When Fallon Prescott returns to her parents’ mansion for what she thinks is just another family dinner, she’s blindsided by two shocking revelations: her father’s company is on the brink of collapse, and the only way to save it is to marry the last person she ever wanted to see again—Reid Callahan. Reid, the charismatic and wildly successful heir to the Callahan fortune, has no interest in marriage either. But business is business, and their parents have sealed their fate with an arrangement neither of them can escape. Determined to keep things strictly business, Fallon and Reid strike a deal: a marriage on paper with an expiration date. No love, no complications, just two years of playing the perfect couple to satisfy their families. But as they navigate awkward public appearances, nosy socialites, and unexpected sparks, Fallon starts to wonder if their arrangement is as simple as it seemed. Because Reid Callahan might just be the one man capable of breaking through her carefully guarded walls—and rewriting the rules of her heart. Can two people who swore off love find it in the most unexpected place?
Lihat lebih banyakPrologue
Early 2000s The whining of the horses at the ranch made my heart race, but I refused to back down. Fear wasn’t going to win today. “I’m not scared of horses,” I muttered to myself, as if saying it out loud would make it true—or maybe scare off whatever ghosts made these creatures seem so intimidating. I pushed the wooden stall door open and stepped inside. The chestnut brown filly stood tall, her coat gleaming in the sunlight streaming through the barn window. This was Honey, my dad’s favorite. “Hi, Honey,” I said nervously, glancing down at my little hands, unsure of what I was even doing there. Before I could rethink this foolish decision, Honey let out a shrill neigh and reared up. My breath caught in my throat as terror gripped me. I didn’t have time to run. Next thing I knew, I was on a pile of hay, my eyes squeezed tightly shut. Strong hands shook me by the shoulders. “Hey! You could’ve gotten hurt!” a boy’s voice yelled in my face. I blinked, my heart still racing. Anger surged through me as I shoved him away. “I didn’t need your help!” He glared at me, amber eyes practically glowing in the dim barn light. “You’re welcome,” he said sarcastically. “Mind your business. Who even are you?” “I’m your neighbor.” “We don’t have neighbors,” I shot back, folding my arms across my chest. “My daddy owns this ranch.” “My daddy owns this ranch!” he mimicked in a high-pitched voice that made my face burn with annoyance. “Stop it!” I shoved him again, harder this time. “Nope.” He stuck out his tongue at me, daring me to react. Before I could think of a clever comeback, a woman’s voice called out, “Reid!” He turned, and I saw a beautiful woman approaching us, her face glowing with warmth. “Hello, beautiful,” she said kindly to me. “Are you okay?” I nodded politely, just as my mother had taught me. “Yes, ma’am.” “What’s your friend’s name, Reid?” “She’s not my friend. I just saved her life,” he said smugly. “Did not! I was fine!” “The horse says you’re lying,” he shot back with a grin. Before I could retort, my parents arrived, leading Honey back into her stall. My dad’s worried expression eased when he saw I was safe, though the strangers clearly caught his attention. Introductions were made, and I learned the boy’s family had just bought the property next to ours. They were coming to dinner tonight. Great. I’d have to see this annoying boy again. Reid left with a smirk, his mother practically glowing with happiness. I groaned inwardly. Little did I know, this was only the beginning. ~~~~ Eighteen Years Later I stared at my reflection, brushing through the curls framing my face. A heavy sigh escaped my lips as my fingers grazed the necklace resting against my collarbone. Tonight’s dinner was the last thing I wanted to attend after such a long and draining workday. But when my mother said it was important, I knew better than to defy her—or my father. Missing this dinner would be the ultimate crime in his eyes. My gaze flicked between the mirror and my watch. Time was slipping through my fingers, and I wasn’t even ready. After a few final touches to my soft glam makeup, I spun in front of my phone camera. The video turned out decent—something I’d probably dump on my social media later. No real-time posting for me; I was far too careful for that. “Oh, shoot!” I gasped, realizing I was dangerously close to being late. Grabbing my purse and car keys, I bolted for the elevator, jabbing the button for the first floor. As the elevator descended, I spun my keys around my manicured index finger, the classic French tip design catching the light. Sliding into my car, I exhaled sharply. I already sensed the night would be more eventful than I wanted. If I were a drinker, maybe a shot of liquid courage would have helped. But no, I was going in sober, as always. Why my father insisted I be present at these business dinners baffled me. I wasn’t involved in the family business, and their clients had nothing to do with me. Yet somehow, my absence was always unacceptable. Thirty minutes later, I pulled into the driveway of my parents’ mansion. The grandeur didn’t faze me; I’d seen it all my life. But Sam, my close friend, never failed to gape at it every time she visited. “Miss Everette,” Mr. Oscar, our long-time butler, greeted me at the door. “Mr. Oscar, please just call me Fallon,” I reminded him, rolling my eyes playfully as I shrugged off my jacket. “Force of habit,” he chuckled. “Where is everyone?” I asked, peering into the empty living room. “Second floor. Dining room.” My brows lifted. “Ooh, must be really important guests.” “You’d be surprised,” he said with a smirk that I chose to ignore. I hurried up the stairs, the sound of chatter and chairs scraping against marble tiles growing louder. They were about to settle in for dinner. “Good evening, everyone. Sorry I’m late,” I announced breathlessly as I entered the room. “Fallon!” My heart skipped at the familiar voice. I blinked, disbelief washing over me. “Mrs. Callahan?” “Yes!” she beamed, pulling me into a warm embrace. I melted into her arms. It had been so long. “You look amazing!” “You look even better. You haven’t aged a day,” I said sincerely. Mrs. Callahan laughed, clearly flattered. “Oh, stop it. You’ve grown into such a fine young woman.” “Thank you,” I said, feeling my cheeks warm. “Mr. Callahan,” I greeted, offering him a side hug before glancing around for… him. Almost as if his mother noticed my searching gaze, she spoke up. “Reid should be here any second. He was taking a work call. Always the busy one, you see.” “I can tell. He’s such a hardworking young man,” my father boomed proudly from the head of the table. I kissed his cheek. “Hi, Dad.” Moving to my mom, who had been smiling oddly since I arrived, I gave her a warm hug before taking my seat. Just as I reached for my fork, he walked in. My breath hitched. Reid Callahan. He moved with the confidence of a runway model, every step calculated and assured. His shoulder-length curls gleamed under the chandelier light, and I couldn’t help but envy how perfect they looked for a man. When his eyes met mine, my heart skipped a beat. This man was drop-dead gorgeous. I forced myself to remain composed as my parents fawned over him. The proud smile on his father’s face didn’t go unnoticed. I wished, just for a moment, that my father would look at me that way. “Hello, Fallon,” Reid greeted, his voice smooth and velvety. I fought back a shiver, blaming it on the cold air despite the warmth of the room. Clearing my throat, I nodded. “Hello, Reid.” “Why are you two so formal?” my mother teased. “You haven’t seen each other in years!” Awkwardly, we both stood. I reached out for a handshake while he went in for a hug, creating a hilariously awkward moment. “Nice to see you again, Fallon.” “Same here, Reid.” It felt like one of those formal conversations straight out of an English textbook. We settled back into our seats, and I kept my eyes on my plate, barely tuning in to the conversations around me. The men discussed business while the women chatted about socialite gatherings. I glanced at my watch repeatedly, counting down the minutes until I could escape. After dinner, the conversations dragged on. Nursing a glass of red wine, I sat by myself, bored out of my mind. “Fallon,” my father called. I looked up, startled. “Yes, Dad?” “You and Reid should take a walk. Catch up for old times’ sake.” “Um…” I hesitated, unsure how to respond. “That would be great,” my mother chimed in before I could say a word. “Okay.” Reid stepped forward, extending his hand. “After you.” His touch sent a small shiver down my spine, but I ignored it, leading him toward the backyard. The garden lights cast a warm glow over the neatly trimmed hedges. “So,” he broke the silence, “how’s work?” “It’s good. How’s yours?” “Great.” There was an awkward pause before he added, “We haven’t talked in a long while.” “Life happened, I guess,” I shrugged. “You don’t seem very happy to see me.” “Last time I checked, we never had a cordial relationship,” I retorted, sipping my wine. He hummed thoughtfully, his gaze fixed straight ahead. I couldn’t help but admire the sharp angle of his jawline. His eyes suddenly locked onto mine, and I quickly looked away. “I should get going. I have work to do,” I said. “You never told me where you work.” “You didn’t ask,” I shot back, walking off before he could say anything else. The last thing I needed was for Reid Callahan to know I was still trying to figure out my life while he was clearly thriving.~One Year Later~ ~Fallon~ The rain had just stopped when I stepped onto the porch. The world looked rinsed clean—washed of everything heavy. The sky was still gray at the edges, but light had begun to filter through in soft streaks, like gold ink bleeding through vellum. The air smelled like lavender and wet grass. Somewhere down the hill, a wind chime danced gently in the breeze—delicate, hollow, musical. It sounded like a lullaby. Like grace. Like the beginning of something quiet and holy. In my arms was everything I didn’t know I’d been missing. My daughter. Wrapped in a blush knit blanket, warm and impossibly small, her tiny cheek pressed against my collarbone. Her breath was soft and even, rising and falling like she had all the time in the world. As if she already understood something the rest of us hadn’t quite figured out—how to simply be here. I couldn’t stop looking at her. She had Reid’s lashes—absurdly long and unfair for someone so new to the planet. My nose. Ful
~One Month Later~~Fallon~The first rays of morning sun spilled through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting warm gold across the hardwood floors of the master suite. Outside, Los Angeles was still stretching, still yawning awake—just like the man asleep in our bed.I stood barefoot on the balcony, wrapped in the oversized white shirt I’d stolen from him—again. His scent still clung to the fabric, and my fingers curled around the coffee mug as if it were anchoring me in this moment.The city looked different now. Not because it had changed. But because I had.This time last year, I was heartbroken. Untethered. Unsure if I’d ever trust myself—or love—again.Now, I was someone’s wife. Again. But not in the way I used to be.This time, I had chosen it with open eyes. With healing behind me. With love that had been tried and tested and still said yes.The wedding had been everything people said it would be—stunning, sacred, a media frenzy. But the moment I kept replaying wasn’t the kiss
~Fallon~ The sun rose like it had been waiting for us. Soft gold spilled across the white curtains of the bridal suite, painting the walls in honey and warmth. I was already awake. Not from nerves—but from stillness. Anticipation. The weight of knowing this wasn’t just a wedding. It was a return. Today, I became Fallon Callahan again. Only this time… I was choosing it. The room buzzed around me—stylists fussing with palettes and pins, Mia barking orders like a Hollywood director, soft music threading through the air—but it all felt like background noise. Like the world had faded into soft focus, and all I could see was the path ahead. The life ahead. Mia peeked through the curtains and gasped dramatically. “Okay. The paparazzi have officially formed a human wall at the gate. It’s giving royal wedding meets Vogue editorial.” I laughed, curling my legs under me on the sofa, silk robe falling around my knees. “They’ve been waiting for this since the first breakup. I’m surprised t
~Reid~I stood on the edge of the balcony at my father’s estate—the same one I used to loathe visiting when I was younger.Nothing had changed.The garden below was still painfully perfect. Trimmed hedges in uniform rows. Stone pathways that curved with clinical precision. Not a petal out of place. It was beautiful in that sterile, expensive way—his way.Too controlled. Too silent. Like everything in his world.But I wasn’t here to judge his landscaping. I was here because he asked.That alone made it strange.We didn’t “talk,” not like normal families. Ours was a home of polite efficiency. Quiet discipline. Appearances over intimacy. Every conversation had an unspoken deadline, and emotion was considered a tactical error.So when he called that morning and simply said, “Come over. Let’s talk,” I’d paused. No tone. No warmth. No motive I could read.But I’d come anyway. Because we were getting married soon. Because I had changed. Because it was time.I heard the soft click of the slid
~Fallon~“Do we want an orchestra or a live band?”Reid was sitting cross-legged on the couch, flipping through a high-end wedding planner binder his assistant had couriered over that morning. His reading glasses—yes, he wore those now when he wasn’t trying to prove a point—slid dangerously low on his nose. He looked so serious, like we were negotiating a hostile merger.One leg was propped on the coffee table. His hair was slightly damp from a shower, his sleeves rolled, and for a second I just watched him. This man I had loved, lost, and found again—now buried in calligraphy options like it was the fate of the nation.I looked up from my Pinterest board, amused. “You own half of California, and you’re asking me about bands?”He didn’t look up. “I figured I’d try being a collaborative fiancé.”I tilted my head, mock-suspicious. “Since when?”“Since Mia threatened to lock me out of my own wedding.”“She will,” Mia called from across the room, where she was sitting cross-legged on the
~Fallon~The curtains were still drawn.Pale morning light painted soft streaks on the walls, the kind of quiet blue-gray that felt more like a sigh than a sunrise. Outside, the city was starting to stir, but in here, time had no shape.It didn’t feel like morning.It didn’t feel like anything I could define.Just warmth. Stillness. That low hum of peace that only comes after you’ve survived the wreckage and found your way back to shore.Reid’s arm was wrapped around my waist, loose and sure. His body curved into mine like we’d been sculpted that way. The sheets were tangled around our legs, our skin pressed together in all the places that mattered. I could feel his breath against the back of my neck—slow, even, steady.Like safety. Like home.I didn’t move. Didn’t speak.Not because I was afraid to break the moment, but because I didn’t have to.The room was quiet except for the sound of his breathing and the occasional creak of the old wood beneath the bed. The air smelled faintly o
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