Contract Marriage With The Disabled CEO By Woody Rain Chapter 13
Contract Marriage With The Disabled CEO
Chapter 13 Mrs. Martin Was Weird Kerwin had a ring on his slender ring finger.
It was of simple style, with some melee diamonds on it.
This was the ring that Betty had bought earlier and put in the dresser drawer!
Bettyâs feet were frozen to the floor. Kerwin waited for her to sit down at the table for long enough and then looked up at her.
âWhatâs wrong?â Kerwin spoke as his eyes swept her hands. He then asked with raised eyebrows, âWhereâs your wedding ring?â
Betty blushed with embarrassment.
The wedding ring she had bought was not suitable for Kerwin, so she did not wear hers in front of him.
Unexpectedly, Kerwin found the ring she had put away and put it on.
Betty reached out and took the ring out of her bag. When she put it on, she couldnât help but whisper, âIâm sorry. I picked the rings at random.â
Kerwin smiled. âItâs okay. They look good.â
Betty didnât know what to say, so she sat down at the table and started to eat her breakfast.
After breakfast, Kerwin folded the newspaper up and said, âLet me take you to work.â
Te âNo, thanks,â Betty said. âIâll just catch a cab or take the subway.â
What if her colleagues recognized Kerwin? They would tear Betty to pieces with their teeth.
âItâs a long way from the subway station.â Kerwin frowned slightly. âYou canât find a cab.â
Kerwin was right. Betty noticed this when she moved in yesterday. People who lived in fancy neighborhoods used their cars very often. Certainly, Betty couldnât find any cabs or subway stations nearby.
Betty checked her watch. It was getting late. She had no choice but to agree. âCan you please take me to the subway station on the way?â
Kerwin stared at Betty and she tensed. After a while, he nodded in agreement.
Betty and Kerwin walked to the door and saw a black Bentley there.
Betty suddenly remembered that the first few times she met with Kerwin, he didnât drive. Kerwin must have been trying to hide his identity from her.
Betty sighed inwardly and walked to the car.
A young man standing by the car introduced himself to Betty. He was Peter Hill, Kerwinâs special assistant.
Peter held the door open. Betty was thinking about how Kerwin was going to get into the car. Suddenly, a steel plate descended, and Kerwin wheeled himself up into the car smoothly.
Betty got into the car and found that it was adapted for wheelchair use. There was a space for Kerwinâs wheelchair.
After Betty sat tight, the car started and headed all the way to the nearest subway station.
The car pulled in by the subway station. Kerwin looked through the window and saw the subway station swamped with people. He frowned, âItâs very inconvenient for you to go to work like this. If you donât want me to give you a ride, how about I get you a car?â
Betty froze and then spoke, âNo, thanks.â
Of course, Betty knew that a car meant nothing to Kerwin, but she felt weird spending his money.
Kerwinâs idea was met with a flat refusal. The light which shone in his eyes dimmed. He spoke again, âI donât stay in the villa too often. How do you go to work alone?â
Betty thought about this on the way. She immediately took out the phone and shook it before his eyes.
âIâll get up a few minutes early and call an Uber. Itâs quite easy for me. Um⦠Iâm late. Iâve got to go, bye.â
Betty got off the car quickly.
TRE Kerwinâs eyes darkened as he looked out the window and watched her running away.
Peter in the driverâs seat saw this and couldnât help but speak, âMr. Martin, why do I feel like Mrs.
Martin is not like the woman we investigated before?â