
I Married The Tycoon In A Coma To Destroy My Ex
Chapter 2
I sat in the darkened living room of my family's penthouse, watching dawn break over the Manhattan skyline. I hadn't slept. The betrayal kept replaying in my mind like a horror film I couldn't turn off.
"Did you see her face? Priceless."
"To Charlotte. Our most useful pawn."
Those words had hollowed me out. Twenty-four hours ago, I'd been standing in a couture wedding gown worth more than some people's homes. Now I was nothing but a discarded chess piece in their game to win Maya.
My phone hadn't stopped buzzing with notifications. #CharlotteJilted was trending. The New York Post had already run with the headline: "WHITMORE HEIRESS DUMPED FOR CHARITY CASE."
I picked up my phone and made a call.
"Gerald? It's Charlotte Whitmore. I need to see you immediately."
Two hours later, I sat across from Gerald Finch, the Whitmore family lawyer for three decades. His office was all mahogany and leather, the kind of old money that didn't need to announce itself.
"Charlotte, your parents are concerned. They've been trying to reach you."
"I'm not here about my parents." I placed my handbag on his desk. "I'm here about the Morrison family."
Gerald's eyebrows shot up. "The Morrisons?"
"Specifically, Ethan Morrison."
Understanding dawned on his face. "The son. The one in the coma."
"Yes." I leaned forward. "I want to marry him."
Gerald stared at me as if I'd lost my mind. Perhaps I had. "Charlotte, I don't think you're thinking clearly—"
"I've never been more clear-headed in my life." My voice was steady, surprising even myself. "The Morrisons need someone to manage Ethan's affairs. I need a husband who won't betray me. It's a perfect arrangement."
"It's insanity," Gerald countered. "The press will have a field day."
"The press is already having a field day." I smiled thinly. "At least this way, I control the narrative."
Three hours and several urgent calls later, I stood in the Morrison family lawyer's office, facing Eleanor Morrison herself. She was a formidable woman in her sixties, with silver hair pulled into an elegant chignon and eyes that missed nothing.
"Miss Whitmore," she said coolly, "you've presented us with quite an unusual proposition."
"Mrs. Morrison," I replied, matching her tone, "I believe we can help each other."
"By marrying my comatose son?" She raised an eyebrow. "Forgive me if I'm skeptical about your motivations."
"My motivations are simple. I need to reclaim my dignity, and your son needs someone to protect his interests while he recovers." I met her gaze steadily. "I'm not asking for the Morrison fortune. I have my own. What I'm offering is loyalty and protection—something I've learned is rare in our circles."
Eleanor studied me for a long moment. Then, surprisingly, her lips curved into a small smile.
"You know, Charlotte, I always thought Ryan Sterling was beneath you."
The civil ceremony at Morrison Manor was small and solemn. I wore a simple cream suit rather than white, standing beside Ethan's hospital bed that had been moved to the manor's library for the occasion. Photographers clamored outside the gates, but inside, it was quiet and dignified.
I placed my hand on Ethan's still one as I spoke my vows. "I, Charlotte Whitmore, take you, Ethan Morrison, to be my lawfully wedded husband. I promise to honor and protect you, in sickness and in health."
The words felt strangely powerful. Not empty promises of love, but a pledge of protection. Something real.
Afterward, in the grand hall where a modest reception was held, Eleanor approached me with a thick folder.
"My wedding gift to you," she said, placing it in my hands. "The deed to our SoHo shopping complex. It's yours now, to manage as you see fit."
I stared at her, stunned. "Mrs. Morrison—"
"Eleanor, please. We're family now." She squeezed my hand. "And there's more. The board has agreed to grant you executive authority within Morrison Industries, effective immediately."
"Why?" I couldn't help asking.
Eleanor's eyes gleamed with something that looked almost like pride. "Because, my dear, anyone who can turn catastrophe into opportunity the way you have is exactly the kind of person we need in our family."
As I looked down at the folder in my hands, I felt something I hadn't expected—power. Real power, not the kind that came from being someone's fiancée or someone's daughter.
Little did I know that across town, Ryan and Alexander were about to discover just who they'd underestimated.
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