Twenty minutes before the "Wedding of the Century" at The Plaza, I stood outside the Presidential Suite in a fifty-thousand-dollar Vera Wang gown. I was the girl from a West Virginia trailer park about to marry Hugh Maxwell, the golden heir to a billion-dollar defense empire. I pushed the door open only to find Hugh pinned against the bed with my own stepsister, Floy. She was wearing my bridal diamond necklace, and the sounds of their laughter scraped against my eardrums like sandpaper. I didn't scream; I listened as Hugh grunted that once the wedding was over and the trust fund unlocked, he'd dump "that hillbilly trash" on a bus back to the mountains. They weren't just cheating; they were planning to steal my family's land deeds and leave me with nothing. When I set off the sprinklers and exposed their naked bodies to the paparazzi, the Maxwell family didn't apologize. They called me a "greedy peasant" and threatened to ruin my life unless I signed a new deal to save their crashing stock. I realized then that I was never a bride to them. I was a transaction, a rounding error in a ledger to be used and discarded. They thought my poverty made me weak and my silence made me a victim. "If we don't have a marriage certificate by midnight, the bank freezes thirty percent of our liquidity," their lawyer warned. So, I gave them exactly what they wanted. I used a loophole in their hundred-year-old family covenant and married the only other direct heir available. I didn't marry Hugh. I walked into the ICU and married his uncle, Fleet Maxwell-the legendary war hero who had been in a vegetative state for months. Now, I am the matriarch of the Maxwell dynasty. I've suspended Hugh's executive powers, exiled my mother-in-law to the Swiss Alps, and taken control of the family vault. They think I'm just a gold-digger waiting for a "corpse" to die so I can collect a fifty-million-dollar widow's payout. But last night, as I lay beside my comatose husband, the man they called a vegetable gripped my hand back.
The corset of the Vera Wang gown was a vice, crushing Darcie's ribs until shallow breaths were the only option.
She stood outside the mahogany double doors of the Presidential Suite at The Plaza, her hand hovering over the gilded handle. Her palms were slick. Not with excitement, but with a cold, greasy sweat that made the metal feel foreign.
"Give me two minutes," she told the makeup artist hovering behind her. Her voice sounded thin, like stretched wire. "I need to see him alone before the cameras start."
The artist nodded and retreated down the plush hallway.
Silence settled. Darcie closed her eyes and counted backward from ten. It was a habit from home, from the days when the debt collectors banged on the trailer door. Ten. Nine. Eight.
The door wasn't locked.
It was cracked open just enough to let a slice of golden light spill onto the carpet. And with the light came a sound.
A low, guttural moan. Followed by a giggle that scraped against Darcie's eardrums like sandpaper.
Floy.
Her hand froze. Her brain, usually so good at calculating odds and solving complex equations, stalled. The variable didn't fit. Her stepsister shouldn't be in her fiancé's suite twenty minutes before the ceremony.
Darcie pushed the door. Just an inch.
The foyer was lined with mirrors. The reflection hit her with the force of a physical blow.
Hugh was bent over the edge of the king-sized bed, his back to her. His hands were gripping hips that weren't Darcie's. Floy was underneath him, her head thrown back, the diamond necklace-Darcie's bridal necklace, the one meant to signify her acceptance into the Maxwell dynasty-glittering obscenely against her neck.
Darcie didn't scream.
She expected to. She expected the hysteria, the tears, the collapse. But instead, a terrifying, arctic calm flooded her veins. It started in her toes and worked its way up, freezing the nausea in her stomach.
She stepped inside. The thick Persian rug swallowed the sound of her heels.
"God, Hugh," Floy gasped. "Faster. Before the hillbilly gets here."
"Don't worry about her," Hugh grunted. The sound was animalistic. "Once the wedding is over and the trust fund unlocks, I'm dumping that trash on a bus back to West Virginia. Or wherever the hell she came from."
"But the land," Floy teased. "You need the Mayo land deed."
"I'll have it by noon," Hugh promised.
Darcie looked to the coffee table.
There it was. The Prenuptial Agreement. A stack of crisp, white paper that she had signed an hour ago. It was the only thing binding the merger. The only thing that made her valuable to them.
Bside it lay a silver Zippo lighter.
She picked it up. The metal was cool against her skin.
Click.
The sound of the lid flipping open was as loud as a gunshot in the quiet room.
On the bed, the motion stopped. Hugh froze. He turned his head slowly, his eyes widening until the whites showed all around.
"Darcie?" His voice cracked.
She didn't look at his face. She looked at him like she looked at a rounding error in a ledger. Something to be corrected.
"Darcie, wait! Let me explain!"
He scrambled off the bed, naked and pathetic. He tried to pull the sheet with him, but Floy was clutching it to her chest, screaming.
Darcie struck the flint.
The flame was orange and blue, dancing in the draft from the air conditioner. It was beautiful.
"No!" Hugh shrieked, realizing what Darcie was looking at. "Don't! That's a ten-billion-dollar merger!"
She touched the flame to the corner of the document.
The paper was high quality. It caught instantly. The fire curled the edges, turning the legal jargon into black ash.
"Darcie!" Hugh lunged.
She took a step back, holding the burning pages high. The heat licked at her fingers, stinging, but she didn't drop it.
She looked up.
Directly above her was the smoke detector.
Darcie stood on her tiptoes, the burning contract acting as a torch. She held it right under the sensor.
Three. Two. One.
The alarm didn't just ring; it screamed. A piercing, electronic wail that vibrated in her teeth. The red strobe lights began to flash, turning the room into a chaotic disco of panic.
Then came the pop.
The sprinkler system exploded overhead.
It wasn't clean water. It was the stagnant, black sludge that had been sitting in the pipes for years. It erupted in a high-pressure torrent, coating everything in a foul-smelling, oily rain.
Hugh slipped on the marble floor as he tried to reach her, landing hard on his hip. Floy was shrieking, her hair plastered to her skull with black goo, looking like a drowned rat.
Darcie dropped the charred remains of the contract into a puddle of sludge.
The water soaked her veil. It ruined the fifty-thousand-dollar dress. But she didn't care. She felt clean.
She turned to the door.
Outside, the hallway was filling with people. Guests in tuxedos, hotel staff, and-crucially-the paparazzi who had been camping out for the 'Wedding of the Century.'
Darcie pulled the door wide open.
"Help!" she cried out, her voice trembling with a performance worthy of an Oscar. "Please!"
The cameras flashed. Pop. Pop. Pop.
They didn't just see a distressed bride. They saw past her. They saw the naked heir to the Maxwell fortune, covered in black slime, scrambling on the floor with his fiancée's sister.
The shutter clicks were a machine gun of humiliation.
While the mob surged forward, hungry for the scandal, Darcie stepped back.
She kicked off her satin heels.
She didn't run toward the elevators. She turned toward the heavy fire exit door.
As the chaos consumed the suite behind her, Darcie slipped into the concrete stairwell, the cold air hitting her wet skin. She was shivering, but her heart was beating a steady, rhythmic drum.
Survival.
She started to run down the stairs, leaving the ashes of a million dollars behind her.
Married To My Ex-Fiancé's Silent Uncle
Ming Yue
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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Chapter 21
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Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
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Chapter 24
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Chapter 25
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Chapter 26
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Chapter 27
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Chapter 28
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Chapter 29
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Chapter 30
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