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.

I was patient.

I let my body go limp before Daniel found me.

He knelt beside the bed, his handsome face blurring into view as I kept my eyes half-closed. The same face that had trembled during his vows. The same mouth that had promised to protect me.

“Poor thing,” he murmured, brushing my cheek. “Too much champagne.”

His mother stood behind him in silver silk, arms folded, watching me like an expensive object being inspected.

“Do it now,” she said. “Before the staff starts cleaning.”

Daniel lifted me onto the bed. I made my breathing slow and heavy, like I had no strength left. He tapped my face twice.

“Clara? Sweetheart?”

I didn’t move.

His mother smiled. “Perfect.”

They placed papers on the bedside table. Daniel slid a pen between my fingers.

“Just a few signatures,” he whispered with a laugh. “Then you can sleep forever in whatever tiny apartment you can afford.”

Rage burned through me, but my hand stayed loose.

The pen dragged across the paper uselessly. No signature. Only a messy scratch.

Daniel cursed.

His mother struck the table. “Hold her hand properly.”

“She’s too limp.”

“Then forge it.”

That was their first beautiful mistake.

Part 2:

Forgery required intent. Coercion required evidence. Drugging required toxicology. And I had already prepared for all three.

Three weeks before the wedding, I noticed Daniel asking too many questions about my voting shares, my father’s house, and my private accounts. So I changed my will. I froze transfer permissions. I informed the board that any post-wedding movement of assets required direct video confirmation from both me and my attorney.

Then I invited suspicion to dinner and watched it eat.

The champagne had gone into a hidden sample vial tucked inside my bouquet. The cameras were recording. My phone, hidden inside the hollow heel of my wedding shoe, was livestreaming audio to my lawyer.

Daniel’s mother leaned close to my face.

“Stupid girl,” she whispered. “Your father should have taught you not to trust hungry people.”

That almost broke me.

Because my father had taught me exactly that.

Daniel forged my name once. Twice. Five times. His mother photographed the pages and sent them to someone.

“By tomorrow afternoon, Hale Medical belongs to us,” Daniel said.

“To you,” she corrected sharply. “But don’t forget who put you there.”

He laughed. “Of course, Mother.”

Then the door burst open with drunken groomsmen calling for him. Daniel snapped the folder shut.

“Hide these,” his mother said.

“In the safe?”

“No. In her suitcase. If anything goes wrong, we say she planned it.”

They were getting careless now, drunk on victory. Arrogance makes people loud. Greed makes them sloppy.

When they left, I waited thirty seconds.

Then I sat up.

My hands were shaking, but my mind was ice.

I pulled the vial from my bouquet, sealed it, and slipped it into the emergency pouch sewn beneath my dress. Then I retrieved my phone.

A message from my lawyer glowed on the screen.

We got everything. Police on standby. Board notified. Your call.

I looked at the forged signatures. The papers hidden in my suitcase. The wedding ring on my finger.

Daniel thought he had married a fortune.

He had married a trap.

I typed back with one thumb.