Ava Reynolds is broke, desperate, and watching her little sister die slowly in a hospital bed. She’s out of options, until a cold, powerful billionaire offers her a lifeline: marry him for one year, and he’ll pay for everything. No love. No intimacy. Just a contract. Damian Kingsley needs a wife to save his empire. Ava is a nobody, and that’s exactly what he wants. What he doesn’t expect is the fire behind her quiet eyes or the way she makes his cold world start to crack. But Ava isn’t walking into this marriage blind. She knows she’s just a tool to him. And she swears she’ll never fall for a man who treats love like a business deal. Until one mistake rips her life apart. Betrayed. Humiliated. Thrown out like trash. She leaves, broken, but not defeated. And when Damian finally realizes the truth, it’s too late. The girl he once used is gone. In her place stands a woman he can’t control. A woman he can’t live without. Now he wants her back. But Ava doesn’t want an apology. She wants him to burn
더 보기It had been raining all day. Not the kind of rain that washed anything clean, just cold, relentless sheets that sank straight through your coat and into your bones. The whole city felt heavy. Like it was mourning something I couldn’t name. Maybe me.
My shoes made that awful wet squelch as I pushed through the hospital’s revolving doors. The fluorescent lights inside hit me like a slap. I didn’t bother shaking off the water. What was the point? I’d been soaked for days, by rain, by worry, by everything I couldn’t fix.
The elevator groaned on its way up. Sixth floor. Oncology.
I could still smell the burnt diner coffee on my sleeves, even after the double shift. My lower back throbbed, but I was past noticing pain. Or maybe I’d just gotten good at pretending it didn’t matter.
Lily was asleep when I got there. The blanket barely covered her. Her IV beeped steadily like it had learned how to breathe for her. Her hair was thinner this week, wisps stuck to her forehead like faded dreams.
I leaned down and kissed her temple. “I’m here, baby,” I whispered. “Always.”
She didn’t move.
I stood there for a minute, just watching. Making sure her chest still rose and fell. Like if I stared hard enough, she’d stay.
When I finally stepped out, the nurse at the desk offered a tired smile. “Rough night?”
I gave a small nod. “Same as always.”
That wasn’t true. Tonight was worse. The rent was due. I’d opened the hospital bill earlier, five red warning stamps across the top like they were shouting at me. I’d applied for two more jobs during my lunch break, anything that didn’t require a degree or dignity. Still nothing.
I dropped into the waiting room chair and pulled out my phone. The lock screen photo popped up: Lily and me at Coney Island last summer. She looked like herself then, sunburned, alive. She’d screamed so loud on the roller coaster the whole boardwalk turned.
That girl was vanishing right in front of me.
“Miss Reynolds?”
The voice came out of nowhere. Crisp. Male. Definitely not a nurse.
I turned and there he was. Tall. Black coat. Dry shoes. His whole presence didn’t belong in this hallway, like someone had cut him out of a magazine and pasted him here.
“Yes?” I said slowly.
He held out a card, gloved hand steady. “Mark Evans. I represent Mr. Damian Kingsley.”
I blinked. My brain tried to catch up. “The CEO?”
“Yes.”
My stomach dropped. Damian Kingsley wasn’t just some CEO. He was the CEO. Ruthless. Rich. On every Forbes list, every headline. Cold as the stock market and twice as unfeeling.
I stared at the card. Didn’t read it. “Why would someone like him want to talk to me?”
Mark’s expression didn’t change. “Mr. Kingsley believes you might be the answer to a mutual problem.”
I let out a short, bitter laugh. “Is this a scam?”
“No, Miss Reynolds.” His voice was calm and practiced. Too calm. “Mr. Kingsley is prepared to make you an offer that would cover your sister’s medical treatment. In full.”
Time stopped.
I looked toward Lily’s room. That steady beeping. Her pale skin under the hospital lights. The folder with numbers we couldn’t afford sitting on the nightstand.
“What kind of offer?”
Mark looked down the hallway. “He prefers to discuss details in person.”
My heart was pounding. Hard.
This didn’t make sense. None of it did.
But when you’re drowning, even a hand from the devil feels like a rescue.
“If I say yes… then what?” I asked, my voice low.
Mark’s lips twitched, maybe sympathy, maybe something else. “Then your life changes. Permanently.”
I clutched the card like it was a lifeline. My fingers shook.
“Come with me, Miss Reynolds,” he said. “Mr. Kingsley is waiting.”
Ava’s POVI didn’t move for a long time.Just stood there in the penthouse, lights off, my reflection barely visible in the glass. Romeoutside, blurred and bright, like the city refused to care that everything was falling apartinside this apartment.Because this wasn’t just smoke and mirrors anymore.It was war.And I was already losing.Naomi’s voice cut through the silence like a crack splitting glass.“Guys. You need to see this.”There was no one else here. Just me. And her. And the air between us felt too still.I turned slowly. She stood by the kitchen island, pale, phone in one hand, laptop glowingcold light across her face.“Helena just called an emergency board vote,” she said. “Effective immediately. She’snominating herself as interim CEO.”I blinked. “She can’t.”“She can,” Naomi said tightly. “If she has enough voting shares. And she does.”“No,” I breathed. “She had… what, seven percent?”“She had seven percent.” Naomi’s voice was sharper now, her fingers flying acros
Ava’s POVHe just looked at me.Silent.And this time, I didn’t know if he believed me.I took a step forward, slow, deliberate. My heart had already cracked once tonight, and I wasn’t sure how much more it could take.“You said all that stuff on the broadcast,” Damian said finally, his voice brittle, still staring at the grainy photo. “But this…”My face burned. “You think I could lie to the world like that, then come home and steal from you?”His silence wasn’t loud. It was worse. It was slow. Creeping. The kind that hollowed out the room.And I broke.“I stood there in front of millions of people,” I whispered. “I told them you were the first man who ever saw me. Who didn’t flinch when he found out I was broken? I told them I loved you—not because I had to, but because I couldn’t help it.”I stepped closer. “Do you really think I could say all that… and then lie to you like this?”He flinched then. A twitch in his jaw. Like the words were slicing through something carefully held.“
“I’m not leaving you.”I said it like a vow, like maybe saying it enough could make everything else stop spinning.But they made me leave anyway.The guard tapped the glass, gave me that rehearsed, polite nod the kind that made it worse. I stood because I had to. Not because I wanted to. Not because I could.I walked out of that holding room with my fists clenched, nails digging into my palm to feel something that wasn’t heartbreak. I didn’t look back. I didn’t have to.Because he didn’t ask me to stay.Because he trusted I would.—The next morning, they let him go.Bail. Money. Quiet backdoor.But the media? They weren’t quiet.By the time I got back to the penthouse, three different headlines had already gone viral.“Kingsley Heir Arrested in Assault Probe.”“Damian Kingsley: Hero, Monster, or Just Rich Enough to Walk?”“Sources Confirm Marriage May Be Strategic Fraud.”Every photo they used was calculated, shots of him in cuffs, one where I looked hollow-eyed in court lighting, an
She just walked across the space and wrapped her arms around him.He exhaled, forehead resting against hers.“I didn’t stop him,” he said. “I wanted to. I tried. But he’s gone.”Ava closed her eyes. “We’ll find him.”“I shouldn’t have left you.”“But you came back.”And this time, she was the one holding him together.But the moment shattered too soon.Mark’s phone rang low, urgent. He stepped away to answer, voice tight.Damian barely had time to register the shift in Mark’s posture before two officers stepped into the hall behind them.“Damian Kingsley?” one asked. “You need to come with us.”Ava stiffened. “What?”Mark was already trying to intercept them. “You can’t be serious. He walked away. Ethan was the one who—”The lead officer held up a printed statement.“Anonymous tip. Blood on-site. Surveillance caught him entering the building alone. We have to bring him in.”Ava turned to Damian, panicked. “Tell them the truth.”But he didn’t say anything.Didn’t fight it.Didn’t even
The photo didn’t blur when Damian blinked.It stayed exactly the same, Ava in that faded diner uniform, her posture a little hunched, her face tired in a way he’d never seen. She looked so young. So unguarded. Like everything kept getting taken from her, and she didn’t even know how to fight for what was left.The message beneath it didn’t need a signature.Still think she belongs to you?He didn’t flinch. But his jaw locked.He set the phone down on the glass table with a kind of care that felt more dangerous than rage. The fire made a sound, louder, sharper like it felt it too, whatever was building.Ethan.It had been sitting there in his chest for weeks, maybe longer pressure, heat, something sharp and then suddenly it cracked.His hand was on the table, curled into a fist so hard his arm shook.And then… he was gone. Out the door. It slammed behind him and only then did he realize how fast he’d moved.The new facility didn’t look like a hospital.It looked like a private villa th
“Then watch what happens to your sister.”That’s what she said.And then she left.No yelling. No threats. Just this awful, calm silence that made everything she said feel heavier like it hadn’t landed yet, but would.The door was still moving, hadn’t even closed fully when Damian came in. His footsteps were quick, like he’d heard something, like something felt off.His eyes landed on me. “Who was that?”His voice wasn’t loud, but it cut straight through me.I opened my mouth. Nothing. My throat felt too tight to push anything out.I had to blink. I had to inhale slowly, like reminding my lungs how to work.“Helena,” I finally said.He blinked once. “What?”“She was here,” I said, barely above a whisper. “She offered me money. Half a million.”“To leave?”I nodded.He didn’t look surprised. Just… disappointed. Like he’d known this was coming.“And?”“I said no.”He exhaled slowly. But something in him stayed braced.Then I forced the rest out.“She said… If I didn’t walk away, I’d dis
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