“Then why marry me?” I cried out, keeping my voice down to a harsh whisper. “If your life is a battlefield, why bring a stranger into it? Why did you agree to this?“
A dark, cynical smile touched the corners of his lips. “Because a man in a wheelchair who suddenly demands to marry a middle-class girl from Jaipur looks weak. It looks like a desperate attempt to find a caretaker, an act of submission to his family’s wishes. It lowers my enemies’ guard even further. They think I’ve given up. They think I am retreating into domestic misery.“
He stopped just inches away from me. The scent of expensive cologne, old paper, and gunpowder washed over me. “Your stepmother didn’t just stumble upon this arrangement, Aarohi. Her ‘pragmatism’ was bought and paid for. Someone paid off your father’s debts to ensure you were the one who walked down that aisle.“
My blood ran cold. “What? Who?“
“That is what we are going to find out,” Arnav said, his eyes narrowing. “But until I know exactly whose pawn you are—whether willing or unwilling—you play your part. To the maids, to the bodyguards, to my own family, I am a broken man who needs your help to do the simplest tasks. If you breathe a word of this to anyone, including your parents, the accident from five years ago will repeat itself. Only this time, there won’t be any survivors.“