LOGINShe married him to save her sister’s life. He married her to save his crown. For two years, Alicia kept her vows and her silence--until the night Edward Valentine asked for an open marriage and stepped back into the orbit of the woman he once called his first love. When her sister collapses and Alicia faces the worst alone, she finally sees the truth: beneath his cold vows, there was never a heart for her at all. But distance cuts deeper than anger. And when the life he built without love starts to crack, Edward learns the cost of the wife he treated like a stranger. Now the man who never begged may have to. If she’s still there to listen.
View MoreAlicia's POV
The first time I saw the photo, I thought it was fake. Elena shoved her phone under my nose while I tried to make sense of quarterly reports that looked like they'd been designed to kill brain cells. The screen was bright, the colors too sharp, like the world was about to laugh in my face. "Sweetness," she said, her voice dripping with the drama she usually saved for office gossip. "Your husband is trending again." I didn't look up right away. Edward Valentine was always trending — business magazines, financial blogs, the occasional society page. He was the kind of man who looked like he owned the air people breathed, and for some reason, the world loved to watch. But there was something in Elena's tone this time. Something that made my chest feel tight, like my heart already knew before my eyes did. I glanced at the screen. And locked in place. Edward Valentine. My husband. Black tuxedo, cufflinks glinting, looking like sin and old money rolled into one. He wore that practiced half-smile, a smile that made people believe him even when they shouldn't, and shoulders broad enough to carry an empire as if it weighed nothing. But that wasn't what made my throat close up. It was the woman on his arm. Tall. Elegant. A diamond necklace blazing under the cameras, every facet begging to be noticed. Her smile didn't just say 'I belong here.' It screamed it. The caption read: 'The Valentine Heir and His Mystery Lady—Love in the Air?' I couldn't feel my fingers. The office noise faded. Elena leaned on my desk, smirking like she was serving me the best gossip of the year. "She's stunning, right? Word is, she's his childhood crush. No wonder he looked so happy tonight." Childhood crush. The words hit like ice water down my spine. No. It couldn't be. But it was. Lucy. Of course, it was Lucy. The same girl who once cornered me in the school bathroom and laughed so hard she cried because my shoes had visible glue on the sides. The one who told everyone who'd listen that my makeup looked like I did it in the dark. The one who always made sure I knew exactly where I stood on the ladder of life — somewhere near the bottom while she floated at the top with her perfect hair and perfect everything. That Lucy. And now she was on my husband's arm, smiling for the cameras as though she had finally won something only she understood they were competing for. My husband. I shut my laptop so hard the sound cracked through the office like a gunshot. Elena jumped. "Whoa. You okay?" "I'm fine," I said, but my voice betrayed me. Too sharp, too thin. She tilted her head, eyes narrowing. "You sure? You look like you swallowed a lemon whole." "Lena, I'm fine. Just tired." I stuffed my things into my bag, refusing to stay another second under that pitying stare before I fractured. The drive home felt endless. Like the universe had stretched out every red light to see if I'd break before reaching my driveway. But nothing slowed down the movie playing in my head. Her hand on his arm. The way he leaned towards her. The cameras were eating it up like they were the perfect couple. He had never looked at me like that. Not once in two years. Two years ago, Edward Valentine had walked into my life with a contract and the kind of confidence that made you want to either throw him out a window or kiss him just to shut him up. "Marry me for a year. Pretend for my father's sake. When it's over, you walk away. Clean. Simple. No strings." His father had stage-four cancer. The board wanted a stable, family-oriented heir. A man who looked like he was ready to take the reins without burning the empire to the ground. And me? I had a sister who needed heart surgery. Parents are drowning in debt after our logistics business crashed. My master's degree at Oxford was hanging by a thread because I was working three part-time jobs just to survive. So yes. When a billionaire offers you a deal that can save your family, you don't overthink it. I married him. I smiled for the cameras. Stood by his side at charity events. Learned how to wear expensive dresses. Stayed out of his way like the contract demanded. And then the year ended. But we didn't. Edward asked me to stay. Said I made him better. Said I completed him in some way. And like the fool I was, I stayed. Because somewhere between the cold dinners and the polite conversations, I started to want...more. Pulling into the driveway, I saw his car was already there. Of course it was. I slammed my Porsche door harder than necessary and marched into the house, heels hitting the marble floor like trouble. The mansion was resplendent, like it always was. A place so steeped in grandeur you lowered your voice without realizing it. Edward was in the living room, jacket off, tie loosened, looking like a cover of some business magazine that declared him Most Eligible, Most Handsome, Most Everything. He looked up as I walked in. "Hey." "Hey." My voice was flat. His eyes scanned my face. "You okay? You look...tense." "Tense?" My voice carried a bite I couldn't swallow back. "Maybe." He raised a brow. "Work?" "Your big event tonight," I said. "Seemed...fun." Something flickered in his expression. Too quick for me to catch. "It was business," he said smoothly. I almost laughed, he could've sold the line to a boardroom. "You know how it is." Business. Right. I tossed my bag onto the couch and kicked off my heels before they killed me. "Dinner?" he asked, casual as ever, pretending he hadn't just set the Internet on fire. "Not hungry," I said, heading toward the bedroom. The shower was hot enough to burn, but it didn't wash away the image of him and Lucy. Her hand on his arm. That smile. The way he leaned into her as if she belonged there. No tears came. No sound either. Only the brutal snap inside my chest. Because he had never once taken me to one of those events as his wife. Not once. The only time he ever brought me along was when it served a purpose—a performance, nothing more. I was good enough to marry. Good enough to smile for his dying father and those he needed me to. But not good enough to stand beside him now when the cameras flashed. When I came out of the shower, towel wrapped tight, Edward was sitting on the edge of the bed scrolling through his phone. He looked up. "I'm heading out again. Dinner with Mother." As expected. The woman who looked at me and saw the gold-digger who hit the jackpot. "It's past eight," I said. "She insisted." His fingers tightened around the watch strap before he fastened it into place. I stared at him. The man I married for money. At the man I accidentally fell for. At the stranger in my own house. "Edward," I said before I could stop myself. "Do you even want to be married to me?" He stilled for a moment, then smoothed cologne along his throat, measured, practiced, like ritual could drown out the question. When he finally spoke, his voice was as composed as ever. "Maybe," he said, not looking at me, "we should talk about an open marriage."Alicia’s POVThe apartment was quiet. Not the comforting quiet that let you sink into stillness, but the kind that pressed against your temples and reminded you of everything you hadn’t done, everything you’d lost. Elena had already left for work. The sound of her heels fading down the stairwell was the only proof she had been here this morning.The clock read three-fifteen. I’d slept through most of the day.I stood. Walked to the bathroom. Splashed water on my face. Steam from the sink curled around my fingers as I rubbed them over my cheeks. The mirror reflected someone who had slept too long, eyelids heavy, strands of hair clinging like wet seaweed. I blinked, and the face didn’t change—but I did, just a little.I went to the small table by the window. The apartment overlooked a narrow street. People walked by below. Normal lives. Normal routines. I watched them for a while, feeling disconnected from it all.Elena had left one of her phones, which I’d almost refused, I didn’t want
Edward’s POVI woke to silence.Not the soft kind that lets you breathe. This silence had edges. Weight. No Alicia moving through the house. No footsteps. No proof that anything in this mansion still answered to me. The light spilling across the bedroom felt too bright. Too accusatory.She'd destroyed her phone on Saturday. Smashed it. Nothing tied me to her anymore except the certainty of where she'd retreated. Elena's apartment. East side.She had nowhere else to go. Elena's place was temporary. Her parents' house was the only other option, and if she'd gone there, I'd have heard by now. She was still at Elena's.I swung my legs over the side of the bed. Marble bit cold against my skin. I didn’t pause. The house hadn’t changed, but nothing felt solid anymore. Curtains stirred slightly in a draft from the north wing, delicate and tense. A trace of yesterday’s coffee clung to the counter, acrid and stubborn. My mind replayed the weekend in jagged fragments.Saturday's board mandate f
Alicia's POV I woke slowly, the way people do when their body is more tired than their mind. Light filtered through Elena’s half-drawn curtains, soft, pale, nothing like the harsh brightness of Edward's estate. My muscles felt sluggish but not painful, just used… overused.The blanket carried a hint of lavender. Elena’s scent. Safe..For a moment I didn’t move. I just lay there listening to the low whir of her refrigerator, the occasional car passing below, and the gentle clink of ceramic from the kitchen.She was trying to be quiet. Typical Elena.I pushed myself up, slowly, and the dull ache low in my abdomen responded, reminding me yes, I was still fragile. Not broken, but fragile.When I stepped out of the room, Elena was standing by the counter pouring tea into two mugs. She looked up with that small, careful smile she reserved for me only when she knew I was pretending to be stronger than I felt.“You’re awake,” she said softly. “Morning.”“Morning.” My voice scraped slightly.
Edward's POV I stood there. Couldn't move for a second. Then a full beat passed and it felt heavier than it should. My eyes followed her. Alicia. The way she tilted slightly. Elena's hand on her elbow holding her steady. She didn't look at me. Not once. My fingers balled into fists. I felt the throb in my jaw, tight and insistent. The air pressed in until it sat like a weight in my chest. I took a step back. Then another. My heel scraped the edge of the rug. The sound cut through the room. I ground my teeth together. She's leaving. The thought sliced through me, unwelcome and raw. Alicia was drifting somewhere I couldn't follow. And I couldn't pull her back without breaking something I didn't know how to fix. I clenched my hands tighter. Part of me wanted to reach for her. Drag her into the room. Remind her who I was. I wanted to throw something. Make noise. Make her look at me. Instead, I forced myself to stay still. Took a breath. Slow. Careful. My muscles loosened just enou
Alicia's POVI didn't know how long I'd been lying there before the sound reached me.A door closing downstairs. Heavy. Final.Then footsteps. Not Elena's.My chest tightened before my brain caught up. I pushed myself upright. The room tilted. My body reminded me with every heartbeat what it had lost.I held still. Listened.Elena's voice cut through the apartment. Angry. Raw. Nothing like the soft way she'd spoken to me earlier."Get out."Air caught in my throat.Edward.I slid my feet to the floor. The cold wood stung. I moved toward the hallway, each step sending a low ache through me. The closer I got, the clearer Elena's fury became."You don't get to show up here," she said. "Not after what you did."I stopped halfway down the hall. My hand caught the wall, which took some of the strain off my legs.His voice came low, tight. "Elena, I need to see her."Elena laughed. It was the worst sound I'd ever heard from her. Empty. Bitter."See her? You couldn't see her when she was fall
Edward's POV The call ended.Not because I hung up. Because Elena didn't answer.The screen went black. No ring. No voicemail. Just nothing.I dropped the phone on the desk. It hit the wood and slid forward before settling. My hand stayed in the air for a second, fingers still shaped around the space where the phone had been.She should have answered. Even if only to tell me to go to hell.She didn't.Which meant Alicia was there.And Alicia had no phone. She'd smashed it yesterday.My jaw tightened. Heat gathered at the base of my skull, that familiar pressure that came before every decision I couldn't afford to get wrong.I waited. Let it settle. Edmund's voice from earlier crawled back up—clipped, annoyed, that edge underneath that said I'd lost control of something I was supposed to handle.I pushed it aside. That conversation was done. Damage managed. Next steps already mapped.But the pressure stayed—because the second the room went quiet, another sound rose up to replace it.L












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