She signed on to save a life. not lose her heart. For sixty million pesos, Fiona Generys signs on for a deal she never thought possible pretend to be the loving wife of tycoon Charles Billion. It's business. He wants a bride to inherit his grandmother's estate. She requires the money to rescue her adopted child from cancer. The rules are simple: no emotions, no attachments, and walk away when the contract ends. But the heart has no rules. Behind the cameras and expertly choreographed affection, something hidden starts to happen. Charles, who was once cold and calculating, starts to melt. Fiona, who was supposed to protect her heart, starts to imagine a life that might be real. Then Marie is lovely, serene, and inseparable from Charles. with a little girl who addresses him as "Papa." Jealousy seethes. Secrets unravel. And when Fiona discovers the truth behind Charles's carefully constructed illusion, the line between love and betrayal is broken. Was it all just a transaction? Or did she accidentally become the one thing he never planned for his greatest love?
View MoreThe Grand Aurelio Hotel's lights glowed like gold in the Manila night sky. Glass spires glittered. Smiles cost more than Fiona's whole closet. The red carpet was no metaphor—it existed.
Fiona hitched up the hem of her borrowed, too-tight, too-revealing sapphire slip. She got out of the car with shaky legs and borrowed nerve.
“I shouldn’t be here,” she murmured, clutching her bag like a lifeline.
“Stop that,” Valeria Jayne whispered, looping her arm through Fiona’s. “You look like a goddess and you’re walking into Olympus. Head high, chest out. You’re with me, remember?”
“I’m a public school teacher with a dying daughter. These people own helicopters.”
Valeria snorted. "Exactly why I brought you. You need air. Hope. A miracle. Who knows—maybe you'll find someone who can write one."
Fiona didn't even have time to reply before they were engulfed by blinding lights, champagne giggles, and conversations laced with egos.
Inside the ballroom, chandeliers hung dripping with crystals. Waiters glided past trays of caviar and champagne. A string quartet performed something refined Fiona couldn't identify.
Valeria inched closer. "You see that man by the balcony?"
Fiona turned her way. A man stood alone among the glittering throng. Tall, expensively dressed in a black suit and no tie. Hair slicked back with effortless care. Hands in his pockets. Eyes like winter.
"That's Charles Billion," Valeria breathed. "Owns half of the production houses in Asia. You ever heard of Red Flame Studios? That's him."
"The Charles Billion?
Valeria nodded. "Billionaire. Producer. Philanthropist. Rumor has it, he can make or break a career in one phone call. Be careful, though—he doesn't smile. Ever."
Fiona was reaching to turn away—when he looked at her.
Their eyes met.
She froze. The sounds around her grew muffled.
And then—he began to walk towards her.
"Don't faint," Valeria muttered.
"Good evening," Charles said, voice deep, smooth, and faintly uninterested. "Valeria Jayne."
"Mr. Billion." Valeria smiled as though she had diamonds between her teeth. "Let me present my friend—Fiona Generys."
He looked at Fiona. That look—keen, inscrutable, but disconcertingly alert. "Fiona," he drawled, as though experimenting with the feel of her name on his lips.
She could only manage a nod. "Mr. Billion."
His gaze dropped—once. "Not in the business, are you?"
"No, sir."
"She's a teacher," Valeria contributed. "One of the best. She's also.a fighter."
Fiona flashed her a swift glare, but Charles arched a brow.
"Fighter?"
She paused. "Life throws punches. I throw back."
Something flashed in his eyes. Interest? Amusement? Approval?
He moved closer. "Tell me, Miss Generys. If life presented you with a shortcut—one you didn't ask for, didn't trust—would you take it?"
"Depends," she replied without winking. "Is someone else paying the price?"
He released the slightest exhalation of laughter. "Interesting answer."
She inclined her chin. "You don't seem like a man who does favors for favors."
He regarded her. "No," he replied. "I do leverage."
The air was wire-tight. A waiter came by, bearing champagne. Charles accepted one glass. Held it out to her.
She paused—then accepted.
Fingers touched.
He didn't release immediately.
Meanwhile.Charles Billion alone beside the glass-walled veranda of the Grand Aurelio, city lights sparkling below him like a grid of golden blood veins. The sound of clinking glasses and whispered egos buzzed behind him. He wasn't paying attention.
He remained focused on the woman with fire blazing in her eyes and defiance in her voice.
Fiona Generys.
She was a distortion in a universe of pretension—a broken porcelain vase that would not be gold-painted. And that, somehow, made her. unforgettable.
He raised his Château Margaux to his lips—when his phone rang.
"Lola Jamaica"
He groaned. "Can I not have one night without royal calling?" he grumbled, picking up the phone with a swipe.
"You're late, Charlie Boy," the voice growled in sharp Taglish. "And don't play dumb about not knowing that you're disobeying your mother once more. That lady has been bawling over your bachelor face for weeks."
"I wasn't informed that I had an appointment with catastrophe," he remarked sarcastically.
"Don't try to be clever with me, I created clever."
He pressed the bridge of his nose.
Bring me a granddaughter when?" she spat. "Or else, your fortune, forget it."
He blinked. "Excuse me?"
"You heard it. No wife, no inheritance. No kid, no cha-ching. Kiss your billions goodbye and live in a condo like the common mortal."
"Lola, that's blackmail.She sniffed. "It's legacy, Charles. I established this empire through blood, sweat, and papaya soap. I want my name to endure, and not in some corporate takeover. I want noise. Little feet. Grandchildren who shatter Ming dynasty vases!"
Charles breathed out. "You know you're crazy, right?"
"You say that like it's a shock. This family has weathered three scandals, four attempts on their lives, and your father's hairstyles. We are constructed of chaos. Now marry someone."
"There is no one," he replied stiffly, looking through the glass at Fiona once more.
"Liar. I saw that girl."
He went still. "What?"
"That woman in blue. The one who would rather eat her own arm than talk to you. That's the one.
Charles moved further onto the balcony. "How the hell do you—?"
"I may be 84, but I didn't pass away in the 70s, hijo. I have drones."
He coughed on his wine. "You. you have drones?"
"Don't be so melodramatic. I have a social media team. And Valeria tagged her on a story, and I saw you drooling like a lovesick frog. So. marry her."
"You are literally insane."
She waited. "What's her name?"
He hesitated.
"You already know her name," she said, triumphant. "Ha! Ha-ha! I knew it. You're toast."
"Goodnight, Lola."
"Get her number! Or I'm writing your inheritance into the dog's name!"
Click.
Charles glared at the black screen. Then at his wine. Then back at the ballroom.
"…I am not marrying a schoolteacher with god-tier cheekbones and sarcasm as a love language," he muttered. But something in him had already started to stir.
The next day
Fiona slept not.
Not because of Charles Billion—okay, not mainly—but because there was a fever spike at 2:00 AM with Liana, and Fiona was in an emergency ward for three hours holding a child who would not shut up and a heart that was already cracked open at the seams.
By morning, Fiona was fuelled by hospital coffee and obstinacy.
She was grading exam papers in the staff room when her phone rang.
Unknown Number:
Miss Fiona Generys, I would appreciate a meeting. Confidential. One hour. The Orchid Room, Aurelio Tower.
She blinked.
And then it buzzed again.
Unknown Number:
P.S. I am Charles Billion. I don't send flowers. I send invitations.
Her mouth fell open. "You've got to be kidding me."
Mr. 'I-Believe-In-Leverage' was text-texting her like she was applying for a job.
Valeria's voice rang in her head: "He never offers drinks to anyone."
Fiona gazed at her phone. Then, before she could dissuade herself, she grabbed her stuff.
And maybe, perhaps—something else.Later, 3:55 p.m. – Vera Sun's AtelierThe atelier was champagne-scented, silk-scented.Fiona stood in the dressing room, barefoot, fingers on the silk of a dress she'd not yet felt brave enough to zip. A seamstress hummed behind her, pinning fabric.Then—there he was.Charles Billion. Bespoke. Stoic. Slow-motion storm.He stopped when he saw her. Then—blinking. Once. Twice."Hello," he growled, the tone lower than usual.Fiona shifted infinitesimally, the meat on her shoulders glinting. "This is not what I had in mind when I thought about 'pretend engagements.'""You look… he stopped. "Beautiful."She blinked.There was no irony in his tone this time. No coldness. Only… surprise."Don't do that," she said, bunching the cloth in her hand."Do what?""Talk like that. It's harder to keep in mind that all of this is imaginary."He stepped closer, slow, tentative, as if he wasn't sure that she would let him."I didn't do this to confuse you," Charles brea
The air was faintly scented with chalk, old books, and spectres of past essays. Morning sunlight streamed through high windows, light on long rectangles between the lines of hunched students over notebooks, laptop keys typing, pencils scratching. Fiona stood near the front of the room, dark curls contained, blouse taut at the waist, heels muffled on the wooden floor.She clutched a dog-eared copy of The Yellow Wallpaper against her palm, pages covered in scribbles in numerous colors over the years of academic battles. Her voice sliced through morning quiet, firm, crisp, yet intimate—like she was sharing a secret she wouldn't share."Her voice," she went on, moving slowly through the room, "is frequently misinterpreted. It is not soft. It is not melodic. Sometimes… rage. Sometimes, staying alive."She stopped walking, turned to the class, gazing at them. "Charlotte Perkins Gilman didn't write about wallpaper because she adored interior design. She wrote it because women like her were b
The aroma of pancakes still clung to the air, though the plates in the sink were rinsed and stacked. Sunlight streamed in through the kitchen windows, casting gold upon the marble countertop. Fiona stood at the front door, heels on, coat slung over one arm, her satchel across the other. Her hair was swept back in a beautiful bun, and her blouse was the pale color of ivory that she wore every lecture day—it complemented the soothing in her voice.Liza Liana stood before her in a puffy jacket with bunny ears on the hood, a glittery backpack held tightly in both hands.Fiona knelt down, fixing the zipper on her daughter's coat. "All right, munchkin. Miss Juniper will go out to the park later and then you'll color, okay?" Liza Liana nodded gravely. "And she said we would bake stars."Fiona smiled, eyes warm. "That's just great. I have to go to work now, remember? But I'll come home early. Promise."The little girl's lower lip protruded a little. "But I liked yesterday better.""I did too
Brunschière, Before DawnIt was still now.Too still.The kind of quiet that comes after fire—after something long and savage has been restrained, if only briefly. Outside the glistening veil, the world growled and raked. Within the cottage where Krishna slept, the air was thick with incense and blood-soaked fabric.She had fallen the instant the final sigil flared.Now she slumbered like the dead.But even at rest, Krishna's body shook. Her breathing was shallow, her complexion pale, her brow beaded with sweat. The veins on her wrists still shone faintly, gold flaring under the surface like the dying coals of a fire.A healer crouched beside her, murmuring incantations. A lavender water basin went dark as blood-stained rags soaked in it."Pushed too far," the healer grumbled to no one in specific. "Gave more than she could give."Outside, war drums of another sort beat—the ripping, shrieking howls of monsters battering the magical barrier.Brunschière trembled with every blow.And Ig
"Gosh, I don't know how this is going to turn out," Fiona muttered to herself, looking over at the sleeping figure next to her. "But something's going to break. I just know it."The car growled under her. Liza Liana, wrapped all snug as a little moonbeam, slept once more against the hand clutching the bunny Valeria had left behind for her, mouth open in peace, eyelashes moving like little wings. The sun streamed through the window and gold across her face. A moment of perfection.Fiona ought to have been resting in relief. Liza was stable. The tests were within parameters. The doctor had spoken to her in person—She's getting better, Miss Degenery. She even might get to go home today.And yet.Her stomach churned.Charles.That name.That man."I shouldn't be thinking about you," she murmured, her hand automatically smoothing a lock of hair back from Liza's forehead. "Not now."But the memory pushed in anyway—his eyes when the towel hit the floor. That split-second of stunned silence.
Valeria fixed her with a wise stare. "You're thinking about him, aren't you?"Fiona's heart skipped a beat. "I'm not.""Uh-huh," Valeria said, raising an eyebrow. "Don't think I don't see."Fiona swallowed, the truth searing like a black cloud in the back of her throat. She couldn't tell him. How could she? How could she make him understand what drew her to Charles? How could she make him understand the discord, the tension between what he'd done for her and what she'd felt for him?"Don't think too much about it," Valeria went on, her voice now sarcastic. "But you're not deceiving me. I'm sitting in the front row for your drama spectacle, and I'm enjoying every moment of it.""Shut up," Fiona growled, her cheeks blazing.The nurse came back in a minute, with a smile on her face to the two of them. "Ms. Degenery, Liza's vitals are stable, and she can be discharged in an hour. We just have to complete the final check."Fiona's heart leaped. An hour. That's all. Liza would come home."T
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