “A what?”

“A marriage alliance,” Richard repeated, now impatient. “Their main heir is already engaged. However, they have a suitable alternative: the current CEO’s nephew, Luca Walker.”

Oliver snorted, a sharp, ugly sound. “A cripple. Paralyzed in a wreck a few years back. A wheelchair-bound drain on their resources.”

Richard shot his son a sharp warning look, then focused his cold eyes back on me. “The Walker Group is willing to inject the capital required to save this company, on the condition that you marry Luca Walker.”

The room seemed to spin. The walls mocked me. The words were stones, thrown directly at my fragile, grieving heart.

“You… you want me to marry a stranger?” I whispered, disbelief making me sick. “Right after my mom’s funeral? To save your company?”

“Our company,” Richard corrected. “You are an Evans. This is your legacy, too, and now you have a chance to fulfill your duty.”

I pushed myself to my feet, my chair scraping on the polished floor, the sound harsh in the vast silence. My hands clenched into useless fists.

“My duty?” Anger burnt though me. “I haven't been an Evans since you walked out on Mom when I was three! You left us with nothing, abandoned me through every birthday, every difficult day! When Mom was sick, dying, and I had to quit my job to care for her—where were you then?”

Richard merely waved a dismissive hand, a gesture of ultimate power. “That is ancient history, Matilda. Sentimental nonsense.”

“And you think I’m going to sacrifice my life for your company because of ‘duty’?” I challenged, tears of pure rage burning behind my eyes. “You didn’t call me here because you wanted your daughter back. You called me here because I am a piece of currency you can spend!”

Oliver let out a short, cruel laugh, finally speaking up, delivering the last, fatal blow to my hope. “Why would we care about a woman who wasn’t good enough for the Evans name? And honestly, Matty, be grateful. You’re broke. You’re an orphan. Marrying a crippled billionaire is the most successful thing you’ll ever do.”

I stared from the father who betrayed me to the brother who despised me.

The house, the wealth, the promise of family—it all dissolved into cold air.

How naïve I was yesterday, to still expect warmth and support from these two men. They were not the family I'd desperately longed for. They saw me only as an asset to be sold.

“You two are despicable,” I choked out.

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