My life had always been carefully controlled. I grew up in a massive marble mansion where everything felt cold and perfectly arranged. My father, Richard, ran his business life with ruthless precision, even at home. My mother, Diana, cared about appearances above all else—white furniture, quiet rooms, and a life that looked flawless on social media.
From a young age, my parents quietly shaped my life around one goal: marrying the “right” woman. At every social event, my mother’s friends paraded their daughters in front of me—polished, polite, and clearly prepared for wealthy marriages.
Then, on my thirtieth birthday, my father set the final rule.
“If you’re not married by thirty-one,” he said calmly over dinner, “you’re out of the will.”
There was no argument, no anger—just the same cold certainty he used in business.
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