
Signed In Silence
Tara signed hospital papers she believed would save a stranger's life.
Weeks later, she learns the truth, she is legally married to him.
Ethan Hale needed a wife to protect his sister.
Tara never agreed to be one.
They have six months to undo the marriage.
Living together was never part of the plan.
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Chapter 1
Waking up expecting a normal day felt like dreaming too big, like a poor girl imagining life as a billionaire - only to realize that normalcy vanishes the moment change arrives.
Tara's phone rang before she could even make sense of the fact that she was awake, or alive, or sitting up. Its insistent tone slicing through the serenity of her apartment like a warning.
Half-awake, half-asleep, she hesitated, staring at the screen, her vision still blurred. A name she didn't recognize flashed back at her, calm and professional, dragging her fully into reality.
"Lawyer", it read.
It might as well have said disaster.
Her chest tightened. Sometimes, reality has a way of arriving before coffee.
"Hello?" Her voice came out as a whisper, swallowed by a sudden weight pressing down on her chest.
"Good morning, Mrs Hale" he said, and waited, confident she wouldn't object.
"I'm sorry," she said, pressing the phone tighter to her ear as though proximity could fix the unexpected. "You must have the wrong person."
There was a brief pause on the other end of the line. The rustle of papers, a throat being cleared - small sounds that sliced through the quiet. "I assure you ma'am, I don't."
Her stomach tightened.He introduced himself again, this time calm and polished, his voice carrying the authority of someone used to being believed. He spelled out her full name, including her middle name which she rarely answered to, then recited her date of birth like it was a password to luxury he had already hacked.
Then he said it again.
"Mrs Hale!"
Tara sank onto the edge of her bed, trying to breathe, gaze fixed on nothing as the tranquility of her apartment revealed itself as a lie.
"I'm not married" she said, more firmly this time.
Another pause - longer now.
"You signed the marriage documents on January 20th at Orchard Hospital", he said.
"Witnessed, filed and finalized."
The room tilted.
Memories flickered- fluorescent lights, sharp sting of antiseptic, a nurse shouting for consent forms. The memory hit her all at once. Blood on her hands that weren't hers.
A man slumped in a wheelchair. Pale. Barely conscious.
She remembered thinking someone should help him, before the thought dissolved into fear.
She remembered signing what she had assumed were consent forms.
"Oh my God," she whispered.
"Yes," the lawyer said gently, mistaking her shock for hesitation. "I believe congratulations are appropriate."
Tara's breath caught.
Congratulations for what exactly?"NO" she exhaled. "No, no, no. Those were hospital papers. I was told they were....."
"Emergency documentation," he finished. "Yes, including marital consent."
Her chest felt too tight.
"Why would anyone need to get married in an emergency?"
There it was– the shift. The hesitation. The careful recalibration.
"That," he said slowly, "is something Mr Hale will explain himself. He's asked that you come in today."
"I don't know any Mr Hale."
Another lie - softer this time.
She did know him.
A deep voice asking her name. A grip on her hand that had felt more grounding than invasive. Heavy eyes she couldn't clearly recall, yet somehow felt dark and watchful,
"Where is he?" she asked.
The address came immediately, as though this had all been expected.
By the time Tara hung up, her hands were shaking. Her heart felt numb. Her thoughts disoriented.
She laughed -short, hysterical then tried to stand. Her legs betrayed her, trembling as she stumbled back onto the bed.
Finally upright, she paced the length of her apartment, heart pounding, thoughts colliding.
"Married?" she said aloud. "To a stranger? Legally?"
It was then it dawned on her.
She hadn't been married through a proposal, a ceremony, or a kiss but through deception.She grabbed her keys.
The building rose before her, all glass and steel, sleek and polished like it was daring the sky to compete. Yet to Tara, it felt less like architecture and more like arrogance made concrete. Each reflective surface gleamed with wealth and control; every sharp edge whispered authority she hadn't asked for.
She stepped closer, heels clicking against the tiled floor, and felt the same weight pressing down on her chest that had started the moment she'd picked up the phone.
This wasn't just a building.
It was a statement.
And apparently, she was expected to fit into it.
The security didn't even blink when she gave her name. Without a word, they escorted her to the top floor, moving as though she had always belonged there.
The office doors slid open silently.
He stood by the window, his back turned to her, the city stretched beneath him like something he owned. Tall, broad-shouldered. Impossibly composed.
When he turned, recognition struck, not clear, not complete but enough.
Hospital lights. Blood pooled on the floor. Dark, heavy eyes.
"Ethan Hale!" She whispered in her thoughts.
"You came," he said.
Her shock sharpened into anger, so precise it steadied her.
"Why," she asked, each word deliberate though uncertain, "am I married to you?"
He studied her for a moment like she was a see-through variable he'd accounted for and had not anticipated feeling guilty about."Because," he said calmly, "you saved my life."
"That does not come with a marriage license."
"No it doesn't," he agreed. "But guardianship laws do."
Her confusion flickered.
"My sister," he continued, "she's sixteen. Our parents are dead. I needed emergency approval to keep her out of state custody, and marriage hastened the process.
"Tara stared at him, disbelief giving way to irritation.
"You used me."
"Yes," he followed.
The honesty stunned her more than a lie would have.
"You let me sign a contract I didn't understand."
"I let you help," he corrected quietly. "I never forced your hand."
She smirked bitterly.
"You manipulated a stranger at a moment of vulnerability, a night that should have
demanded care not deception."
"His jaw tightened. "I did what I had to do."
The air between them thickened.
"I want this undone," Tara said.
"You can't."
Her heart sank.
"The marriage is valid," he continued. "But we can dissolve it."
Relief sparked, brief, fragile."In six months."
"Six months?" her voice cracked. "So what now? You expect me to just stay married to you?"
"Yes"
"Absolutely not."
"You'll live here," he said, as though discussing a business arrangement.
"It'll remain private. No public appearances. No emotional expectations. At the end of six months, we divorce quietly."
Cold settled in her chest.
"And if I say no?"
Something unguarded flickering in his eyes.
"Then my sister loses everything," he said. "Including her freedom."
That did it.
The anger didn't explode–it sank. Because Tara had always been weak to that kind of truth. Truths carrying consequences she didn't fully own. Choices where someone else bore the cost.
She swallowed hard.
"This is temporary"
"Yes," he obliged.
"This is not real."
"No."
"And when this is over," she added softly, "I walk away."He nodded.
But something in his expression suggested he already knew that living together would change everything .
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8.0
I sat at a table for two in the center of Le Coucou, clutching a gift box that had cost me two months of savings. It was our three-year anniversary, and I was waiting for Gavin to finally ask the big question.
But when the heavy oak doors opened, Gavin didn't walk toward me with a ring. He walked in with a polished blonde heiress tucked under his arm, her hand resting protectively over a small baby bump.
"This is Tiffany Stone. My fiancée," he said, his voice devoid of any warmth. He didn't apologize for being late or for the three years we'd spent together. Instead, he pulled out a checkbook, scribbled a number, and slid a ten-thousand-dollar check across the white tablecloth.
"Consider it severance for your time," he added, as Tiffany mocked my cheap drugstore dress. "Don't contact me again. Tiffany doesn't need the stress." I was the entertainment for the entire restaurant—the pathetic girl dumped for a better model. By the time I walked out into the rain, I had lost my boyfriend, my home, and the funding for my secret medical research project.
I was an orphan with no safety net, facing an eviction notice and a ruined career. I had given Gavin everything, and he had discarded me like a broken tool. The injustice burned in my chest, a hot, sharp rage that replaced my tears.
Desperate and freezing, I ducked into a coffee shop where I met Colton Bentley, a reclusive billionaire in a wheelchair. After I defended him from a cruel date, he offered me a contract: a marriage of convenience and a seven-figure payment to act as his shield. I signed the papers that night, ready to use his wealth to rebuild my life. But as I watched my new husband navigate his penthouse, I noticed his "paralyzed" legs tense with a strength that shouldn't exist.

7.7
A Whitmere Family Romance
Ten years ago, Sloane Hart ran from the only man she ever loved.
Not because she stopped loving him-
but because loving Rhett Whitmere meant risking everything.
Now she's back in Whitmere County, standing inside the luxury hotel he built from heartbreak, legacy, and a love he never let go of. Rhett is no longer the boy she left behind. He's a powerful CEO bound by family expectation, haunted by the past, and still hopelessly in love with the woman who shattered him.
Sloane only planned to stay long enough to complete a high-profile spa expansion.
She never planned to fall for him again.
But in a town that remembers everything, whispers turn into scandals, and old wounds reopen fast. When a dangerous betrayal threatens Rhett's empire and puts Sloane at the center of a storm, they're forced to face the truth they've both been avoiding:
Some loves don't fade.
They wait.
And this time, Rhett Whitmere isn't willing to lose her again.
Forever Yours, Almost is a slow-burn, second-chance romance filled with family legacy, small-town secrets, emotional tension, and a love worth fighting for

7.5
To save my dying father, I made a deal with the billionaire Christopher Kirkland. I became his secret, a bird in a gilded cage he paraded around when it suited him.
But I was just a pawn in his twisted game to win back his ex-girlfriend.
He proved it when he publicly outbid me for my own mother's heirloom necklace, only to gift it to her right in front of me.
Then he threw me out of the penthouse. My few cherished belongings-my books, a photo of my parents-were tossed out.
"Chaney doesn't like clutter," he told me, erasing my entire existence for her.
A text on his phone confirmed the brutal truth.
"Our little game is working perfectly," she'd written. "She's completely fooled."
Years later, after she betrayed him and his empire nearly crumbled, he came back begging. He thought he could buy my forgiveness. He was about to learn that my freedom had no price tag.

7.3
Seraphina Serenity Miller has spent her entire life putting her parents' happiness above her own.
When they arranged for her to marry Hans Continental in the name of a business merger, she didn't protest. She followed the rules-just as she always had.
Everything was fine until River Sage Palmer entered her life. He's stubborn, vile, and a rule breaker-Serenity's complete opposite.
Where she clings to order, he thrives in chaos. And where she draws lines, he's determined to cross them-all for her.
Bound by blood as they were cousins, Serenity knows they can't be together. But River has never been the kind to take no for an answer.
He's always gotten everything he wanted. Serenity will not be an exemption.

7.7
Jaclyn woke up in the sterile hospital room after falling down the stairs. The nurse delivered the devastating news: she had bled heavily and lost her baby.
But before she could even cry, her trusted cousins, Katelyn and Cherri, locked the door and revealed the horrifying truth.
"It wasn't an accident," Katelyn smirked, pinning Jaclyn's arm down. "The lubricant on the top step was a very deliberate choice."
They needed her broken and unstable. They had forged her signature, draining her massive trust fund to save their uncle's bankrupt business.
What shattered Jaclyn's world was the fresh hickey on Cherri's neck. Her lover, Bradford, had helped plan the entire murder.
When Jaclyn tried to scream, they smothered her with a pillow, framing her as a lunatic having a mental breakdown.
Two weeks later, when she confronted them, Bradford violently shoved her through a second-story glass window to silence her forever.
As she fell to her death, the husband she had spent her life hating—the ruthless billionaire Gaines—burst through the doors.
He threw himself forward, his face filled with pure terror, desperately trying to catch her.
When her body hit the stone patio, Gaines fell to his knees in her blood, weeping and begging her not to close her eyes.
Until her last breath, Jaclyn was consumed by suffocating regret. Why did she trust the monsters who killed her, and hate the only man who truly loved her?
Opening her eyes again, she was back in the penthouse, exactly one month into her marriage with Gaines.

7.2
Ade had sacrificed the life she loved, the things she liked doing to please James. But it was never enough for him. Somehow, the one woman he just couldn't get, was the price, she was the gem.
And so once the opportunity presented itself, Ade became a past chapter of his life. A reject.
Betrayed and scorned, Ade is on a quest to reclaim her life back and face off adversaries.
But now what is she to do with the two men in front of her. One of them her ex James who can't seem to forget her and keeps stepping in her way, and the other, a billionaire who wants her at all costs.