My Father Married Me to a Billionaire in a Coma—Then He Opened His Eyes When He Heard My Voice
The safe opened.
Inside was a flash drive, a stack of medical records, and a small black notebook.
I reached for the notebook first.
The first page held Ethan’s handwriting.
If I don’t wake up, Jason wins.
I stopped breathing.
The next pages were worse.
Names. Dates. Payments. Private security reports. A mechanic who disappeared after servicing Ethan’s car. A doctor who altered toxicology results. A company board member found dead of a heart attack two weeks before a vote.
And then, near the end, a name I knew.
Daniel Whitmore.
My father.
Beside it was a number.
$750,000.
My knees nearly gave out.
Not debts.
Not bills.
Not survival.
Three-quarters of a million dollars.
I pressed my hand to my mouth, but the sound escaped anyway.
Behind me, the study door creaked.
I spun around.
Mara stood in the doorway.
The nurse’s soft expression was gone.
“You shouldn’t be in here,” she said.
I shoved the notebook behind my back. “Vivian gave me the key.”
Mara stepped inside and closed the door.
“That won’t matter.”
My skin prickled.
She held a syringe in one hand.
For one frozen second, neither of us moved.
Then I ran.
She lunged.
I threw the desk chair into her path and bolted toward the side door near the shelves. It opened into a narrow servants’ corridor. I plunged into darkness, clutching the notebook and flash drive against my chest.
Mara shouted behind me.
Footsteps thundered.
I did not know the house. I did not know where the passage led. I only knew that if Jason got what I held, Ethan would never wake again.
The corridor spilled me out near the conservatory.
Rain hammered the glass roof.
I slipped on the marble floor, caught myself, and nearly collided with Vivian.
She took one look at my face.
“What happened?”
“Mara,” I gasped. “She has a syringe.”
Vivian’s eyes hardened.
She pulled me behind her just as Mara appeared at the end of the hall.
The nurse stopped.
For a moment, the two women faced each other across the polished floor.
Then Vivian said, “You were dismissed from Columbia Presbyterian for tampering with patient medication. I wondered when Jason would make use of you.”
Mara’s hand tightened around the syringe.
Jason’s voice came from behind her.
“No need to be dramatic, Grandmother.”
He stepped into view, calm as ever.
My heart beat violently against the notebook hidden beneath my cardigan.
Jason smiled at me.
“You found something.”
Vivian moved slightly, shielding me.
“You won’t touch her.”
“Won’t I?” Jason sighed. “You’re old, Vivian. Ethan is half-dead. And Claire is no one.”
I expected Vivian to snap back.
Instead, she smiled.
It was not a kind smile.
“No one?” she said. “Then why are you so afraid of her voice?”
Jason’s expression flickered.
A low alarm suddenly screamed through the house.
Everyone froze.
Vivian turned toward the stairs.
Ethan.
I ran.
I ran past Jason, past Mara, past shouting staff and flashing lights. My slippers slipped on the floor. My lungs burned. The notebook dug into my ribs.
When I reached Ethan’s room, the machines were shrieking.
A doctor I had not met was already beside the bed. Two nurses moved around him quickly. Ethan’s body convulsed once beneath the sheets.
“What happened?” I cried.
The doctor barked, “Get her out.”
“No!”
I pushed forward.
Ethan’s eyes were open.
Wide open.
Terrified.
His gaze found mine.
The doctor grabbed my arm, but Ethan’s hand jerked violently on the bed.
Once.
Yes.
He wanted me there.
I tore free and leaned close to his face.
“I found it,” I whispered. “The notebook. The drive. I have them.”
His breathing hitched.
Jason entered behind me.
“Claire,” he said softly. “Give me what you took.”
I did not turn.
Ethan’s lips moved.
At first, I heard only air.
Then one word.
“Sing.”
I stared at him through tears.
“What?”
His eyes pleaded with me.
“Sing.”
Behind me, Jason cursed.
The doctor said, “Her presence is overstimulating him.”
Vivian’s voice cut through the chaos. “Everyone out except his wife.”
“No,” Jason snapped.
Vivian lifted her phone. “The police are already at the gate.”
Jason’s face changed.
Not fear.
Calculation.
I took Ethan’s hand in mine and began to sing the song from the gala.
My voice trembled at first, broken by panic, but then the melody found itself. It rose softly above the alarms, above the storm, above nine months of silence.
Ethan watched me.
His fingers tightened around mine.
The alarms slowed.
The doctor went pale.
Mara backed toward the door.
Jason stared at Ethan like a dead man had just accused him.
Then Ethan Thornton turned his head.
Only an inch.
But enough.
His eyes locked on Jason.
And in a voice rough as broken glass, he said, “You should have killed me the first time.”
No one moved.
Then the lights went out.
The mansion plunged into darkness.
For one breath, the whole world disappeared.
Then Vivian screamed.
A crash sounded near the door.
Someone grabbed me from behind.
I fought wildly, but a cloth pressed over my mouth, chemical-sweet and suffocating. Ethan’s hand slipped from mine.
The last thing I saw before darkness swallowed me was Jason standing in the doorway, illuminated by a flash of lightning.
He was smiling.
When I woke, I was no longer in Ethan’s room.
I was in a car.
My wrists were tied.
Rain streaked the windows.
My head throbbed, and every breath tasted like medicine.
Beside me, my father sat in the back seat.
His face was gray.
“Dad?” I whispered.
He flinched as if my voice hurt him.
“Claire,” he said, crying now. “I’m sorry.”
The car sped through the night.
In the front passenger seat, Jason looked back at me.
“You really should have signed.”
I tried to scream, but my throat barely worked.
Jason lifted the black notebook.
My notebook.
Then he held up the flash drive.
“Did you think I didn’t know about the safe?” he asked. “Ethan was always sentimental. Like his mother. Like you.”
My father shook his head. “You said you wouldn’t hurt her.”
Jason laughed. “Daniel, I said many things.”
I stared at my father.
“You helped him?”
His face collapsed. “I owed people. Dangerous people. Jason offered a way out.”
“You sold me twice.”
He sobbed harder but did not deny it.
The car turned sharply onto a narrow road bordered by trees.
I looked out the window.
Through the rain and darkness, I saw the river below.
Storm King Road.
The same road where Ethan’s car had gone over.
Jason noticed me looking.
“Poetic, isn’t it?”
My blood turned cold.
Then his phone rang.
He answered with irritation.
“What?”
Silence.
His expression changed.
For the first time, I saw real fear.
“What do you mean he’s gone?”
My heart stopped.
Jason sat forward. “Find him.”
The line went dead.
A second later, headlights exploded behind us.
A black SUV appeared through the rain, gaining fast.
Jason twisted around.
My father whispered, “Oh God.”
The SUV slammed into the back of our car.
I was thrown sideways.
Jason shouted.
The driver lost control.
The car skidded across wet pavement, tires screaming, river flashing below like a mouth waiting to open.
Then, through the shattered rear window, I saw the driver of the SUV.
Pale face.
Dark hair.
Hospital gown under a black coat.
Ethan Thornton.
Awake.
Bleeding.
And smiling like a man who had come back from the dead for revenge.
