The Billionaire Said She'd Never Have His Heart. His Daughter Knew Better-Cherry - Chainityai

The Billionaire Said She’d Never Have His Heart. His Daughter Knew Better-Cherry

The night Harper Ellis married Gideon Vance, the rain struck the hotel windows like handfuls of gravel.

It was not a romantic sound.

It was sharp, steady, and cold, the kind of weather that made the whole city look like it had been blurred by someone too tired to keep drawing the lines.

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Harper stood barefoot in the center of the suite in an ivory wedding dress she had not chosen.

The skirt brushed the carpet every time she breathed.

The room smelled of white roses, wet wool, and the bitter coffee Gideon had ordered and then ignored.

On the glass table, his phone kept lighting up with messages from lawyers, staff, and people who believed marriage could be managed like a calendar entry.

Gideon Vance stood near the window in his dark suit, dry and immaculate, as if storms knew better than to touch him.

“Take off that wedding dress,” he said.

His voice was not loud.

That was what made it worse.

Men like Gideon rarely needed volume.

He had built Vance Meridian into an empire before forty, and the world had rewarded him for speaking softly while other people scrambled.

“You may have my name tonight, Harper,” he said, “but you will never have my heart.”

For a second, all Harper heard was the rain and the small hum of the suite’s heating system.

Then, behind the adjoining bedroom door, a little girl shifted in her sleep.

Six-year-old Willa Vance had gone to bed holding a torn scrap of Harper’s veil.

She had refused to let it go when Harper tried to tuck the blanket around her.

Harper had not argued.

Children who had lost too much were allowed to hold strange things.

She looked at Gideon and felt the old nursing instinct move through her body, the same calm she had learned in hospital rooms where parents panicked and machines beeped and children watched every adult face for clues.

“I know,” Harper said quietly.

Gideon’s expression did not change.

“I never asked for it.”

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