On the eve of our tenth wedding anniversary, Daniel Carter abruptly canceled our travel plans.
"Clara, there's an important wedding tomorrow. I have to be there," he said.
"So suddenly... you're the groom?"
I masked the sting of disappointment in my eyes and tried to joke lightly.
"Yes."
Hearing Daniel's unexpected affirmation made my heart skip a beat.
Could it be a surprise?
The wedding he owed me, Clara Parker... was finally coming.
The next day, the wedding hall was filled with guests.
Daniel hadn't lied-he was indeed the groom, but the bride... was not me.
Meeting my questioning gaze, he leaned close and whispered in my ear.
"Don't look at me. I only found out last night that I was getting married today."
Without another word, he strode onto the stage and took Emily Morgan's hand.
After the vows, Emily navigated through the crowd and placed the bouquet in my hands, smiling serenely.
"Dr. Parker, I hope you find your match soon, too."
......
Cheers erupted around us.
Taking advantage of the embrace, Emily patted my back, already chilled from tension, and whispered in my ear.
"Don't be nervous. Your relationship with Daniel is an open secret between the Carter and Parker families. And besides, all I want is the legal title of Mrs. Carter's and Daniel's lineage; as for his heart, it can stay with you. We each take what we need."
The bouquet in my hands felt like a vine covered in thorns, slowly sinking into flesh, wrapping me tightly and inescapably.
Meanwhile, Daniel moved gracefully among the guests, radiating the ease of someone in command.
"Did you hear? The union between the Carters and Morgans was arranged the year Miss Morgan was born."
"They're eight years apart. To wait for Miss Morgan to come of age, Mr. Carter, such a catch, waited until he was thirty-three to marry."
"Their marriage is the greatest threat to the Hayes family-both talent and beauty, a union of strength, a match made in heaven."
"The previous Hayes generation managed fine, but this one... might fall to that sickly heir..."
The whispers around me felt like a slow, excruciating torment.
At this moment, everything I saw and heard was completely different from the life I had known for the past ten years.
The man I had shared a rented apartment with for a decade, earning just a few thousand dollars a month, was actually the heir to one of Riverton's three great families, the Carters.
And he was fated to be another woman's husband.
So... who was I?
I wanted to rush forward, confront Daniel in front of everyone, and demand why he had deceived me.
But I couldn't. From the moment I stepped into the wedding hall, I knew I was not of the same class as anyone here.
Crushing me would be easier than crushing an ant.
I drained the champagne in one gulp, neither crying nor making a scene, and quietly slipped away.
By the time I came to my senses, I was already in the car.
"Good evening, ma'am. I'm Oliver Reed, Mr. Carter's assistant," he said. "Mr. Carter asked me to bring you home first. He'll be back on time tomorrow morning to have breakfast with you."
Oliver buckled his seatbelt, his tone polite yet measured.
In my memories of the past ten years, Oliver had been the one truly in charge of Daniel.
A chill crept through me as fragments of my memories shredded and reassembled in my mind.
"Did they register their marriage?"
I steadied myself but couldn't stop the question from leaving my lips.
"They did," he replied without a hint of hesitation.
Of course. How could a union between two of Riverton's great families be in name only?
For ten years, I had believed Daniel was just an ordinary man, and that we were a simple, ordinary couple.
Living in a modest home, holding steady jobs, expecting a quiet, uneventful life.
"Mrs. Carter, Mr. Carter knows you were wronged today. As compensation, you may ask me anything. I will not withhold a single detail," Oliver said, focusing on the car as his tone regained a professional edge.
"What between Daniel and me... is real?"
I stared blankly out the window, my heart sending waves of pain, even trembling deep in my bones.
A few seconds of silence filled the car before Oliver finally uttered three words.
"He loves you."
The moment I returned to our apartment, I collapsed onto the bed and fell asleep.
Over and over, I told myself it was all just a nightmare. Once I woke up, everything would be fine again.
In my dream, my memories drifted back to the year my father had suddenly fallen ill.
I was still a medical resident then, and my family couldn't afford his surgery.
Without a second thought, Daniel handed over every dollar he had saved to start his business.
"Clara, money can always be earned again, but you can't get your father back."
From that day on, I silently swore that I would spend the rest of my life treating Daniel well.
Later, Daniel's business ventures failed one after another, leaving him buried in debt.
I followed him into rundown neighborhoods where sunlight barely reached, enduring one difficult year after another by his side.
Every paycheck I earned went toward paying off those debts, and I never once regretted it.
The night we got married, our celebration was nothing more than a cheap meal from a small shop downstairs. Yet back then, it had felt like enough.
I jolted awake. My pillow was damp, and the corners of my eyes still felt cold.
"Rise and shine, sleepyhead. I got your favorite breakfast waiting for you."
Daniel leaned against the bedside, watching me with the same gentle eyes I knew so well.
This was the Daniel I remembered.
The nightmare had to be over.
"Daniel, I missed you so much."
Without caring how I looked, I threw myself into his arms and breathed in the familiar scent that had always made me feel safe.
With a fond smile, Daniel ran his fingers through my hair, the warmth of his touch slowly easing into my heart.
Then I noticed that two buttons on his shirt had come undone. A vivid red mark stood out against his skin.
A love bite. A deep one.
I shoved him away instinctively as my reason slowly returned.
Daniel glanced down at the mark. A flicker of disgust crossed his eyes before he calmly buttoned up his shirt.
"Clara, Oliver has probably already answered some of your questions. You just need to understand one thing. My marriage to Emily is about family interests, nothing more. There are no feelings involved. I love only you, and from now on, I promise I'll never lie to you again."
"Was it fun? Making a fool out of me?"
I sat against the headboard, looking calm on the surface, though I was completely drained.
"As long as you don't make things difficult, nothing has to change. Just think of yesterday as attending a friend's wedding. After that, life goes on exactly as before."
The emotions in Daniel's eyes were as still and lifeless as stagnant water, sending a chill through me.
Could anything really go back to the way it was?
After breakfast, Daniel drove me to the hospital in the same used car as always.
Before I got out, he kissed my forehead just as he always had.
The coworkers passing by still looked at us with envy.
A strange sense of unreality washed over me.
The Carter-Morgan wedding had dominated headlines across the city yesterday. How could anyone in Riverton not know Daniel's true identity by now?
Yet everyone acted as though nothing had happened.
It felt like I was trapped inside The Truman Show.
Sure enough, by the time my shift ended, not a single person had asked me about Daniel.
One of the younger nurses greeted me cheerfully from the nurses' station.
"Dr. Parker, your husband really adores you. He shows up half an hour before your shift ends every single day to take you home, rain or shine."
The smile on her face reminded me of the times I'd visited Daniel's company. Everyone there had been equally kind to me.
But looking back now, I realized every smile had carried the same polished perfection, as if it had been carefully rehearsed.
I watched Daniel walking toward me step by step. The hand that never trembled while holding a scalpel was shaking uncontrollably.
Only then did I understand. This had been a cage built specifically for me.
Run, Clara. Before it was too late.
After dinner, Daniel unexpectedly said he needed to go out.
"Clara, you get some rest tonight. I'm heading over to the Morgans'."
"Okay, go ahead."
They were the legitimate couple. I was nothing more than a fake wife, with no right to stop him.
Seeing how straightforward my reply was, Daniel paused for a moment as he opened the door.
"Clara, once Emily safely delivers an heir for both families, I promise to be your husband again, for you alone. Good girl. From then on, all my time will be yours."
He said this while still facing away, his voice as calm as if he were simply stepping out to buy a bottle of water.
Daniel left, the door closing softly behind him-and with it, my heart felt shut as well.
I closed my laptop, packed my luggage, and booked the earliest flight for the next morning.
I glanced at the torn remnants of the fake marriage certificate in the trash, and for the first time, I felt a flicker of relief.
That night, Daniel did not return.
After a four-hour flight, a two-hour bus ride, and another hour on the village shuttle, I finally saw my long-missed parents.
All these years, I had worked tirelessly to repay debts, yet never once let them enjoy a single good day.
My father, gathering crops in the open field, froze for a moment upon seeing me before rushing over.
"Clara! Clara is back!"
My mother came running from the kitchen, and all three of us had tears in our eyes.
"Why didn't any of you call ahead before coming home? So your father could've driven the tricycle to the village entrance to pick you up."
My mother wiped her hands on her apron before tenderly brushing the thin layer of sweat from my forehead.
'Any of you'?
Was someone else coming home today besides me?
But there were only three of us in the family.
"Clara, you're back?"
At that moment, Daniel emerged from the kitchen carrying a plucked goose, smiling at me.
My heart sank, my legs felt cemented to the floor, unable to move even an inch.
A furious mix of being watched and toyed with coursed through me from head to toe.
It was only the long scar from my father's surgery, pressed against my chest, that pulled me back from the brink of losing control.
That night, Daniel held me tightly, his voice catching.
"Clara, if you don't like me touching Emily, I'll tell her I'll only do IVF. Once the child is born, I'll divorce her and make you my legal wife. If you want to see your parents more often, I'll bring them to Riverton. Your father's heart condition will be managed by the best medical team."
I broke free from his embrace, looking at him seriously as I slowly asked, "What if I don't want that?"
"Then I'll cling to you, pester you every day, until you agree," he said.
After speaking, Daniel pulled me back into his arms, the stubble on his chin tickling the hollow of my neck.
"Don't rub against me, your stubble's sharp."
I pushed him away with mock annoyance.
"Well, it's your fault for running off without a word-I didn't even get a chance to shave."
We stayed at my family home for nearly a month. During the day, Daniel helped my parents with fieldwork.
At night, he handled work online and never mentioned going back to Riverton on his own.
Meanwhile, the Morgans called daily, urging him to return, and each time he firmly refused.
The wound in my heart seemed to be slowly healing.
He had his family responsibilities, and I had my decade-long obsession.
In the end, I decided to give him one more chance.