
Substitute Bride For The Comatose Billionaire
After surviving twenty-one years in a brutal orphanage, I finally returned to my billionaire biological family with the silver pocket watch that proved my identity.
But my relatives didn't care about me; they only loved Corie, the fake daughter who had stolen my life after our mothers switched us during a hospital fire.
On my very first day home, the family faced total ruin over a thirty billion dollar debt.
The creditors demanded a Dunlap daughter marry their comatose, vegetative heir to settle the score.
Without a second thought, my grandmother and uncle pointed their fingers at me.
They claimed Corie was too delicate and precious to spend her life nursing a corpse with a heartbeat.
"You're used to hardship and deprivation," my grandmother sneered, demanding I fulfill my so-called family obligation to save them all.
I looked at these strangers who had ignored my existence for two decades, expecting me to sacrifice my future just so a thief could keep enjoying my stolen wealth.
They thought they were tossing an unwanted orphan into a living hell.
But when I saw the medical file of the comatose heir, a cold thrill ran through my veins.
It was Andres Gillespie.
The man who had taken my innocence during a mountain storm four years ago, and the secret father of my hidden twins.
I calmly set down my coffee cup and smiled at my arrogant family.
"I'll do it. I'll marry him."
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Chapter 6
The black Maybach climbed the winding road to the Dunlap family compound, its engine a low purr that barely disturbed the morning stillness.
Inside, the atmosphere had solidified into something that resisted breathing. Corie huddled in the corner of the rear seat, her body language screaming victimhood, her eyes darting constantly to Emilie and away. Hettie sat rigid, her hand locked around Emilie's as if she could physically prevent what was coming. Burnett stared out the window, his phone dark and silent-the network of power and influence he'd spent decades building, suddenly useless.
Emilie closed her eyes.
She didn't need to see the estates passing outside to know where they were. The Sanctuary's training had included detailed study of global power structures, and the Dunlap compound featured prominently in the files. Three generations of accumulated wealth, defensive architecture, and the kind of paranoid security that suggested secrets worth protecting.
The gates appeared ahead-wrought iron and stone, cameras tracking their approach with mechanical indifference. They swung open with a groan of well-maintained hydraulics, and the Maybach passed through into another world.
The main house rose before them, a monument to excess that managed to be both impressive and exhausting. Emilie counted six chimneys, fourteen visible security personnel, and a helicopter pad on the roof that probably cost more than the annual GDP of some nations.
Her family-this strange collection of blood and obligation-filed out of the car and into the grand entrance hall.
The family was waiting.
Archibald Dunlap sat in a thronelike chair at the far end of the room, his spine straight despite his eighty-plus years, his eyes the color of faded denim and just as soft. Beside him, Kristyn Dunlap held a gold-tipped cane like a scepter, her face a topography of disapproval that had been carved by decades of judging others and finding them wanting.
To their left, Ancil and Beatrice Dunlap arranged themselves on a loveseat, their bodies angled to display both concern and superiority. And in the shadows near the fireplace, a younger woman-Cecelia, Emilie recognized from the files-watched with eyes that held something almost like sympathy.
"Burnett." Archibald's voice carried the weight of absolute authority. "You bring your... daughter."
The pause before the final word was microscopic, but Emilie caught it. The old man was testing her, measuring her reaction to being defined by relationship rather than name.
She stepped forward, placing herself in the center of the room, her posture relaxed but alert. "Emilie Dunlap. Yes."
Kristyn's cane struck the marble floor-a sharp crack that demanded attention. "No greeting? No acknowledgment of your elders? The orphanage clearly failed to teach basic manners."
Emilie turned to face her. The movement was unhurried, unimpressed. "I was taught to respect those who earn it. Not those who demand it by age or accident of birth."
Hettie's breath caught. Burnett made a sound like a man swallowing broken glass. But Emilie held her grandmother's gaze, watching the old woman's eyes narrow with something that might have been reassessment.
"Bold," Kristyn said finally. "Reckless, but bold. You'll need that, where you're going."
"Mother-" Hettie began.
"Silence." The cane struck again. "You've had your say, Hettie. Twenty-one years of indulgence, of coddling that-" A gesture toward Corie, who had immediately positioned herself at Kristyn's side, seeking protection. "-that substitute. Now the bill comes due."
Kristyn reached out, her hand finding Corie's with obvious affection. The gesture was natural, unstudied-the touch of a grandmother who had never questioned the rightness of her preference.
"My Corie," Kristyn continued, her voice softening in a way it hadn't for her actual grandchildren. "Delicate. Sensitive. Raised with every advantage, every protection. She cannot be expected to-" The words emerged with delicate horror. "-to nurse a vegetable. To bind herself to a man who will never speak, never walk, never give her children."
She turned, and her eyes-so different from Archibald's, hard and bright and calculating-fixed on Emilie with the intensity of a predator selecting prey.
"But you." The word was almost gentle. "You've survived hardship. Adapted to deprivation. You have-" A smile that showed too many teeth. "-resilience. The kind of strength that can endure... limitation."
The room held its breath.
"Gillespie wants a bride by tomorrow sunset," Kristyn continued. "The contract specifies a Dunlap daughter. It does not specify which daughter." She raised her cane, pointing it at Emilie like a weapon. "You will go. You will marry the comatose heir. And in doing so, you will save this family from destruction."
Burnett stepped forward, his face twisted with anguish. "Mother, please. She's just come home. We can't-"
"You can." Archibald's voice emerged for the first time, quiet but absolute. "And you will. The decision is made."
He rose from his chair, moving with the careful precision of age, and approached Emilie. Up close, she could smell him-tobacco and old paper and something medicinal, the scent of power maintained through sheer will.
"You have your mother's eyes," he said. "And something else. Something I don't recognize." He studied her for a long moment, then nodded slowly. "Good. You'll need it."
He turned away, dismissing her, and the meeting was over.
But Emilie stood unmoving, her eyes tracking across the room-taking in Corie's hidden triumph, Ancil's satisfied smirk, Beatrice's careful neutrality, and Cecelia's strange, sad gaze.
She smiled.
It was a small expression, quickly suppressed, but in that moment her eyes held something that made Archibald pause at the doorway, something that made him turn back to look at her one more time before shaking his head and continuing on his way.
The game, Emilie thought, was about to change.
And she was finally holding all the cards.
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8.7
"I hate you, Aiden! I hate you! And trust me... you'll never find anyone who'll love you the way I did."
Tears streamed down Charlotte Parker's face as she stormed into her room, packing the last pieces of her broken heart. This time, I knew I'd messed up. And there was no going back.
Charlotte Parker is a kind, beautiful, and well-mannered 22-year-old with dreams of becoming a popular writer. But life has other plans. With her family struggling, she's forced to step up... whether she's ready or not.
Aiden Kingston, on the other hand, is everything she can't stand. Arrogant. Rude. A notorious playboy. And the cold-hearted CEO of a million-dollar company. For Aiden, keeping his inheritance means one thing: marriage. Fast.
Both blindsided by an arranged marriage neither of them asked for, their worlds collide in the most chaotic way. Charlotte is water, soft but strong. Aiden is fire, uncontrolled and burning through everything in his path.
But Aiden has a secret. One that could destroy whatever fragile peace they're trying to build.
Will he let his walls down for her?
Can Charlotte see past his mistakes and frozen heart?
Or will the hatred between them grow so deep it consumes them both... for good?

7.2
My family arranged my marriage to Silas Thorne, a Wall Street titan. There was just one problem: everyone, including my powerful new husband, believed I was a crippled, helpless girl from the countryside.
On the day of my physical therapy, my father called, not to ask how I was, but to demand I give up the marriage for his illegitimate daughter, Chloe.
"You can barely walk without a limp," he sneered. "You are going to embarrass the Vance family."
My new husband treated me with cold duty, carrying me like a fragile doll but refusing to share a bed, citing my ‘soft tissue injury’ as a pathetic excuse. The rejection was humiliating. To make matters worse, Chloe tracked me down while I was shopping, eager to mock me in public.
"Silas doesn't value you," she said, flashing a cheap ring from my father. "You’re just a crippled placeholder."
They all saw a weak girl they could push around, completely blind to the fact that my limp was a carefully crafted lie.
So I took the unlimited black card Silas gave me and bought a fifty-seven-million-dollar pink diamond, crushing her in front of New York’s elite. When I returned to our penthouse, Silas was waiting for me, a dangerous smirk on his face.
"I heard," he said, his voice a low rumble, "that you bought a star with my money today?"

8.1
Alice Monroe has always lived quietly. Between the late nights diner shifts and early morning classes,her world is small, ordinary, and safe. She doesn't have time for distractions especially not the kind that comes wrapped in tailored suits and gray eyes.
Brian carter is used to getting everything he wants as the ruthless billionaire CEO of cross enterprises, people fear him ,envy him and obey him. But the moment he locks eyes with an innocent diner waitress whose innocent eyes disarm him, Brian finds himself craving something he's never had , someone untouchable .
She wants nothing to do with men like him powerful, dangerous ,the kind who burn everything they touch. Yet fate keeps pulling them together. His world is full of secrets and ruthless,hers is fragile and simple. They should never collide.
But he can't stay away .
And she can't deny the fire he awakens in her.

7.2
Chloe Bishop never imagined her blind date would end in marriage-to a complete stranger. Expecting nothing more than a calm, respectful life, she instead gained an oddly clingy husband who never left her side.
Stranger still, every problem she faced vanished the moment he intervened. His excuse? "Just good luck."
But Chloe's world shattered when she saw a televised interview with the city's richest billionaire-a man identical to her husband, openly devoted to his wife.
And that wife... was Chloe herself.

9.4
Aria Mcgee was the unwanted second daughter of a decaying Long Island family.
To save their bankrupt corporation, her father and older sister drugged her. They shoved her into a town car and delivered her to a ruthless Wall Street billionaire's bed like a piece of meat.
They expected her to be the perfect sacrifice. The original Aria had no access to her own trust fund and was forced to live in a windowless broom closet. Even worse, a cold, synthetic System voice echoed in her skull, demanding she play the tragic, helpless female lead. It ordered her to endure her family's abuse and suffer the billionaire's humiliation to force a pathetic romance plotline.
"Host must follow the tragic trajectory and achieve the ultimate painful romance."
But the soul that woke up in that bed wasn't a weak, frightened girl. She was a dead Hollywood Oscar-winning actress. Why would a top-tier professional ever agree to play the weeping victim in such a garbage, B-list script?
Instead of trembling in fear as the System commanded, Aria looked at the billionaire and smiled. Using her flawless acting skills, she shattered his ego, extracted a hundred thousand dollars, and walked right out the door. Now, she was heading back to the Mcgee estate, ready to rip her money from her father's greedy hands and burn her sister's life to the ground.

7.7
In my past life, the bullet chambered in the gun on the desk was less lethal than the indifference of the two men standing beside me.
Dante and Matteo were supposed to be the future kings of Chicago, and I was their queen.
But they threw it all away for Sofia—a liar with a pretty face and a fake sob story about a gambling father.
They forced me into a gilded cage, making me serve Sofia like a maid while they played her saviors.
They let me rot in isolation until I swallowed a bottle of pills just to escape the coldness of their neglect.
They didn't even mourn me; they were too busy comforting the girl who would eventually destroy them.
I died realizing that my loyalty was my fatal flaw.
I had worshipped men who saw me as nothing more than an accessory, while they sacrificed their empire for a woman who played them for fools.
But the universe has a sick sense of humor.
It sent me back.
Back to the day that sealed my fate.
The Consigliere pushed the assignment papers toward us—the path to becoming Bosses.
"We are not going," Dante said, looking at me with cold eyes. "Sofia needs us. She is fragile."
In my past life, I begged them to stay.
This time, I stepped forward and picked up the pen.
"I will go," I said, signing my name in sharp black ink.
"I don't need your protection anymore."