A ruined promise. A reckless threat. And a proposal that turns vengeance into a dangerous game. Desperate to restore her shattered dignity, Raellyn confronts Arnav, the powerful director who holds the key to her ruined past. Driven by pride she offer him marriage instead of money. For Arnav, she’s the perfect solution. For Raellyn, he’s the only path left. But what begins as a cold transaction spirals into a storm of passion, power, and dangerous emotions. Because in a deal built on vengeance and desire… who will end up surrendering first. Raellyn’s heart, or Arnav’s control?
ดูเพิ่มเติม“Careful, Miss. That little thing could hurt someone.”
His voice was maddeningly calm almost serene, as though the steel at his throat was nothing more than an inconvenience. It slithered into her ears like a whisper of smoke, unhurried, insolent, and entirely out of place given the tension suffocating the room. The man in the leather chair didn’t even flinch, though she could see the faint red bead beginning to form where the edge of the folding knife touched his skin. Raellyn’s fingers curled tighter around the handle. Her palm was damp with sweat, trembling from both adrenaline and disbelief. This wasn’t how he was supposed to react. He was supposed to panic, to beg for his life, or at the very least, to acknowledge the danger he was in. Instead, Arnav looked at her as if she were a curious street performance a strange, mildly entertaining spectacle that interrupted the monotony of his day. “Do I look like I’m joking to you?” she snapped, the edge in her voice sharper than the blade she wielded. Her tone cracked through the silence like glass. Even the air in the office seemed to recoil. She pressed the knife closer, just enough to make sure he could feel it not only on his skin, but in his bones. Her voice didn’t tremble. It was clear, cold, and merciless. She had nothing left to lose, and that made her dangerous. “Listen to me, Sir Arnav,” she hissed. “I didn’t come here to exchange pleasantries or ask politely. Your brother committed a betrayal so vile it gutted me. I want consequences. I want retribution for what he’s done. And if I have to start with you, I will.” Arnav’s brow barely moved. The blade at his throat didn’t seem to disturb him nearly as much as her words did. But even then, his expression remained unreadable, forged in the same steel his expensive office was made of. Cold. Polished. Impenetrable. Raellyn’s eyes darted briefly to the nameplate on his desk. ARNAV, DIRECTOR. She didn’t need confirmation she knew who he was. She had studied every photo of him she could find before storming this office. But seeing him in person was worse. The arrogance she’d expected in his features was not only present it was weaponized. Still, he didn’t move. His shoulders stayed relaxed, posture loose, like he was indulging a tantrum rather than facing someone holding a knife to his throat. It made her rage burn deeper. Then, in one swift motion, she pushed the blade forward just enough to break skin. A thin line of red appeared along his throat, slow and deliberate, like the start of a signature written in blood. And still he didn’t even blink. “Justice, you say?” he finally murmured, voice smooth as silk. His lips curled into something too cold to be a smile. “Then put down the knife and sit. Let’s see what exactly you’re demanding.” He gestured casually toward the chair across from his desk, like a host inviting a guest to tea. The detachment in his voice was unbearable. Raellyn hesitated. Her fingers tightened instinctively around the knife. Her knees buckled slightly, not out of fear, but exhaustion the weight of everything she’d buried inside now pressing down with merciless force. This was reckless. She knew it. Barging into the office of a high-profile director and threatening him could end her life or worse. But desperation had pushed her past the edge of reason. Her world had already collapsed. What difference did it make now if she fell a little further? Slowly, with the reluctant grace of a woman still walking a tightrope, she lowered the blade but didn’t let go. She moved stiffly around the desk, her spine taut like a bowstring, and sat at the edge of the high-backed chair. Her grip on the knife remained firm. This wasn’t surrender. This was war by another name. Arnav didn’t acknowledge her caution. He merely leaned forward, folding his fingers beneath his chin. The posture of a man used to being listened to. “So tell me,” he said, voice deceptively pleasant, “what exactly has my brother done that turned you into such a feral little thing and barging into my office like a deranged lunatic?” The condescension hit her like a slap. Without a word, Raellyn reached into her coat and pulled out a folded newspaper. She slapped it down on the desk with force, the paper sliding toward him across the polished oak. “The headline,” she said through gritted teeth, “read it. That’s why I’m here.” Arnav cast a languid glance at the front page. The bold letters screamed the betrayal louder than any voice could: "Director’s Brother, Arsene, Engaged to Sylvia." Sylvia. The name alone made bile rise in Raellyn’s throat. That woman’s face haunted her dreams smiling, triumphant, draped around Arsene like she had earned him. Like he was a trophy. Raellyn clenched her fists so tightly that her nails bit into her palms. Arnav’s eyes didn’t even flicker. “And this disturbs you… why?” he asked, leaning back, voice a picture of indifference. “Because your brother was my lover,” Raellyn snapped. “For over a year. He courted me, loved me promised me forever. A week before that article, he asked me to marry him.” Her voice cracked, but only for a moment. “Then he vanished. Not a word. No explanation. And now I find him plastered on every goddamn newspaper, engaged to someone else like I was never even real.” The chair screeched as she stood abruptly, pacing the floor like a caged animal. Her fury filled the room now, heavy and burning. Her boots thudded softly against the marble, marking her rage like footsteps toward the edge of ruin. “I trusted him,” she continued, her voice trembling with grief disguised as rage. “I gave him everything. And he discarded me like garbage.” Arnav didn’t interrupt. He simply watched her with that same maddening calm, like a scientist observing an experiment. Then his voice lowered, quiet and deliberate. “Say that again.” Raellyn stopped. Her breath caught, surprised by the sudden gravity in his tone. But she met his gaze. “We were together,” she repeated. “For a year. He proposed to me. And then he vanished.” She reached into her pocket again and withdrew a small velvet pouch. From it, she pulled out a delicate silver pendant, glinting faintly under the office lights. She placed it on the desk. “He gave me that,” she said. “Said it was a symbol of our bond. Of everything we were supposed to become.” The pendant lay between them like a broken promise. Arnav stared at it. His fingers moved slowly, brushing the chain, lifting it delicately like it might dissolve in his grip. “He gave you this?” he asked. “Yes,” she replied, her voice stronger now. “He called it a vow. And then he erased me.” She could feel her heart thudding against her ribs like it wanted to break free. The knife was still in her hand, though she had forgotten it was there. Her weapon wasn’t the blade anymore it was the truth. The raw, terrible truth of a woman discarded. “So tell me, Director Arnav,” she said, her tone now trembling with quiet fury, “what is your brother, if not a liar? And what does that make you, defending him in your glass tower?” Arnav took a long breath and leaned back in his chair. His fingers tapped against the desk once, twice, three times. And then, he spoke. “You expect sympathy from me?” he said coolly. “After threatening me with a knife?” “I expect decency,” she snapped. “Something your family seems to lack.” He chuckled. The sound was soft, almost pitying. “And this is what the desperate do?” he murmured. “Wave blades and broken hearts like weapons? Is this how you think you’ll win something respect, perhaps? Or a payout?” His words were poison. Her jaw clenched. Tears burned in the corners of her eyes, but she refused to let them fall. She would not let him see her bleed. “Oh, I see,” she said bitterly. “This is about class now. Poor little Raellyn, chasing a rich man’s brother for attention? Is that what you believe? That people like me don’t deserve justice unless we come wrapped in diamonds?” Something in Arnav’s gaze shifted tightened but he said nothing. She stepped forward, fists shaking. “Your brother made promises,” she whispered. “He made me believe I was his forever. And now I’m the one standing here, accused of madness, when all I ever did was love him.” The room pulsed with silence. Her breath hitched. The air between them felt like a string stretched to its breaking point. Then Arnav’s voice came, soft but cold. “Tell me,” he said, his eyes locked on hers, “are you pregnant with my brother’s child?”Raellyn never thought she would find herself driving alone to her uncle’s house like this. It was both insane and oddly liberating, something about steering the wheel herself, having no one to tell her where to go or how fast to get there, made her feel a freedom she hadn’t anticipated. But beneath that breath of independence was another reason altogether. The lawyer's unexpected shown up at the house, and Arnav’s refusal to explain a damn thing. That silence itched at her, needled her thoughts like a thorn under skin. She couldn’t stand the waiting so, rather than sitting still and speculating endlessly, Raellyn had chosen to face the truth head-on. If Arnav wouldn’t tell her what was going on, then she’d uncover it herself—starting with her family.The front door swung open before her fingers even touched the knocker.“Oho~ Milady,” Lita drawled, her expression unreadable, her voice laced with the kind of knowing mischief that prickled under Raellyn’s skin. It was clear she’d been e
“Seems like your visiting hours are over. Those documents need more of my attention than this conversation does. So would you mind leaving me alone to tend to business?”The dismissal was clean. Brutal. Delivered with the cold elegance only a man like Arnav could perfect, one who had spent his life fencing emotions behind sharp intellect and colder indifference.But Raellyn didn’t flinch.She had expected this. In fact, she'd rehearsed it in her head this moment when he would retreat behind his fortress of silence. When the man who devoured her soul the night before would vanish, leaving only a stranger in his place.It stung, more than she allowed herself to admit.So this was who he was now. A man who couldn’t even muster a straight answer about the bed they’d shared, who couldn’t face the weight of her words, the tension of her presence. He would rather bury himself in paperwork than acknowledge what had passed between them.Fine.If it was distance he wanted, she would give it.Sh
“So this is the place where you isolate yourself?”There was something dangerously enchanting about the way she spoke, like every word she uttered held the weight of an incantation. It wasn’t just what Raellyn said, but her presence, every movement, even the way she breathed, came wrapped in an invisible charm that dulled the trigger of his anger. Odd, considering Arnav was never the kind of man known for his generosity, much less forgiveness. How she said it. Soft, measured, too deliberate for someone so young. Her voice didn’t stab. It seduced, lulled, cloaked itself in honey, disarming the very man who had once mastered the art of keeping people at bay.Perhaps that was her power.Witchcraft. Verbal sorcery.It was the only reasonable explanation for why Arnav hadn’t thrown her out the moment she appeared in his private study, wearing a dress so infuriatingly familiar, so indecently stunning, it bordered on cruel.“Yes,” he replied, his voice clipped, but not cold enough to freeze
Raellyn awoke in a daze of dopamine and delirium, her heart fluttering in a rhythm she hadn’t felt in years. It reminded her of the first time she ever fell in love heady, overwhelming, and strangely pure. The cold air of the room nipped at her skin, but it couldn’t dampen the fire that still burned within her chest. She wriggled out of the cocoon of bedsheets that had wrapped tightly around her like a silken chrysalis, her body still sensitive to the faintest movements.The morning light poured in, almost blinding in its brilliance. She blinked, squinting at the open window. The heavy curtains had been drawn and tied neatly at the sides, letting the day invade her sanctuary. Her gaze lingered there for a moment, then drifted back inward, to the unspoken smile curling her lips. A giggle bubbled up in her throat. What was this feeling?She was... happy.Utterly and foolishly happy.It was absurd, almost embarrassing. She was behaving like some wide-eyed girl freshly drunk on her first
The sunlight filtered weakly through the mist that had crept into the room overnight, entering through the wide-open window left bare of curtains. A chill hung in the air soft, gentle, almost intimate in the way it kissed the skin.Arnav shifted in bed, the silk sheet slipping from his waist as he adjusted his position, only to freeze the moment he realized he wasn’t alone. Lying beside him, nestled into the warmth of his body like she belonged there, was a woman. His wife. Her face was relaxed, lips slightly parted in a content slumber, and there was a serenity in her expression that unsettled him in ways he couldn't explain.What the hell was this feeling?He had slept with countless women. That wasn’t new. What was new, however, was waking up next to one. Spending the night. Not sneaking out at dawn or kicking them out before the sun dared to rise. Not even Clarissa, the woman who had once stolen his heart his ex-wife, his first and only true love had ever shared a full night with
Raellyn’s fingers curled timidly around the length of something that had stiffened beneath her touch. It was the first time in her entire life she had ever held something so hot, so alive like steel set aflame. Her breath hitched as Arnav clenched his jaw, a low groan escaping him when her fingers dared to move with the lightest pressure, tracing the unfamiliar heat with hesitant curiosity.“You like my touch, don’t you, sir?”“Raellyn.” Her name came out barely a whisper, a throaty plea that curled into the space between them like smoke. But the way he said it fragile, restrained, desperate felt like an urgent call for her to fill the aching void that lived somewhere deep inside him.“You want this?” she asked again, her voice a blend of innocence and provocation, while the man beneath her simply clenched his jaw tighter, suppressing another shuddering breath.A mischievous giggle slipped from her lips, satisfaction washing over her. If this was her chance to reclaim even a fragment
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