LOGINI clutched my threadbare purse strap, my throat dry. I had spent an agonizing hour trying to decide if I should wear the dress I reserved for job interviews or the sweater that hid the exhaustion clinging to my bones.
The hostess, all angular features and designer restraint, glanced at the address I showed her on my phone. “Mr. Conti is waiting. Follow me.”
My heart, which I had tried to wrap in steel wire all day, began to hammer against my ribs.
Alessandro.
Despite the message, the cold, mercenary tone, a tiny, absurd part of me still whispered a childish fantasy: He just wants to apologize. He heard about Leo, and he’s going to help out, friend to friend.
I was desperate for the kind boy who loved climbing trees, not the cold mogul on TV.
She led me past velvet ropes and hushed, wealthy conversations to a secluded booth nestled in a corner. And there he was.
Alessandro Conti. He stood when I approached, a gesture of politeness. He was taller than I remembered, broader, and the expensive tailoring of his charcoal suit only emphasized the dangerous angles of his shoulders.
His hair, slicked back, caught the dim light, and his face, those sharp, commanding features, was utterly impassive. The storm-cloud eyes settled on mine, devoid of warmth.
“Elara Vance,” he stated, his voice low
It wasn’t a greeting. It was an affirmation of inventory. “Thank you for coming.” I stopped respectfully two feet away, the distance feeling vast.
I could feel the cold emanating from him, a protective shield years in the making.
“Alessandro,” I managed, my voice sounding shaky and thin in comparison.
“It’s been… a very long time.”
He didn't acknowledge the sentiment. He just gestured to the plush leather seat across the marble table.
“Please. Sit.”I sat down, feeling the heavy silence stretch. My hands rested in my lap, suddenly sweaty. I noticed a simple, heavy manila envelope lying on the table beside a crystal tumbler of whiskey. It looked like a business file.
“I won’t waste your time, Elara,” he began, leaning back, crossing one leg over the other with unnerving composure. “I’m a man of efficiency. I assume the message conveyed the urgency and the necessity of this meeting?” My fleeting hope instantly shriveled and died.
“The message conveyed that you wanted to see me,” I said, the bitterness bubbling over slightly.
“What it didn't convey was why the most successful man in Seattle needs a bankrupt barista from Ballard.”
A faint, almost imperceptible twitch played at the corner of his mouth. It wasn’t a smile, but a momentary acknowledgment of my defiance.
“Direct. I appreciate that. It’s simple, Elara. This isn’t a social call. This is a transaction.” He slid the manila envelope across the polished marble. It stopped directly in front of me. I didn't touch it.
“Open it,” he instructed.
My fingers trembled as I pulled out the dense stack of papers. The title page, in bold, legal black font, stared up at me: MARRIAGE OF CONVENIENCE CONTRACT. My breath hitched.
The blood drained from my face, leaving my ears ringing. “What… what is this?” I whispered, staring at the words as if they were written in a foreign language.
“Exactly what it says,” Alessandro replied, picking up his glass. The ice clinked, loud and insulting in the silence. “A contract. A solution for both of us.”
“A solution? You think I’m going to enter into a fake marriage so you can, what? Satisfy some twisted billionaire ego?” I shoved the papers away from me, the anger a welcome rush of heat to combat the icy shock.
He remained utterly calm. “Let me explain the terms before you make assumptions you can’t afford.” I sat rigid, refusing to give him the satisfaction of leaning in.
“My grandfather, Arthur Conti, is a sentimental man. He founded this empire and, in his old age, decided to inject some… romantic caveats into my inheritance. To gain total control and access to the full, unfettered Conti fortune, I must be legally married for one calendar year. And, crucially, it must be a ‘marriage of genuine affection and history’ in his eyes.” He paused, his eyes narrowing slightly.
“You and I, Elara, share a history. We were childhood friends. You fit the narrative he needs to believe. You are the perfect, unassuming, ‘humble’ choice that makes the story believable.”
Humble. I bit my tongue so hard I tasted blood. “And what do I get in this transaction?” I asked, my voice dangerously low.
“I was getting to that,” he said, his tone suggesting I was interrupting a vital quarterly review. “You will receive a lump sum of ten million dollars ($10,000,000 USD) upon the signing of the agreement, transferable immediately. That is enough to pay off your father’s debt and secure Leo the absolute best care available, anywhere in the world, with a significant trust fund left over.”
Ten million. The number detonated in my mind, sending shockwaves through every fiber of my being. It wasn’t just money; it was Leo’s future, Leo’s life. It was a golden ticket out of the suffocating darkness.
“The conditions,” he continued, oblivious to the war waging inside my head, “are simple. One, no cheating. You will maintain the appearance of a loving wife. We will share the Conti Manor residence, but we will maintain separate quarters. Two, no pregnancy. This is strictly a business arrangement. Any deviation will immediately void the contract and forfeit the remaining payment.” He took a slow sip of his whiskey, his eyes holding mine over the rim of the glass.
“You play your part for one year. You save your brother. I secure my future. A clean, mutually beneficial exchange.”
My hands were shaking uncontrollably now, not just from the shock, but from the horrifying temptation of the number. Ten million. I could give Leo his life back. “And what about the part of the contract that says ‘marriage of genuine affection’?” I challenged him.
“How do we fake that? I remember the boy who promised me the world, Alessandro. That boy is dead. And I genuinely despise the ruthless, ice-cold man who replaced him.”
This time, he didn't twitch. He set the glass down with a decisive thud and leaned across the table, his composure finally starting to look like an effort. He wasn't yelling, but the quiet intensity of his gaze felt like physical pressure.
“Then you are luckier than you realize, Elara. Because that disgust is exactly what makes you the perfect candidate.” The cruelty of the words landed like a physical blow. I gasped, leaning back sharply.
“You came here thinking I wanted to reminisce, didn’t you?” he continued, his voice softer now, which only made it more lacerating.
“You thought I might have some lingering affection for the past. Let me be clear: I am doing this for my grandfather’s legal requirements. You are a convenience. An easily purchasable asset who comes with a perfectly tragic backstory, ready-made for his sympathy.” He paused, letting the insult settle.
“Look around you, Elara. Look at your life. Look at the calls you’ve been ignoring from the debt collectors. Look at your brother, whose survival hangs on the thread of your next paycheck. You are at your lowest point. You are desperate. And I am offering you an instant end to that desperation.” His cold eyes flashed to the envelope.
“You should be thanking me. I am giving you a dignified way out, a chance to be the hero to your brother, without having to work three exhausting, degrading jobs. Do not insult me by pretending you have the moral high ground or the luxury to refuse.”
I didn't think. I reacted. My hand shot across the marble table, propelled by two years of crushing grief, debt, and betrayal, and connected sharply with his jaw. SMACK!
The sound echoed through the hushed lounge. A few heads turned, but instantly averted their gaze, recognizing the potential cost of interference. Alessandro didn't flinch. He slowly raised a hand, touching the rapidly reddening mark on his skin, his eyes now blazing with a raw, dangerous fury I hadn’t seen before.
“You insolent—”
“Insolent?” I cut him off, surging to my feet, my chest heaving. Tears were already stinging my eyes, not of sadness, but of pure, white-hot rage.
“I am insolent? You used to be the only person who cared if I cried! Now you call me an asset and leverage my ten-year-old dying brother to force me into a contract! You are not a man, Alessandro! You are a piece of calculated garbage. I would rather live on the streets and see Leo fight this thing without your blood money than owe one single transactional moment to the monster you’ve become!”
I snatched up my purse. He was speechless, his perfect composure finally broken, his eyes hard and cold.
“Keep your contract. You’re right. I’m desperate. But even in desperation, I still have a soul you can’t buy, and a memory of the boy you executed to become this heartless machine!”
I turned and stumbled away, past the astonished hostess, through the velvet ropes, and burst out onto the chilly Seattle street. I didn't hail a cab or check my phone. I simply ran until I reached the familiar, battered sedan I called my own.
I fumbled for the key, the tears now streaming, hot and furious, blurring the city lights. I collapsed into the driver’s seat, slamming the door and burying my face in my hands, letting the heartbroken sobs wrack my body.
I lost him twice. The first time was the boy I loved. The second time was the memory of him, which the man in the suit had just viciously murdered. But the money... Leo... The numbers flashed behind my eyelids, mocking my righteous exit.
I didn’t start the car. I couldn't move. I was paralyzed by the devastating knowledge that I had walked away from the only thing that could save my brother. What good was my pride if Leo was gone?
Just then, my old phone screamed the abrasive ringtone I had assigned to the hospital. I stared at the screen, heart slamming against the cage of my ribs. Seattle City Hospital.
I snatched it up, my voice hoarse with choked sobs. “H-hello? This is Elara Vance.”
“Ms. Vance, you need to return to the hospital immediately,” a tight, controlled voice, Dr. Reed’s nurse said on the other end. “It’s Leo. He was rushed in a few minutes ago, we had a sudden, severe complication. His vitals are crashing. You need to rush, Elara, he’s barely hanging on.”
The world dissolved into a blinding white panic. The contract, the pride, the slap, Alessandro’s cruel face, all of it vaporized. Only Leo remained.
I threw the car into gear, the tires squealing in protest as I pulled into traffic, one thought screaming in my head: I’m too late. I should have taken the money.
The atmosphere in the East Wing felt oppressive, heavy with the phantom weight of Alessandro’s presence, even though he was barricaded in his West Penthouse office. His corporate email, delivered by Ms. Thorne, had successfully reduced the scorching intimacy of the kiss to a "lapsed professional discipline." His retreat was absolute, and I was left staring at the wreckage of my own self-control.He had to destroy it. He had to reduce the passion to policy because the alternative, the truth of that hunger, threatened the fortress he built. And I am terrified because his denial doesn't make the feeling any less real. I don't hate him anymore. I love the cold, terrifying strength of him, the way he fights himself. That is the true danger.I lay in the massive, silken bed, the vastness of the room echoing the emptiness in my chest. Sleep was a slippery thing, punctuated by flashes of the Gala, the chilling tone of his phone call, and the paralyzing fear that I had risked everything, Leo's
The air in the Manor, thick with the unaddressed tension of the kiss and Alessandro's panicked retreat, was fertile ground for manipulation. While Alessandro was burying himself in his West Penthouse office, denying the very existence of sentiment, Victoria was observing the fault lines he’d created. She had seen the raw, unplanned fury of his defense during the family dinner, and she had certainly heard the gossip about the "spontaneous" Gala kiss.Her target wasn't me; it was Lucas.Two days after Alessandro's cold phone call, Lucas hosted a small, self-pitying lunch in his private apartment, complete with several open bottles of expensive, unappreciated wine. I had been dragged into attendance, ostensibly to discuss his latest programming project, but mostly to listen to his woes about his cousin's crushing success.Victoria arrived precisely at the moment Lucas was venting about the unfairness of the Conti name. She was dressed impeccably, a picture of sympathetic concern."Oh, Lu
Alessandro returned from Singapore late Thursday evening, not with the fanfare of the Gulfstream, but quietly, having routed his travel through a smaller, private terminal. The suddenness of his appearance was matched only by the immediate, suffocating chill he brought back with him. He was a man drowning in his own forced composure. The memory of the kiss, now officially categorized by his legal counsel as a "strategic maneuver," was a raw wound he was desperately trying to suture with work and ice.The contract is the truth. The ten million is the truth. The kiss was a temporary, biological flaw in the structure. I purged the vulnerability, I disciplined the asset, and now I reinforce the walls. I cannot allow the confusion of her eyes, or the softness of her touch, to dismantle seven years of careful, calculated control. The threat is not Lucas; the threat is the light she brings.He had barely stepped into his private office when the familiar chime of the internal Manor phone requ
The morning after the Founders’ Day Gala was silent—a thick, unnerving silence that seemed to have swallowed the entire North Wing. I woke up with the ghosts of Alessandro's lips on mine, the silver dress tossed onto the chaise lounge, and the sickening knowledge that I had completely lost control of the one thing I was supposed to guard: my heart.It was a kiss. A purely physical, passionate, uncontrolled breach of contract. It meant nothing. He was stressed. He was performing. He was trying to prove a point to Victoria. It was a chemical reaction, not a confession. If I believe anything else, I lose everything—the ten million, Leo's future, and whatever fragile emotional autonomy I have left.But the lie was paper-thin. When he had pulled me close, there was no camera in his eyes, only fire.I spent the morning pacing the perimeter of my wing. Leo was happily absorbed in the observatory with his new spectral analysis charts, making my need to process this alone even more acute. I ne
The Contis were hosting the annual Founders’ Day Gala, a mandatory, glittering display of corporate success and familial cohesion, designed purely for the cameras and the shareholders. Following the intimacy of the scar and the fraught conversation in the East Wing, the thought of playing the adoring wife under the full glare of the media was almost paralyzing.I felt like an actress being pushed onto a stage without a script. The rules of our relationship changed nightly, shifting from cold disdain to shared vulnerability, only to be snapped back into transactional reality by the threat of the contract.The man who held my throat last night, whispering about finding comfort in the "uncontrollable variable," is the same man who is about to use me as a prop for his stock price. I hate the lie, but I hate the confusing, genuine thrill of being near him even more. He's making me crave the performance because, in public, he allows himself to touch me.I stood in the massive, mirrored foye
The Manor had developed a new, bewildering atmosphere since the San Juan trip and the shocking intimacy of the scar. Alessandro had maintained his professional distance during the flight, but upon returning, his routine had fractured. He hadn't retreated entirely to the West Penthouse. Instead, the East Wing, my territory, and Leo's, had become a strangely magnetic hub for his presence.He started small. A fleeting presence in the North Wing when Leo was having his post-dinner cocoa, offering a concise summary of the day’s astronomical news from the Astrophysical Journal. Then, a casual request for my input on a new design feature for the Manor's security gate, pure business, but conducted while leaning against the frame of my living area.Tonight, the blurring was complete.It was nearly midnight. Leo was fast asleep, the scent of the sea and salt still faint on his pillow. I was curled on the window seat in my living room, nursing a cup of herbal tea and trying to process the emotio







