On my wedding night, I crawled under the bed, my veil still caught in my hair, giggling – one last silly prank before I became a wife. The door cre:aked. My husband’s voice came through, warm… then my mother-in-law’s voice cut through like ice. “Have you given it to her yet?” she hissed.

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My father had built Hale Medical from one small clinic and a secondhand van. Before he died, he warned me that greed always arrived with a smile. So I learned contracts before makeup, security law before wedding etiquette, and corporate governance before floral arrangements.

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Daniel didn’t know that.

He didn’t know the champagne glass he had handed me touched my lips but never went down my throat.

He didn’t know my father’s old security consultant had installed cameras in every private suite of the estate.

And he definitely didn’t know that the “helpless bride” under the bed was the majority shareholder he needed alive, awake, and willing.

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My veil tightened in my hair.

Above me, Daniel said, “She was so easy.”

I smiled in the darkness.

No, darling.

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I was patient.