I pretended the accident had broken my bones, so I sat silently in my wheelchair and watched my fiancée laugh mockingly in front of everyone. “Look at you,” she sneered, leaning closer. “Now you’re nothing—just a useless cripple.” No one defended me. Only the maid knelt beside me,

The next morning, Vanessa entered my room carrying flowers like she was performing for an audience. Clara stood near the window, folding towels.

“My poor darling,” Vanessa said loudly, just in case anyone was listening. “I’ve spoken to a specialist. A private care center. Very peaceful.”

I looked up. “You want to send me away?”

“For your own good.” Her eyes flicked toward Clara. “And we’ll need to reduce staff. Some people are getting too attached.”

Clara’s fingers stilled.

Vanessa moved closer to her. “Pack your things by tonight.”

“No,” I said.

The room fell silent.

Vanessa turned slowly. “Excuse me?”

“Clara stays.”

Her face hardened. “You don’t give orders anymore, Adrian.”

I let the silence linger. Then I smiled faintly.

That was the first time fear appeared in her eyes.

She recovered quickly. “Fine. Keep your little maid. It won’t matter.”

But it did matter.

Because Clara had already found something.

That evening, she slipped into my room holding a torn envelope. “Sir… I found this in Miss Vanessa’s trash.”

Inside were copies of forged medical records, a draft guardianship petition, and emails between Vanessa, Daniel, and a board member named Pierce. They had planned to have me declared mentally incompetent.

At the bottom was a payment receipt.

The doctor they had bribed was not my doctor.

It was the man who had signed my false injury report.

They thought they had cornered a broken man.

Instead, they had handed evidence to the majority shareholder, CEO, and legal owner of every asset they were trying to steal.

I looked at Clara. “Are you afraid?”

She swallowed. “Yes.”

“Good,” I said softly. “Then you understand what they should be.”

By sunrise, my lawyers had the files. By noon, my security team had locked every executive server. By evening, I invited everyone back to the ballroom.

Vanessa arrived smiling, dressed in white, believing it was an engagement announcement.

In a way, it was.

Just not hers.

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