The Runaway Bride's Secret Billionaire Protector

The Runaway Bride's Secret Billionaire Protector

Sophia Langley

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I sat before the vanity in a lace dress that cost more than a mid-sized sedan, but to me, it felt like a burial shroud. I was the sacrifice being offered to the Ortega family, a human payment for my father's debts and failing company. When I tried to refuse, my stepmother forced a glass of drugged champagne into my hand and threatened to destroy me. She whispered that if I didn't marry the "monster" Cooper Ortega, she'd release psychiatric records proving I was a mental patient who hallucinated a child that never existed. I escaped by jumping out of a speeding limo, tumbling into a ditch and losing everything but my life. A mysterious, scarred driver in a beat-up Ford saved me, but when I limped back home, my father threw me out like trash. My own sister stood in the foyer, wearing my engagement ring and clinging to Lance, the man who had promised to protect me. "You're a sinking ship, Fran," my father sneered before locking the gates. Then I found the recording-my stepmother's voice complaining that the doctor wanted more money because my baby had cried before they took him away. My son wasn't stillborn; he was stolen by the people I called family. I was broken, homeless, and hunted, with only a "poor" driver named Cooper to help me. I didn't know he was actually the billionaire monster I had jumped out of a car to avoid, but I moved into his cramped studio anyway. I'm starting a war with nothing but a cracked phone and a mother's rage. They took my life and they took my son, so now I'm going to take everything they have left.

Chapter 1 1

Francesca sat before the vanity, her reflection a stranger trapped in a gilded cage.

The woman in the mirror wore a dress that cost more than a mid-sized sedan, layers of French lace and silk that felt less like a garment and more like a shroud. Her skin was the color of old paper. Her eyes, usually a vibrant hazel, were dull, two extinguished candles.

She wasn't breathing. Not really. She was sipping air in shallow, terrified gasps, trying not to expand her ribs against the corset that held her torso in a vice grip.

Her fingers, cold and trembling, clutched the silver locket around her neck. It was cheap, tarnished, and the only thing in this room that actually belonged to her. Her mother's locket.

Just breathe, Fran. Just survive today.

She closed her eyes, forcing a memory to the surface. Lance. His voice on the phone last night.

"I have a meeting, Fran. Don't be dramatic. It's just cold feet."

The click of the line going dead had echoed in her ear for hours. It was a sound of dismissal. A sound that said her fears were inconvenient.

The bedroom door banged open against the wall.

Francesca jumped, her hand flying to her chest.

Dollie Leonard sauntered in. She was wearing a bridesmaid dress that was cut too low and hemmed too high, a deliberate splash of crimson against the pristine white of the room.

"You look like a corpse," Dollie said. Her voice was sugar-coated glass. She walked behind Francesca, her eyes meeting Francesca's in the mirror. There was no sisterly affection there. Only the cold, hard glint of triumph.

Dollie reached out, her manicured nail tracing the delicate lace of the veil. "Such a waste. This was supposed to be mine, you know. Before Daddy realized the Ortegas wanted a sacrifice, not a wife."

Francesca stood up. The chair scraped harsh against the hardwood floor.

"Then take it," Francesca said, her voice shaking but her chin high. "Take the dress. Take the wedding. You were the one who wanted the title."

Dollie's smile faltered, just for a second. Then it sharpened.

"And live with a monster? A cripple who burns things for fun?" Dollie laughed, a brittle sound. "No thanks. I prefer men who can walk. And who have faces."

Janeen Leonard swept into the room before Francesca could respond. The stepmother. The architect of this nightmare.

"Enough chatter," Janeen said. She was smiling, but her eyes were dead. She moved with the efficiency of a general on a battlefield. She adjusted Francesca's veil, her fingers pinching Francesca's scalp. "The car is waiting."

"I can't do this," Francesca whispered. The panic was rising, a tide of black water in her throat. "I can't marry him. Everyone says he killed his last-"

"You will do this," Janeen hissed, her face inches from Francesca's. The mask of civility dropped. "Your father's company is leveraged to the hilt. If you don't walk down that aisle, we lose everything. The house. The accounts. Your mother's little trust fund."

The threat hung in the air, heavy and suffocating.

Janeen stepped back, the fake smile plastered back into place. She picked up a crystal flute from the side table. The champagne fizzed, golden and innocent.

"To new beginnings," Janeen said. "Drink. It will calm your nerves."

"I don't want it."

Janeen's grip on the glass tightened. "Drink it, Francesca. Or I tell Lance the full truth about Switzerland. Not the polite lie we told him."

Francesca froze. The blood drained from her face.

Switzerland. The clinic. The lie that it was a simple miscarriage. The secret that had eaten a hole in her soul for five years. If Lance knew what she suspected-that the baby hadn't just died, but that something far darker had happened-it would destroy the last shred of him she held onto.

She took the glass. Her hand shook so hard the liquid sloshed over the rim, cold against her fingers.

She drank.

The champagne tasted metallic. Bitter. Like swallowing a penny.

"Where is Dad?" Francesca asked, handing the glass back. She wiped her mouth, the taste lingering on her tongue.

"Downstairs," Janeen said, turning away to check her makeup in the mirror. "Entertaining the Ortega representatives. They are... impatient."

The door opened again. A maid, head bowed. "Mrs. Leonard. It's time."

Janeen grabbed Francesca's arm. Her nails dug into the soft flesh of Francesca's bicep. "Smile. You're a bride, not a prisoner."

They walked down the grand staircase. The foyer was empty. No father waiting to walk her out. Just two large men in dark suits, wearing sunglasses indoors.

They didn't look like wedding guests. They looked like undertakers.

Francesca stumbled. The floor seemed to tilt to the left.

"Careful," one of the men said. He didn't sound concerned. He grabbed her elbow, his grip bruising.

They marched her out the front door. The sunlight was blinding. A black stretch Lincoln sat in the driveway, its engine idling with a low, ominous rumble.

"Wait," Francesca mumbled. Her tongue felt thick. Heavy. "My father..."

"He'll meet you at the church," Janeen called out from the porch. She was waving. A mocking, little flutter of fingers.

The men shoved Francesca into the back of the car.

The heavy door slammed shut.

Click.

The sound of the lock engaging was loud. Final.

Francesca sank into the leather seat. The air conditioning was on full blast, chilling the sweat on her skin.

She blinked, trying to clear the fog in her brain. Why was she so dizzy? She had only taken a few sips.

The partition between the back and the driver was up. A black wall. Above it, a small security camera blinked a slow, red rhythm.

The car began to move.

Francesca leaned her head against the cool window. She watched the familiar trees of the driveway blur past.

They turned onto the main road.

Wait.

The church was left. The car turned right.

Francesca sat up. The movement made the world spin. She grabbed the door handle.

Locked.

She pounded on the partition. "Hey! You're going the wrong way!"

No answer. The driver didn't even tap the brakes.

The heat in her body was rising. A feverish, unnatural heat that started in her stomach and spread to her fingertips. Her limbs felt like they were filled with lead.

The champagne.

Janeen hadn't just given her a drink. She had given her a sedative. Or worse.

She fumbled for her clutch purse. Her fingers felt like sausages, clumsy and numb. She clawed it open and pulled out her phone.

Lance. Call Lance.

She stared at the screen.

No Service.

"No," she whimpered. A tear leaked out, hot and stinging. "Please, no."

She looked out the window again. A green sign flashed by.

Ortega Estate - Private Road. No Trespassing.

The rumors crashed into her mind. Cooper Ortega. The man who lived in the shadows. The man with the melted face. The man who bought wives and buried them.

Fear, sharp and primal, cut through the drug-induced haze.

She wasn't going to a wedding. She was being delivered. Like a package.

"I won't," she gritted out.

She looked at the door lock. It was an old-fashioned plunger style.

She grabbed it with her thumb and forefinger. It was slippery. Her grip was weak.

She gritted her teeth and pulled. Her nail bent back, snapping to the quick. A drop of blood welled up.

Click.

The lock popped up.

On the partition console, a red warning light flashed.

The car was speeding up. The trees were a green smear.

Ahead, the road curved sharply. A blind turn.

The driver hit the brakes. The car lurched, momentum throwing her forward.

It was now or never.

Francesca closed her eyes. She grabbed the handle.

And she threw the door open.

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