
Substitute Bride For The Fake Cripple
Grace's engagement to Dillan Hayes was nothing but a cold business transaction to secure funding for her family's company.
But when Dillan violently shoved her into a marble bar over his ex-girlfriend, leaving her bleeding, Grace didn't hesitate.
She called 911, had her fiancé arrested on the spot, and broke off the engagement.
Returning to the Albert estate, she expected chaos, but not absolute betrayal.
Her family didn't care that she had just been physically assaulted.
They were in a sheer panic because her cousin Ashly had just fled the country, abandoning a terrifying arranged marriage.
The groom was Hudson Turner, a man known across Manhattan as a disgraced, violent psychopath, paralyzed from the waist down in a severe crash.
To save themselves from the Turner family's wrath and financial ruin, Grace's aunt and father ordered her to take Ashly's place.
"You eat from this family, you live in this house! It is time you paid us back!"
Her father even threatened to freeze her bank accounts and faked a heart attack to force her compliance.
For three years, Grace had single-handedly kept the family business afloat while they squandered the profits.
Now, they were throwing her to a monster without a second thought, expecting her to rot as a crippled man's miserable nursemaid.
But they picked the wrong sacrifice.
Grace ruthlessly extorted a legal severance from her family, taking her shares and cutting all ties forever.
She walked straight into Hudson Turner's private gallery to propose a mutually beneficial, cutthroat business marriage.
However, when the prenuptial was signed, the "paralyzed" billionaire placed his hands on his wheelchair.
Slowly, deliberately, Hudson stood up to his full, imposing height of six-foot-three.
"The wheelchair is a necessary illusion for my enemies," Hudson stated calmly. "But it will never be an illusion between you and me."
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Chapter 7
Grace walked out of the heavy, bronze doors of the New York City Hall. The cold wind whipped her hair across her face, but she barely felt it. In her right hand, she gripped a piece of paper that still felt warm from the printer. It was her marriage certificate.
A few yards away, the black Maybach idled at the curb. The rear window rolled down smoothly, revealing Hudson's sharp profile.
"Get in," Hudson said, his voice carrying over the noise of the traffic. "I'll have Mike drive you back to the estate to collect your things."
Grace stopped on the sidewalk. She looked at the luxurious car, then down at the piece of paper in her hand. She shook her head.
"No," Grace said firmly. "I have my own car. I need to handle this myself. I need some time to pack."
Hudson's dark eyes locked onto hers. He studied the rigid set of her shoulders and the defensive tilt of her chin. He didn't push. He simply gave a single, slow nod.
"Take all the time you need," Hudson replied. He tapped the partition glass, and the window rolled up, sealing him away. The Maybach pulled smoothly into the traffic and disappeared.
Grace walked to her SUV, got in, and drove back to Long Island.
When she pulled through the gates of the Albert estate, the sprawling grounds were eerily quiet. The panic from the night before had settled into a tense, exhausted silence. The family had clearly received word that the Turner crisis had been averted.
Grace bypassed the living room and walked straight up the grand staircase to her bedroom.
She pulled a large, black hardshell suitcase from the top shelf of her closet and threw it onto the bed. She moved with mechanical efficiency. She opened her dresser drawers and only pulled out the clothes she had purchased with her own salary. She packed her books, her laptop, and her personal documents.
She walked over to her jewelry box. Inside sat rows of diamond earrings, pearl necklaces, and expensive watches-gifts from the family over the years, tools used to parade her at social events.
She didn't touch a single piece. She left them exactly where they were.
The bedroom door creaked open.
Grace turned to see her mother, Eleanor, standing in the doorway. Eleanor's eyes were red and swollen, her hands wringing a silk handkerchief.
Eleanor stepped into the room and walked toward the bed. Her trembling hand reached out, trying to grab Grace's wrist as she folded a sweater.
"Grace, please," Eleanor sobbed, her voice breaking. "I'm so sorry. I'm a coward. I should have stopped your father. I shouldn't have let them force you into this."
Grace's hands stopped moving. A tight, painful knot formed in her throat. Her eyes burned, but she violently suppressed the urge to cry. She couldn't afford to break down now.
She gently pulled her wrist out of her mother's grasp. She placed the sweater into the suitcase.
"It's not your fault, Mom," Grace said, her voice softer than it had been all day, but still remarkably steady. "You didn't force me. I chose this. It was the only way out."
Eleanor looked down at the desk. She saw the photocopy of the marriage certificate sitting next to Grace's keys. A fresh wave of tears spilled down her cheeks. She reached into her cardigan pocket and pulled out a thick, white envelope.
"Take this," Eleanor whispered, trying to shove the envelope into Grace's hand. "It's cash. It's my private stash. If that man hurts you, if he's as cruel as they say, use this to run away."
Grace looked at the envelope. She felt a profound, aching pity for the woman standing in front of her.
She pushed Eleanor's hand back.
"I don't need it," Grace said firmly. "I have my own money. I can take care of myself."
Grace reached out and held her mother's shoulders. She looked deep into Eleanor's tear-filled eyes.
"You need to start thinking about yourself, Mom," Grace urged, her voice tight with emotion. "Don't let them hold you hostage forever. You have to find a way out."
Eleanor covered her mouth, her shoulders shaking with heavy, silent sobs. She shook her head. She had been a dependent of the Albert family for thirty years. The cage door was open, but her wings were long broken.
Grace saw the resignation in her mother's eyes. The knot in her throat tightened, but she let go of Eleanor's shoulders.
She turned back to the bed and grabbed the two halves of the suitcase. She slammed them together. The loud, sharp clack of the metal latches snapping shut sounded like a gunshot in the quiet room.
Grace walked over to her vanity. She picked up a sealed envelope she had prepared earlier and placed it on the glass surface.
"There's an emergency contact number in there," Grace said, not looking back. "And a prepaid debit card. Use it if you ever decide to leave."
Grace grabbed the handle of her suitcase and pulled it off the bed. The wheels hit the floor with a heavy thud.
Eleanor stood frozen by the bed. "Grace..."
Grace stopped at the doorway. She didn't turn around. Her chest physically ached, a hollow, pulling sensation right behind her ribs.
"Take care of yourself, Mom," Grace whispered.
She stepped out into the hallway. She walked past the portraits of her ancestors, her posture rigidly straight. A few maids were dusting the corridor. When they saw Grace with her luggage, they immediately dropped their eyes to the floor, the air thick with awkward silence.
Grace reached the top of the grand staircase. She gripped the handle of her suitcase, preparing to carry it down.
"Well, well. Leaving so soon?"
Grace paused. She looked down.
Standing at the bottom of the stairs, holding a porcelain teacup, was her aunt Beatrice. The panic from last night was entirely gone from her face. Instead, she wore a sickeningly sweet, triumphant smile. Her eyes sparkled with malicious glee.
Grace looked down at her, her fingers tightening around the plastic handle of her luggage until her knuckles turned white. She didn't say a word. She simply lifted the heavy suitcase and began to walk down the stairs, one deliberate step at a time.
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8.1
Elinor's frail daughter, Cece, died in a sterile hospital room while waiting for her father to take her to Disney World.
But her billionaire husband, Derick, never showed up. At the exact moment Cece's heart monitor flatlined, the hospital TV broadcasted Derick affectionately holding the hand of his mistress and he has booked a clearance of the entire Disneyland to celebrate mistress's daughter's birthday!.
When Elinor confronted Derick with their daughter's ashes, he sneered and accused her of hiding the child just to get his attention. Elinor's heart was torn to shreds. How could a father be so blind and ruthless? Did Kamryn use his power to steal the very kidney that belonged to Cece? Why did her innocent baby have to die for their sick affair?
The suffocating grief inside Elinor finally crystallized into a sharp blade. She wiped the blood from her lips, canceled the simple divorce, and began her ruthless revenge.

9.5
My husband, Colton, the Wall Street mogul, slid annulment papers across the table, coldly discarding me and our unborn child. He thought he was getting rid of a useless wife, but he was actually throwing away the secret architect of his entire empire. Now, I'm ready to make him pay for every insult, every lie, and every single secret I've kept.
For three years, eight months pregnant, I secretly saved Colton's ten-billion-dollar company from collapse, enduring a cold, transactional marriage.
One night, he shattered that illusion, serving annulment papers and callously discarding me and our unborn child.
I signed, leaving luxury behind. Exposing his butler's fraud, I escaped. Colton later found his wedding ring gone and, on his desk, my SEC compliance fixes—proof I was his hidden genius.
Blindsided, he realized he’d destroyed his own empire. His mother then called, gloating. The injustice ignited a fierce resolve within me.
The next morning, I launched Kidd Legal Consulting. I'd use forty-seven folders of Farmer Capital's un-patched loopholes to force a fair settlement, securing my daughter's future.

8.9
For seven years, I hid my MIT Ph.D. and my identity as a top haute couture designer to be the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Cornelius Lambert.
But on our anniversary, while I waited at home with a cold dinner, I found him at a Michelin restaurant with his childhood sweetheart, Halle.
My seven-year-old son sat between them, laughing loudly.
"Mom is too boring. I wish Aunt Halle was my real mom."
Cornelius didn't defend me. He just smiled and affectionately ruffled the boy's hair.
When I finally packed my bags and left, I accidentally triggered an old AI robot prototype Cornelius had given me years ago.
A hidden recording played his voice from the very night he proposed.
"Why marry her? Because she's easy to control. Halle doesn't want to settle down yet, so Cassidy is just a perfect, temporary shield."
Later, when I caught them being intimate in a dark parking garage and snapped a photo, Cornelius watched with cold, dead eyes as his massive bodyguard shoved me against a concrete pillar.
My arm was torn open, blood dripping onto the floor, as they forced me to delete the evidence of his affair.
For seven years, I filed down every sharp edge of my brilliance for a man who saw me as nothing but a pathetic, disposable placeholder.
My heart turned to absolute ice. He thought I was just a weak, powerless housewife.
But he forgot who he was dealing with.
As his luxury car drove away, I pulled up the hidden command terminal on my phone and recovered the encrypted cloud backup of the photos.
I looked at my lawyer with a bleeding arm and a cold smile.
"Let's go. Now, we have a weapon."

8.4
Kenzie, the former leader of the Aegis Alliance, opened her eyes to find herself reincarnated as a freezing, abandoned infant in a wet cardboard box.
She was rescued from the rain by Devin Ayers, a ruthless billionaire, and rushed to a private hospital, but a deadly threat was already waiting for her.
The ER doctor, Desiree Dillon, approached her with a syringe. Through a sudden burst of telepathy, Kenzie read the doctor's dark thoughts. Desiree wasn't trying to cure her fever. She deliberately ignored the safe dosage, drawing a lethal amount of Diazepam to permanently silence the crying baby and disguise it as sudden infant death.
"This will make it all go away," Desiree smiled gently, the needle glinting as it moved inches from Kenzie's arm.
Trapped in a weak, paralyzed three-month-old body, Kenzie couldn't run, fight, or even speak. She could only watch the poison inch closer.
How could she survive death only to be assassinated in a hospital bed by a corrupt doctor? She used to command armies. The sheer injustice and terror of dying completely helpless in this tiny body ignited a blinding rage inside her.
Refusing to be a victim again, Kenzie pushed her newborn brain to its absolute limit and unleashed a desperate telepathic scream directly into the billionaire's mind.
"Poison! She's trying to kill me!"
Devin, who had been looking away, suddenly froze, his icy gray eyes locking onto the doctor's wrist.

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.

7.5
When Alessia Romano's ex-husband destroys her family's company to drag her back to him, she refuses to beg. But refusing comes at a cost she never expected.
Billionaire Adrian Virelli pays off every debt and saves Romano Industries from ruin. The price is simple. Three years of her life, living under his roof as his daughter's nanny.
Adrian is cold, controlled, and completely off limits. Alessia tells herself she feels nothing.
But when she discovers a hidden room filled with portraits of a woman wearing her face, the truth hits harder than any betrayal she has ever known
She was never the woman he wanted. She was only a replacement.
She walks away. Then his ex-wife returns, and the danger that follows is nothing like Alessia expected. Someone wants her dead, Adrian nearly dies saving her life, and when he finally opens his eyes again, he remembers nothing.
His ex-wife is standing at his bedside, ready to rewrite every memory he has left.
And Alessia is running out of time to make the man she loves remember that he loved her too.