The Billionaire’s Bride: Our Vows Do Not Matter

This is our better and worse



Cathleen’s eyelids fluttered against the sterile white light that invaded her vision. Agony pulsed through her skull, a relentless drumbeat that seemed to echo off the walls of the hospital room. She tried to piece together the events that led to this moment but found only fragments in the void.

“Let me call your husband,” the doctor’s voice cut through the fog in her mind, his silhouette blurred as he pivoted on his heel and hurried out.This belongs to NôvelDrama.Org: ©.

Downstairs, Xavier was jolted from his brooding by the doctor’s announcement. “Mr. Knight, your wife is awake.” The words propelled him upward, each step a march toward confrontation.

But as he ascended, Olivia descended, her presence an unwanted obstacle. “Xavier, can you please give me some cash? I didn’t drive here. I used Uber,” she pleaded, her voice a blend of hope and desperation.

Xavier halted, the air between them crackling with tension. “Where were you going without money?” His tone was icy and accusatory. “Don’t you think you should not have come if you knew you didn’t have transport money? Are we in high school?”

Olivia recoiled, the sting of his words palpable, but she rallied, her pride swelling against the insult. “Unless Miss Williams is selling her pussy,” he continued, his form looming over her like a dark cloud.

The accusation hung heavy in the air. Olivia’s breath hitched, and her body tensed, ready for battle. But then, realization dawned, and she exhaled slowly, reclaiming her composure. “Selling my pussy like your wife?” Her retort was sharp and poised.

Xavier’s smirk was a blade. “Of course, at least my wife doesn’t hide it. But you, Miss Williams,” he taunted, relishing the cruelty. “Cheap. Very cheap,” his words dripping with venom.

Their exchange was a dance of power and defiance, a tempest contained within the confines of the stairwell. It was a scene repeated too often, a motif of their twisted relationship, where love was overshadowed by betrayal and abuse-a cycle that threatened to consume them both.

Olivia’s heels clicked against the cold, polished marble floors, a staccato beat marking her hasty retreat. She didn’t dare look back at the opulent Knight mansion behind her, tears threatening to spill over at any moment. As she strode away from the imposing estate and its lavish facade, she couldn’t help but feel a sense of relief wash over her. Xavier, the man she had once thought was everything, had never truly seen her for who she was; he only saw a possession, an accessory to his wealthy lifestyle. With each step away from him and their toxic entanglement, Olivia could feel the weight of his expectations and control slowly lifting off her shoulders. As her trembling steps led her further from the mansion, her carefully crafted facade began to crumble alongside her illusions of love and happiness.

Meanwhile, Xavier ascended the staircase with urgency, his mind a storm of conflicting emotions. His pace quickened as he approached Cathleen’s room, where the scent of antiseptic and the quiet hum of medical equipment filtered through the door. He entered, finding his wife cold and composed, disconnecting a call on her sleek cellphone.

“Who was that?” he demanded, his voice a growl of possessiveness.

Cathleen faced him, her expression unreadable. “Know your place, Mr. Knight,” she said, the sharpness of her tone cutting through the air. “I am your wife only on paper, so don’t act like I’m cheating on you.”

Xavier, about to argue, found himself silenced by her preemptive strike. “I want a divorce with immediate effect,” Cathleen announced, her voice steady and resolute. “I don’t think I can live up to your two-year contract or your new offer. I want out.”

Xavier’s jaw clenched. “I just bought you the most expensive house in the city,” he snapped, incredulity lacing his words. “What is it that you want from me, Mrs. Knight?”

“Nothing, actually,” Cathleen replied with finality, “except that we go our separate ways. As for the most expensive house, you can give it to Miss Williams. I’m sure she’ll jump at the thought of you buying her a house.”

The air crackled with electricity as Xavier towered over her, his imposing figure casting a shadow of dominance. The ghost of old family values loomed behind him, fueling his steely determination. “I will not let you go, Cathleen Knight; divorce is not an option,” he declared through gritted teeth. “You are my wife, and I will fight for our marriage. I may have been forced to marry you by my father, and I married you to please him, but divorce is not in our blood. Our ancestors stayed together through thick and thin, and this is no exception for us. There has been no report of a divorced Knight through the years. My father and mother stayed together for better or for worse. This is our better or worse, Cathleen.” His eyes burned with fierce determination, daring her to challenge him.

He leaned in, his voice lowering to a dangerous whisper. “I didn’t get married to get divorced. Of course, I have no feelings for you. But as long as I live, you are my fucking wife. The sooner you get that, the better. Yeah?”

The unspoken violence of his words hung between them like a guillotine blade, ready to sever the last thread of their sham marriage. But Cathleen held his gaze, unwavering, her own resolve an immovable force. They were locked in a battle of wills, neither yielding, both prisoners of a loveless bond forged by duty and cold, calculated decisions.

Cathleen’s silhouette loomed, elongated and imposing, as she rose from the tangled sheets like a vengeful spirit. Her dark hair cascaded down her back in wild waves, adding to her ominous presence. Her eyes, sharp and unyielding like daggers, fixed on Xavier, standing at the foot of the bed with an air of indifferent arrogance. The room seemed to shrink under her intense gaze as if it were cowering in fear. Every movement she made exuded power and control, making even the confident Xavier feel small in comparison.

“Well, Mr. Knight,” she began, her voice laced with a venomous sweetness, “you hail from a time where divorce is taboo, but I… I am a child of modern whims. Divorce is our rite.” Her grin sliced through the tension, a sly crescent moon in a darkening sky. “My father’s matrimonial ventures are legendary-second or third, who keeps counting?” She tilted her head, studying him and daring him.

Xavier’s laugh, a cold and mirthless sound, scraped against the walls. “Dream on, baby girl,” he scoffed, the disdain dripping from every word. His stance was unmovable, a monolith to his own stubborn resolve. “Even your bare flesh wouldn’t stir me.”

Her heart thundered, not with fear but with the thrill of the challenge. She was no wilting flower; she was a warrior in silk and lace. “No divorce,” he declared, finality ringing in his voice like a judge’s gavel.

He turned to leave, the promise of his absence hanging heavy in the air. But as his hand met the door, Cathleen’s retort stopped him cold. “We will see about that, Mr. Knight,” she said, her voice low and brimming with conviction. “We will see.”

The door shut with a whisper, leaving Cathleen alone amidst the echoes of war.


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