I married my friend’s wealthy grandfather for his inheritance—on our wedding night, he looked at me and said, “Now that you’re my wife… I can finally tell you the truth.” I was never the pretty one. Not in school. Not anywhere. The kind of girl people only noticed when they needed someone to laugh at. Crooked smile, awkward posture… always a little too quiet—or somehow too much—at exactly the wrong time. By the time I reached high school, I had already made peace with it. No one was ever going to fall in love with me. Except Violet stayed. She never laughed at me. We remained friends through school, and later ended up at the same university, sharing a tiny apartment. After graduation, she planned to return home. I didn’t have a home waiting for me. My family had made that clear years ago. So I followed her. I found a job in her city, rented a small place nearby—anything to hold on to the only person who had ever truly stayed in my life. That’s how I met her grandfather. Rick. Seventy‑six. Sharp. Observant. Nothing like I expected. At first, it was just casual conversations over dinner. Then longer talks. Somehow, he listened to me more closely than anyone ever had. And one evening, he made me an offer. Marriage. He was wealthy. Extremely wealthy. And for the first time in my life… I saw a way out. No more worrying about rent. No more counting every last dollar. When I told Violet, she looked at me like I was a stranger. “I didn’t think you were that kind of person,” she said. She cut me off that same day. The guilt stayed with me. But not enough to make me stop. The wedding was small—just Rick’s family. No one came for me, which didn’t surprise me. It was held in a quiet, elegant hall. Everything looked perfect. Like a life I had stepped into… not one I had earned. Afterward, we drove back to his estate. And when I finally stepped into the bedroom, still wearing my wedding dress— Rick walked in behind me. Closed the door. Then looked straight at me and said: “Now that you’re my wife… I can finally tell you the truth. It’s too late to walk away.

I stared at him. “Your own son?”

“Yes. David.”

“What does that have to do with me?”

“Everything.”

He nodded toward a folder on the bedside table. “Open it.”

I did.

Inside were documents—transfers, legal drafts, handwritten notes.

Unsent donations. Employees quietly pushed out. Violet’s mother’s hospital bills—paid by Rick while Angela and David took credit.

Then I reached the estate plan.

My throat went dry.

“Rick…”

“After I die,” he said, “part of the company and the charitable foundation go to you.”

I dropped the folder onto the bed.

“No.”

“Yes, Layla. It’s the only way.”

“No. Your family already thinks I’m a gold digger. Imagine when they find out.”

“They thought that before you put on the ring.”

“They’ll destroy me.”

He held my gaze. “Only if you let them.”

I let out a sharp, unsteady laugh. “Why me?”

“Because you notice what others step over. Who gets ignored. Who gets used. People who’ve been unwanted usually do.”

“I thought I was the desperate one in this marriage.”

Rick lowered himself into the chair by the fire. “No. Just honest.”

“You should’ve told me.”

“You would’ve run,” he said. “And I needed time to prove I wasn’t offering you a cage.”

“So what now?”