The Paper Wife Heard One Sentence And Found The Key To His Fortune-yumihong

Clara Callahan learned the truth about her marriage because of a door Grant forgot to close.

It was not a dramatic door.

It was not carved with family crests or guarded by security or marked private in gold letters.

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It was just a heavy walnut door to a donor lounge at the Whitlock Children’s Hospital gala, left open by three careless inches.

That was all it took.

Three inches of space.

Three inches of sound.

Three inches between the life Clara thought she was living and the arrangement Grant Callahan believed he had purchased.

The ballroom behind her was all chandelier light, soft music, and camera flashes bouncing off polished marble.

Rain slid down the windows above downtown Chicago and made the city outside look like black glass.

Clara carried a silver tray of champagne because she had offered to help when a young waiter nearly dropped it.

That was the kind of wife she had tried to be.

Useful before anyone asked.

Kind before anyone deserved it.

Invisible in ways people praised as graceful.

She was passing the donor lounge when she heard her husband say her name.

“Relax, Victor,” Grant Callahan said. “Clara is useful, but she’ll never be my real wife.”

The tray shifted in her hands.

The champagne flutes touched and chimed softly, a pretty little sound in an ugly little moment.

Inside the lounge, the men laughed.

Not the careless laughter of friends.

This was lower, smoother, the kind of laughter rich men used when cruelty was safer whispered than spoken out loud.

Clara stood in the hallway with her ivory gown brushing her ankles and felt her wedding ring tighten on her finger like a hand closing.

Victor Harlan spoke next.

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