I married Lukas to save my daughter’s life, even though I knew people would judge me for it. But on our wedding night, he handed me an envelope with Lina’s name on it, and what I discovered inside changed everything I had believed about his family, my daughter, and the accident.
I married the twenty-year-old millionaire I had been caring for because my daughter was running out of time and I had already exhausted every other option. But on our wedding night, he gave me a deep red envelope with Lina’s name on it and said, “This is why I really needed you.”
I kept telling myself I wasn’t a terrible mother for agreeing to this. I told myself there were worse things than being judged by strangers. There were hospital bills. There were doctors speaking in hushed tones. There was my daughter Lina, lying motionless in a bed while time ticked away relentlessly.
But on our wedding night, Lukas handed me a deep red envelope with Lina’s name on the front. “Open it,” he said. I stared at him.
My comatose daughter’s name was right there in my new husband’s hand. “Lukas,” I said, “why is my daughter’s name on that?”
His fingers tightened around the envelope. “Because there’s no turning back now, Kirsten. There’s no way out of this anymore.”
That morning, I had been sitting by Lina’s hospital bed, smoothing her dark hair over one shoulder. Even in a coma, she was still my girl—the one who hated having knots in her hair. Still nineteen. Still mine. Dr. Weber stood in the doorway, a file pressed against his chest. “Kirsten,” he said, “we need to talk about the neurological rehab program.” “I paid what I could yesterday, Dr. Weber. I can bring more on Monday.” “The deposit is due next Friday. Without it, her spot will be released.” I took Lina’s hand. “Then please hold it until Friday. Please.” “I can’t do that.” “You mean the billing department won’t even bother.” His expression softened. “If the deposit isn’t made, we can continue basic care until a transfer to a long-term care facility is arranged.” “Basic care,” I repeated. “That’s what people say when they want mothers to stop fighting for their children.” “It’s not giving up.” He looked at Lina, then back at me. “Do what you can, Kirsten. This program is her best chance.”
By midday, I was back in the kitchen of Lukas’s cold villa. Lukas sat in his wheelchair, glaring furiously at his oatmeal. During my first week working for him, he told me not to address him formally, saying he was “twenty, not a retired judge.” I told him he looked like one, though. That made him laugh for the first time. Most people treated him as if the wheelchair had swallowed his voice. They talked over him, around him, or to him in a slow, cautious tone that made his jaw muscles tighten. I slid the bowl closer. “Eat.” “It tastes like wet cardboard, Kirsten.” “I’ll put honey in it tomorrow.” “Then I’ll hate it tomorrow.” The corners of his mouth twitched. “You have no pity for me, do you?” he asked. “Young man, I sympathize with you, and I’m here to help. But pity? I don’t have time for that.” That became our rhythm. He’d fire off barbs, and I’d shoot back. Eventually, he let me help him.
One afternoon, while I was fixing the brake on his wheelchair, he asked, “Did Lina go to university?” “To a university of applied sciences. She loved it.” “What did she study?” “All sorts of things. Nursing, design, psychology, then business administration because numbers made sense. She was still figuring things out.” He almost smiled. “She once bought a keychain shaped like a yellow raincoat because she said it looked emotionally supportive. She would have loved to get into an argument with you, Lukas.” He dropped his spoon. His face had gone pale. “A yellow raincoat?” I stared at him. “Yes.” “Was it hanging from her rearview mirror?” My hand froze on the wheelchair brake. “Lukas, how do you know that?” He turned his wheelchair toward the window. “A lucky guess.” “No,” I said. “Nobody guesses a keychain shaped like a yellow raincoat hanging from a car’s rearview mirror.”
The hospital called before he could answer. Just like that, Lukas got to keep his secret a little longer. I stepped out into the hallway. Dr. Weber’s voice sounded quiet and cautious over the line. “Lina’s spot in rehab can only be held until tomorrow morning.” I closed my eyes. “You said Friday.” “I tried to extend it.” “Then tell me what happens if I can’t pay.” “She’ll be transferred to a long-term care facility with a lower level of care.” My hand tightened around the phone. “So she stays alive, but loses the program that could help her wake up.” “I wish I had a different answer.” “Me too,” I said. I hung up before I could burst into tears in Lukas’s hallway.
The next morning, I arrived at his house with hands shaking so badly that I burned his toast. “You’re filling the whole kitchen with smoke,” Lukas said. “I’ll make some more.” “Kirsten. You’re crying.” He rolled closer. “Is it about Lina?” That broke my heart. “They’re moving her,” I said. “Not to rehab, like I’d hoped. Somewhere they can keep her stable, but where she won’t get what she needs.” “How much?” “Don’t.” “How much, Kirsten?” “Too much. More than I can earn. More than I can borrow. More than I can beg for without losing the last shred of myself.” Lukas looked down at his hands. Then he said, “Marry me.” I stared at him. “Excuse me?” “Marry me, Kirsten.” “That’s not funny.” “I’m not laughing.” “You’re twenty.” “I know.” “I’m forty-three. I’m your employee.” “I can hire someone else.” “You’re grieving, hurt, lonely, and furious at oatmeal. This isn’t a proposal. It’s panic with paperwork.” His jaw tightened. “I’m not asking for romance.” “That just makes it worse.” “Viktoria controls the bulk of my trust fund until I’m twenty-one. She rejects what she calls ‘emotional expenses.’” “Lina isn’t an emotional expense.” “I know.” His voice dropped. “My private medical account and the household fund are separate from the main assets. Viktoria can stall almost anything I request on my own. But if I’m married, my spouse can co-sign emergency medical expenses with me. She can still fight it, but she can’t just quietly sweep it under the rug.”
I took a step back. “No.” “Kirsten.” “No. I won’t marry a man for money—especially not one who has his whole life ahead of him. You deserve more, Lukas. You deserve to live.” “You wouldn’t be using me.” “Yes, I would.” “Then use me.” He said it as if the words cost him something—as if he already knew I’d hate him for the offer. “Use the money. Use the name. Use whatever it takes to get Lina into that program.” “Don’t talk about my daughter like she’s a bill.” “I’m talking about her like she’s alive.” That silenced me. He glanced at my phone on the counter. “If you leave this house unmarried, what happens tomorrow?” I looked away. “They’ll move her,” I whispered. “And if you marry me?” I hated him for pitting my pride against Lina. “Why are you doing this?” I asked. His eyes wandered to the window. “I can’t tell you everything yet.” “Then my answer is no.” “Please, Kirsten. I just need you to trust me for one day.” My phone buzzed again. The hospital’s billing department. I thought of Lina, lying there so still while strangers decided what kind of chance she deserved. Then I closed my eyes. “Fine,” I whispered. “I’ll marry you. But if you’re hiding something that harms my daughter, I’ll never forgive you.” Lukas looked at me as if I had already wounded him. “I know,” I said.



















































