The Mute Heiress's Fake Marriage Pact

The Mute Heiress's Fake Marriage Pact

Alma

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I was finally brought back to the billionaire Vance estate after years in the grimy foster system, but the luxury Lincoln felt more like a funeral procession. My biological family didn't welcome me with open arms; they looked at me like a stain on a silk shirt. They thought I was a "defective" mute with cognitive delays, a spare part to be traded away. Within hours of my arrival, my father decided to sell me to Julian Thorne, a bitter, paralyzed heir, just to secure a corporate merger. My sister Tiffany treated me like trash, whispering for me to "go back to the gutter" before pouring red wine over my dress in front of Manhattan's elite. When a drunk cousin tried to lay hands on me at the engagement gala, my grandmother didn't protect me-she raised her silver-topped cane to strike my face for "embarrassing the family." They called me a sacrificial lamb, laughing as they signed the prenuptial agreement that stripped me of my freedom. They had no idea I was E-11, the underground hacker-artist the world was obsessed with, or that I had already breached their private servers. I found the hidden medical records-blood types A, A, and B-a biological impossibility that proved my "parents" were harboring a scandal that could ruin them. Why bring me back just to discard me again? And why was Julian Thorne, the man supposedly bound to a wheelchair, secretly running miles at dawn on his private estate? Standing in the middle of the ballroom, I didn't plead for mercy. I used a text-to-speech app to broadcast a cold, synthetic threat: "I have the records, Richard. Do you want me to explain genetics to the press, or should we leave quietly?" With the "paralyzed" billionaire as my unexpected accomplice, I walked out of the Vance house and into a much more dangerous game.

Chapter 1 1

The black Lincoln Town Car glided through the Upper East Side like a funeral procession of one. Elara Vance rested her forehead against the cool, tinted glass. Outside, the city was a blur of steel and ambition, but inside, the air was recycled and stale. She looked down at her feet. Her canvas shoes were frayed at the edges, the white rubber yellowed by time and the grimy floors of the state facility. She had hollowed out the right heel weeks ago to conceal her most valuable asset-a micro-recorder bought with cryptocurrency mined on a library computer.

They looked like an infection against the pristine, deep-pile leather mats of the luxury vehicle.

The partition window buzzed. It didn't lower completely, just a crack, enough for the driver's eyes to appear in the rearview mirror. He looked at her the way one looks at a stain on a silk shirt. He pressed a button, and the glass slid back up, sealing her in. He turned up the volume on the radio, drowning out her existence.

The car slowed. They were approaching the iron gates of the Vance estate. The security guard in the booth hesitated. He checked his clipboard, looked at the car, then looked at the clipboard again. Three seconds. It took him three full seconds to decide she was allowed to enter the place that was legally her home.

The car stopped at the foot of the limestone steps. The driver didn't get out. He popped the trunk release and waited. Elara opened her door. The humidity of a Manhattan summer hit her, thick and suffocating. She walked to the back, hauled out her single, battered canvas duffel bag, and slung it over her shoulder.

Jeeves, the butler who had served the Vance family since before Elara was born-and subsequently discarded-stood at the top of the stairs. He did not bow. He did not smile. He extended one arm, his index finger pointing rigidly toward the side of the house. The tradesman's entrance. The door for the help.

Elara adjusted the strap on her shoulder. The metal buckle dug into her collarbone. She looked at Jeeves. She didn't glare, and she didn't plead. She simply looked through him, her eyes dark and unblinking, devoid of the deference he expected. She stepped onto the first stair, then the second. She walked past his outstretched arm as if it were a tree branch obstructing a path.

Jeeves took a breath to speak, to reprimand, perhaps to physically block her. Elara turned her head slightly. She locked eyes with him. It was a look she had perfected in the communal showers of the foster system, a look that said violence was a language she spoke fluently. Jeeves froze. His hand dropped.

She pushed open the heavy oak double doors.

The foyer was an assault of light. A crystal chandelier, large enough to crush a small car, suspended from the three-story ceiling, refracting light into a thousand piercing daggers. Laughter drifted from the drawing room to her left. It was the sound of a commercial for a perfect life.

She walked toward the sound. Her sneakers made no noise on the marble, but her presence seemed to suck the air out of the room.

The laughter died instantly.

It was a tableau of wealth. Eleanor Vance, her biological mother, sat on a velvet settee, a teacup halfway to her lips. The cup rattled against the saucer, spilling a few drops of Earl Grey. For a fraction of a second, Eleanor's eyes widened-a flicker of recognition, perhaps even guilt-before the mask of the obedient wife slammed back into place. She didn't stand. She didn't open her arms. She looked at Elara with a mixture of horror and pity, like she was watching a news report about a tragedy in a foreign country.

Richard Vance, her father, checked his Patek Philippe watch. He frowned, a deep vertical line appearing between his brows, as if Elara's arrival had thrown off his schedule for the quarter.

And then there was Tiffany.

Tiffany sat on the floor, surrounded by torn wrapping paper and open boxes. She was wearing a tweed Chanel suit that cost more than the operational budget of Elara's last group home. She clung to Eleanor's arm, her head resting on her mother's shoulder. Her eyes, wide and blue, darted to Elara. There was a flash of something sharp-territorial aggression-before it was masked by a performance of innocence.

At the head of the room, in a high-backed wing chair, sat Victoria Vance. The matriarch. She held a cane topped with silver. She lifted it an inch and let it drop. Thud.

"You're here," Victoria said. Her voice was like dry parchment crumpling. She scanned Elara from her messy bun to her cheap shoes. "Go wash. You smell like the subway."

Elara stood still. She was a statue carved from silence. She let the insult wash over her, noting the way Eleanor flinched but stayed silent, the way Richard looked out the window.

"Oh my god," Tiffany gasped, her hand flying to her mouth in a theatrical display. "Is it true? Is she... does she not speak? I read in the file that she has... cognitive delays."

"Tiffany, quiet," Eleanor murmured, though her hand stroked Tiffany's hair soothingly. "Elara, this is your sister."

Tiffany stood up. She walked toward Elara, her heels clicking on the hardwood. She stopped a foot away, invading Elara's personal space. She smelled of vanilla and old money. She leaned in for a hug, but her arms remained stiff. She brought her lips close to Elara's ear.

"Go back to the gutter," Tiffany whispered. The venom in her voice was so pure it was almost impressive.

Elara didn't flinch. She turned her head, just an inch, and stared directly into Tiffany's pupils. She didn't blink. She didn't breathe. She just watched, dissecting the fear that lay beneath the aggression. Tiffany's smile faltered. She took a half-step back, her confidence cracking under the weight of that dead, heavy gaze.

"Take her to her room," Richard barked, breaking the tension. "North wing. Third floor."

Jeeves appeared at Elara's elbow. "This way."

They walked past the second floor. The door to Tiffany's room was ajar. It was a cavern of pink silks and white furniture, flooded with afternoon sun.

They climbed higher. The air grew warmer, stuffier. The carpet ended, replaced by bare floorboards. Jeeves stopped at a narrow door at the end of the hall. He unlocked it and pushed it open. It was a converted storage room. The window was small, facing the brick wall of the neighboring building and the alleyway below.

"Dinner is at seven," Jeeves said. "Tardiness means no service."

He left. The lock clicked.

Elara dropped her bag. The silence of the room rushed in to meet her. She walked to the window and looked down. A gardener was trimming the hedges, unaware that a ghost was watching him from the attic.

She sat on the edge of the narrow bed. The mattress was hard. She slipped her shoe off, pried open the hidden compartment in the heel, and pulled out the small, silver digital recorder. Her thumb brushed the 'stop' button. The red recording light blinked off.

She had every word. Every insult. Every hesitation. She had slipped it into her pocket before entering the drawing room, a reflex honed by years of needing evidence to survive.

She reached into her pocket and pulled out a lemon drop, the wrapper crinkling loudly in the empty room. She unwrapped it and popped it into her mouth. The sour, chemical taste hit her tongue, sharp and real. It was the only thing in this house that wasn't a lie.

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