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The Billionaire's Contract Bride (Replacement)
img img The Billionaire's Contract Bride (Replacement) img Chapter 2 The Signing
2 Chapters
Chapter 6 The Grandmother's Heart img
Chapter 7 The Public Debut img
Chapter 8 A Hunt For Margaret Chen img
Chapter 9 The Hidden Key img
Chapter 10 A Day Of Promises img
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Chapter 2 The Signing

The contract arrived at seven the next morning.

Emma found it waiting on the breakfast table, a thick document bound in black leather, the Hawthorne Corporation phoenix embossed in silver on the cover. Beside it sat a pen and a single white rose in a crystal vase.

Fiona was already seated at the table, a cup of coffee cradled between her palms. She watched Emma with the same predatory stillness as yesterday, but there was something new in her eyes now. Relief.

"Sit down, Emma," Rachel said from the head of the table. "Your father will be here shortly."

Emma sat. She didn't touch the contract, she poured herself a cup of tea from a fresh pot and waited.

Mr. Williams entered three minutes later. He took his place at the head of the table and nodded at the contract.

"You'll be signing it today. We're going to the Hawthorne estate this afternoon."

Emma lifted her teacup. "Will I?"

The silence sharpened.

"You are aware of the situation," Mr. Williams said.

"I'm aware that you brought me back because the Hawthorne family demanded a bride. I'm aware your company is weeks from collapse. I'm aware Fiona refused to marry a man in a wheelchair, and you needed someone expendable." She set her cup down. "Is there anything I'm missing?"

Rachel went pale. Fiona's hands tightened around her coffee cup.

"I have terms," Emma said.

Mr. Williams jaw tightened. "Go on."

"My adoptive parents get a trust fund. Enough that they never worry about money again. The transfer happens before I sign anything."

"Done."

"A separate account in my name. My own money, deposited monthly, no questions asked."

"Done."

"The contract is for one year. At the end, I walk away with a divorce and ten million dollars. If Alex Hawthorne dies before the year is up, I still get the money. If he leaves me, I still get it. If anyone tries to extend the contract, I walk away with double."

Fiona's mouth had fallen open. Mr. Williams stared at his daughter, this stranger who had walked into his house yesterday with nothing but a duffel bag.

"You've thought about this," he said.

"I've had a year to think. You had a year to come get me. You didn't, so now we negotiate."

He nodded slowly. "Fine. Get ready, we leave in two hours."

****

The Hawthorne estate was a fortress of old money and power.

Emma followed her family through the gates, past manicured lawns and fountains, toward a mansion that made the Williams house look modest. Her heart beat steady in her chest. She had faced worse than this.

A butler greeted them at the entrance. "Mr. Hawthorne is expecting you. But first, the Madam wishes to meet the young lady."

Emma glanced at her father. His expression was unreadable. "The grandmother," Rachel whispered. "She's... formidable."

They were led into a sunroom filled with orchids. An elderly woman sat in a velvet armchair, her silver hair swept up, her eyes sharp despite her age. She wore a simple black dress and a string of pearls that probably cost more than Emma's entire village.

Madam Hawthorne. Her eyes landed on Emma and stayed there. "So," she said, her voice clear and strong. "This is the girl."

Emma stepped forward. "Madam Hawthorne. It's an honor to meet you."

The old woman's eyes swept over her, the simple blouse, the plain trousers, the calloused hands. Emma expected dismissal, disappointment. Instead, Madam Hawthorne smiled.

"No fancy dress, no practiced words. You come as you are." She nodded slowly. "I like that."

Emma blinked. "Thank you, ma'am."

"Come closer. Let me look at you."

Emma obeyed. Madam Hawthorne reached out and took her hands, turning them over to study the scars and calluses.

"These are the hands of someone who works," she observed. "Who made things. Who wasn't afraid to get them dirty." She looked up at Emma. "My Alex has been surrounded by vultures since his accident. Women who see a crippled billionaire and smell money. Men who see weakness and smell blood." She squeezed Emma's hands. "But you're not a vulture, are you?"

Emma met her gaze. "No, ma'am. I'm not."

Madam Hawthorne smiled again, wider this time. "Good. Then you'll do."

She released Emma's hands and turned to the Williams family. "You may wait in the parlor. The girl stays with me until Alex is ready."

Mr. Williams opened his mouth to protest. One look from Madam Hawthorne shut it.

Emma sat with the old woman for twenty minutes. They talked about nothing, the gardens, the weather, the orchids. But Emma felt herself being measured with every word.

Finally, a servant appeared. "Mr. Hawthorne will see Miss Williams now."

Madam Hawthorne rose with surprising agility. She took Emma's arm and walked her to the door herself.

"Remember," she said quietly. "My grandson has been hurt. Not just his legs, but his heart and trust." She looked at Emma with eyes that had seen too much. "Be gentle with him. But don't let him push you away. He'll try."

Emma nodded. "I understand."

Madam Hawthorne patted her hand. "I think you do."

Alex Hawthorne's study was dark, all leather and wood with closed curtains. He sat behind a massive desk in his wheelchair, his face half-shadowed, his eyes fixed on her the moment she entered.

Emma closed the door behind her. "So," she said. "We meet."

He studied her for a long moment. "You're not what I expected."

"You mentioned that on the video call."

A ghost of a smile crossed his lips. "I did."

He gestured to the chair across from him. Emma sat. "The contract is on the desk," he said. "I've already signed it. Your terms have been added."

Emma picked it up, scanning the pages. Her terms were there, everything she had asked for.

She picked up the pen. "Before you sign," Alex said, "there's something you should know."

Emma paused.

"My grandmother. She's been... eager for me to marry. For two years, she's been pushing. She doesn't know this is a contract."

Emma lowered the pen. "You haven't told her."

"No." His voice was quiet. "She's old. She's lost too much already. My father, my mother. Watching me in this chair nearly broke her." He looked down at his hands. "This marriage... it gives her hope. I don't want to take that from her."

Emma understood. "You want me to pretend."

"I want you to let her believe. Let her think this is real. Let her have her happiness." He met her eyes. "Can you do that?"

Emma thought about Madam Hawthorne's smile. Her warmth and kindness in a house that had shown Emma nothing but cold calculation.

"Yes," she said. "I can do that."

Alex nodded slowly. "Then sign."

Emma picked up the pen and signed her name. Emma Williams.

The ink was still wet when Alex spoke again. "One more thing."

She looked up.

"The night we met on video, I asked you to tell me you were doing this because you had no other choice." He leaned forward slightly. "You never answered."

Emma held his gaze. "Because it would have been a lie." Something flickered in his eyes. Interest, recognition.

"I'm doing this because I choose to," she said. "I could have run. I could have refused but I chose to sign." She set down the pen. "I'm not a victim, Mr. Hawthorne. I'm a contractor."

He smiled, a real smile, small but genuine. "Good. Then we understand each other."

He reached into his desk and pulled out a small velvet box. He opened it to reveal a ring, a simple diamond solitaire, elegant and understated.

"For the performance," he said. Emma let him slip it onto her finger. The diamond caught the light from the window.

"The wedding is in three days," Alex said. "Small. Private. My grandmother will be there. She'll cry. She'll hug you. She'll tell you you're the best thing that's happened to this family."

He looked at her with something she couldn't name.

"Can you handle that?"

Emma looked at the ring on her finger. At the man in the wheelchair who was asking her to give his grandmother hope.

"I can handle anything," she said.

***

When Emma returned to the parlor, Fiona was waiting by the window.

The Williams family had already been dismissed, Rachel and Mr. Williams were speaking with the butler about arrangements. But Fiona had stayed behind, her arms crossed and her smile sharp.

"Well?" she asked. "How was he? As pathetic as they say?"

Emma didn't answer.

Fiona stepped closer, her voice dropping to a whisper. "You know, I should thank you. Taking this off my hands. A cripple for a husband. A life spent pushing a wheelchair, being pitied by everyone who sees you." She laughed softly. "You were made for it, really. A country girl marrying a broken man. It's almost poetic."

Emma looked at her. At the triumph in her eyes. The relief, the cruelty.

"You're welcome," Emma said quietly.

Fiona's smile faltered. "What?"

"You said you should thank me. I'm accepting." Emma walked toward the door, then paused. "But Fiona?"

"Yes?"

Emma turned back. "Be careful what you celebrate. You refused a marriage because you thought the man was weak. But I've learned something in my life." She smiled, that small and dangerous smile. "The ones who look broken are often the most dangerous of all."

She walked out, leaving Fiona frozen in the parlor window.

That night, Emma sat in her small guest room and looked at the ring on her finger.

Her phone buzzed.

Unknown number: You signed the contract, good. Now the real game begins. Remember, the key you'll find opens more than locks. It opens truths his mother wanted buried. Find it before he does.

Emma stared at the message. She thought about Madam Hawthorne's warmth. Alex's request. The secrets buried in this family.

She deleted the message and turned off her phone.The game, she realized, had only begun.

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