I pretended the accident had left my bones shattered, so I sat quietly in my wheelchair and watched my fiancée mock me in front of everyone. “Look at you,” she sneered, leaning closer. “Now you’re nothing—just a useless cripple.” No one stood up for me. Only the maid knelt beside me, fixed the blankets around my legs, and whispered, “You still deserve to be treated kindly.” That was the moment I finally understood who truly mattered in my life.
The first time my fiancée called me useless, the entire room laughed. The second time, I chose to let them keep laughing.
I sat in the middle of my father’s grand ballroom, wrapped in a gray blanket, my legs concealed beneath it, my hands resting weakly on the wheels of my chair. Crystal chandeliers blazed above us. Champagne glasses sparkled. Everyone had gathered to “welcome me home” after the accident that had supposedly destroyed my spine.
Fatherhoodsupport groups
Only I knew the truth.
My bones were perfectly fine.
The crash had truly happened, but the injury had not. My doctors, my attorney, and my head of security knew I could stand. Everyone else believed exactly what I wanted them to believe.
Especially Vanessa.
She swept toward me in a silver dress, her diamond engagement ring flashing like a weapon. Behind her, my cousins, business partners, and status-hungry friends watched with cruel fascination.
“Look at you,” she sneered, leaning close enough for me to smell the wine on her breath. “Now you’re nothing—just a useless cripple.”
A few people gasped. No one defended me.
My uncle Martin turned his face away. My best friend Daniel lowered his eyes. Vanessa’s mother actually smiled.
Motherhoodadvice books
I kept my expression empty.
Vanessa tapped my blanket with one polished nail. “I was supposed to marry a powerful man. Not a burden.”
“Vanessa,” I said quietly, “we are still engaged.”
She laughed. “For now. Until your board realizes you can’t even walk into a meeting.”
That sentence told me everything. She was not mourning what had happened to me. She was waiting for my empire to fall apart.
Then someone knelt beside me.
It was Clara, the young maid who had worked in our home for three years. She adjusted the blanket Vanessa had kicked aside and whispered, “You still deserve to be treated kindly.”
Her voice was gentle, but it sliced through the noise like a blade.
Vanessa rolled her eyes. “How touching. The servant pities him.”
Clara lowered her head, but she did not step away.