“The hospital,” I admitted. “My son needs heart surgery. Urgently.”
“Ah.” Arthur’s expression softened. “I’m sorry.” He tapped a hand against his own chest. “My heart is failing too. Soon enough, I’ll need a caregiver myself.”

“I’m sorry, sir. If there’s anything I can—”
“Arthur,” he corrected gently. “Call me Arthur.”
The next morning, the hospital called again.
“Ma’am, Noah’s latest test results came back. We need to move his surgery forward and begin pre-op treatment immediately. Can you confirm payment by Friday?”
I held the phone so tightly my fingers hurt.
“Friday? I—I need more time.”
But there was no more time.
I ended the call and sank onto the marble floor in Arthur’s hallway. Ten minutes later, he found me there, his cane tapping softly against the tile.
“What happened?” he asked.
“My son,” I whispered. “They’re moving the surgery up. I can’t pay for it. I’ll never be able to pay for it.”
He was silent for a long moment.
Then he said something so shocking I thought I had misunderstood him.
“Marry me. Your son gets his surgery, and I get a wife my children can’t control.”
I shook my head as tears spilled down my face. “I won’t become that woman.”
“Not even to save your son?”
I left the mansion that night with his words echoing inside my head.
Around midnight, I had to rush Noah back to the hospital. The doctors stabilized him, but their warning was clear: surgery could not wait much longer.
The next morning, I called Arthur from the hospital parking lot.
“If I say yes, the money goes to the hospital today.”
“Done,” he said.
I closed my eyes.
“Then yes. I’ll marry you.”
Noah was admitted for pre-op treatment that afternoon. Soon, color returned to his cheeks, and the doctor said he could attend the wedding as long as he didn’t stay long and came straight back afterward.
White roses lined the mansion’s grand staircase. Reporters crowded outside the gates, taking pictures of “the millionaire’s mystery bride.”
I wore a simple ivory dress Arthur’s tailor had rushed overnight.
Noah stood beside me in a navy suit, smiling as if something wonderful was happening. He had no idea I had agreed to the marriage only to save him.
Arthur’s children glared at me throughout the ceremony and left as quickly as they could.
That night, Arthur led me into his office and closed the door behind us.
“The doctors already have their money,” he said. “Now you can finally learn what you really signed up for.”
My stomach dropped as he slid a thick folder across the polished desk.
“Open it,” he said quietly.
With trembling hands, I lifted the cover.
The folder was filled with legal documents. On the first page, my name appeared in bold black letters beside Eleanor’s.
“You are now Eleanor’s legal guardian,” Arthur said. “And the executor of my entire estate. I’ve changed my will so that you receive the largest share.”
I stared at him, unable to breathe properly.
“Why would you do this?”
“Because I know what my children are planning,” he said. “And I refuse to let them win.”
“I know they’ve been fighting over the inheritance,” I said softly.
Arthur nodded. “They’re dividing my estate as if I’m already dead. But it’s worse than that. Vivien wants to send Eleanor to the cheapest facility she can find. I heard her call my sister ‘a burden draining the inheritance.’”
I covered my mouth with one hand.
“My children are waiting for me to die so they can profit from it and throw Eleanor away,” he continued. “But you don’t think like them. You—”
The office door suddenly slammed open.
Vivien stormed inside with two men in dark suits behind her, briefcases swinging at their sides.
“Vivien, what are you doing?” Arthur demanded.
She pointed at me. “You gold digger. I know exactly what you’re doing, and I won’t let you manipulate my father into signing away his fortune. My lawyers have already prepared a petition. Elder abuse. Undue influence.”
One of the men stepped forward with papers in his hand.
“You should read these carefully.”
“And there’s more,” Vivien said, smiling now. “I’ve already spoken to someone at social services. A woman who marries a dying millionaire for money raises serious questions about her child’s welfare.”
My blood went cold.
“Don’t you dare bring my son into this.”
“Then disappear quietly,” she snapped. “Or I’ll make sure your little boy is taken before the week is over.”
“Vivien, stop this,” Arthur said, his voice cracking.
“You stop, Father. You’ve embarrassed this family enough.”
“I said stop—”
Arthur’s hand flew to his chest. His face drained of color, then turned gray. He stumbled forward against the desk.