12/26/2025
đŹ On My Wedding Night, I Carried My Disabled Husband to Bed â Then We Fell⌠and I Discovered a Truth That Left Me Frozen
My name is Lila Carter, Iâm 24 years old.
My mother has always been a woman of cold, practical logic.
She used to say: âA girl who marries a poor man is signing up for a lifetime of misery. You donât have to love him, just make sure he can give you a stable life.â
I used to think it was just her way of warning me. Until the day she forced me to marry a man in a wheelchair.
His name was Ethan Blackwell, the only son of one of the wealthiest families in Seattle, Washington.
Five years ago, he was in a terrible car crash that left him paralyzed from the waist down â or so everyone believed.
People whispered that heâd become bitter, reclusive, and cold toward women.
But when my late fatherâs business debt grew unbearable, my mother begged me to agree to the marriage.
âLila, if you marry Ethan, theyâll forgive the debt. Otherwise, weâll lose the house. Please, honey⌠Iâm begging you''
I bit my lip and nodded. The wedding was lavish but empty. I wore a white gown, smiled for photos, and tried to ignore the hollow ache in my chest.
The groom sat motionless in his wheelchair, his face handsome but distant â not a trace of emotion in his eyes.
That night, I entered our bedroom quietly.
He was still sitting there, staring out the window. The warm lamplight carved soft shadows across his sharp features.
âLet me help you into bed,â I said softly, my hands trembling.
He gave me a quick, unreadable look and replied,
âNo need. I can manage.â But when he tried to move, the chair tipped slightly â instinctively, I rushed forward.
âCareful!â We both lost balance. The next second, I was on the floor, sprawled over him. And thatâs when I felt it ...đ Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All Comments đ¨ď¸