
The bride i never wanted
Chapter 2
The limo door shut with a heavy click behind us.
“Tonight you’re going to tell me everything,” Alexander said, voice low and flat as we stepped into the honeymoon villa. “And I mean everything, Emma.”
I kicked off the heels that had been killing my feet all day. “I already told you in the hallway. Sophia ran. Dad begged me. The merger would collapse if the wedding fell apart. That’s it.”
He flicked on the lights. The huge living room glowed soft gold. Floor-to-ceiling windows showed the dark ocean outside. Alexander loosened his bow tie with one hand and stared at me like I was a problem he needed to solve right now.
“That’s not everything.” He walked closer. “You stood in my bride’s place. You said the vows. You let me put that ring on your finger. Why the hell would you do that to yourself?”
I crossed my arms over the lace bodice of the dress. “Because my family would lose everything. The company, the house, Dad’s reputation. You think I wanted this?”
He laughed once, short and cold. “You expect me to believe you did it out of pure love for your father?”
“Yes,” I snapped. “I do.”
Alexander stepped even closer. His cologne hit me again, the same one from the dance floor. He reached out and caught my wrist, not hard but firm. “Take the dress off.”
My stomach dropped. “What?”
“You heard me. I want to see the woman I actually married. Now.”
I yanked my wrist free. “I’m not undressing for you like some kind of prize.”
His eyes narrowed. “You think this is about sex? I want to see the differences I missed at the altar. The birthmark. The way your shoulders sit. Everything Sophia doesn’t have.”
I felt my face burn. “You already know I’m not her. You said it yourself back at the reception.”
“I want proof,” he said. “Right now.”
I turned my back to him, fingers shaking as I reached for the zipper. “Fine. Look. Then leave me alone.”
He moved behind me. His fingers brushed mine away and he pulled the zipper down himself. The dress loosened. Cool air touched my skin.
His hands stilled on my shoulders.
“There,” I said, voice tight. “Happy? Small heart-shaped birthmark on my left shoulder blade. Sophia doesn’t have it. You can check every photo of her if you want.”
Alexander didn’t speak for a long second. His breath brushed the back of my neck.
“You really did it,” he muttered. “You really stood there and let me marry the wrong sister.”
I spun around, holding the front of the dress to my chest. “I saved both families. You needed the merger as much as we did. Don’t act like I’m the only one who benefited.”
He stared down at me. Grey eyes dark. “Benefited? I got a stranger in my bed tonight instead of the woman I agreed to marry.”
“I’m not in your bed,” I shot back. “And I never will be if you keep looking at me like that.”
Alexander’s mouth twisted. “You think you get to decide that?”
“I think the law does,” I said. “We’re legally married. But that doesn’t mean you own me.”
He walked to the bar cart, poured two glasses of something dark, and pushed one toward me. “Drink. You look like you’re about to pass out.”
I took the glass but didn’t sip. “I’m fine.”
“You’re not fine. Your hands are shaking worse than they were at the altar.” He took a long swallow from his own glass. “Tell me the truth, Emma. Did Sophia know you were taking her place?”
“She left a note. Said she couldn’t go through with it. Dad found me two hours before the ceremony and begged. I said yes because I didn’t want to watch my family fall apart on live television.”
Alexander set his glass down hard. “So you sacrificed yourself.”
“Call it whatever you want.”
He stepped close again. Too close. “Look at me.”
I lifted my eyes.
“You’re going to regret this,” he said quietly. “Every single day you’re going to regret stepping into that dress.”
My throat tightened. “Maybe. But at least my family is safe tonight.”
He reached out and brushed a strand of hair from my face, the same way he had at the reception. This time his fingers lingered.
“Don’t touch me like that,” I whispered.
“Why? Because you hate me or because you don’t?”
I opened my mouth but nothing came out.
Alexander’s hand dropped. He turned away and walked to the big mahogany desk in the corner of the living room. He pulled out a thick folder and dropped it on the glass table with a thud.
“These are the contracts,” he said. “All of them. The merger papers. The prenup. The marriage agreement your father signed on behalf of Sophia.”
I stared at the folder. “And?”
“And now they have your name on them instead of hers.” He flipped the folder open. Pages and pages of small print. “There is no easy way out. If we annul this marriage within the next thirty days, the merger dies and both companies lose millions. My board will eat me alive. Your father will lose the last thing he has left.”
I sank onto the edge of the white sofa. “So what do we do?”
Alexander looked at me across the room. His face was hard again.
“We follow the rules I set right now,” he said. “Separate bedrooms. No touching. No pretending this is real when we’re alone. You stay out of my business and I stay out of your life.”
My chest squeezed. “For how long?”
“Until I decide otherwise.”
I stood up slowly. “And if I say no?”
He smiled then, but it wasn’t kind. “Then I make sure every day of this marriage feels exactly like the mistake it is.”
The folder lay open between us like a trap.
I looked at the papers, at his cold face, at the dark ocean outside the windows.
My voice came out small but steady. “I want to see the exact clause that says we can’t annul it.”
Alexander picked up the contract and held it out to me.
“Read it yourself, wife.”
I took the thick pages. My eyes scanned the lines, heart beating faster with every word.
And that’s when I saw the final paragraph at the bottom.
The one that changed everything.
The exact clause in the contract that binds them even tighter than they thought — setting up Alexander’s cold rules and the start of their forced cohabitation.
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