MasukThe phone connected with a single, sharp click. It felt less like a dial tone and more like the snapping shut of a trap.
“Conti,” the voice answered, a deep, low command, stripped of any typical greeting. He hadn't even let it ring twice. He was waiting.
My breath hitched, and I swallowed the lump in my throat, which felt like a piece of dry marble. I was still shaking slightly from Dr. Reed’s ultimatum and the searing image of Leo struggling against the ventilator.
“It’s Elara Vance,” I stated, injecting a forced coolness into my voice. I would not beg. “I’m calling about your… proposal.” There was a beat of silence on the line, heavy and expectant.
“I assume you’ve reviewed your options, Ms. Vance,” he finally responded, his tone utterly devoid of triumph. He spoke as if I were a late delivery he had finally tracked down. Ms. Vance.
He refused to use my first name unless he was insulting me.
“But I want one thing made crystal clear: the entire sum, ten million, is transferred to an escrow account accessible to Dr. Reed’s office for Leo’s treatment before I sign anything.”
“Of course,” he agreed instantly. “The contract specifies immediate transfer upon signature and notarization. I’ve already contacted my legal team. They’ll be waiting.”
“Where?” I asked, rubbing my temples. The headache was back, a jackhammer behind my eyes. “Conti Tower, sixty-second floor, Legal Annex. Now. I’ll send the car for you in thirty minutes. Do not be late, Ms. Vance.” He didn't wait for my agreement. The line went dead.
I stared at the screen for a full minute. Thirty minutes. He didn't offer a polite suggestion. He issued a deadline. The man was a creature of calculated efficiency, and I was just another line item on his calendar. The thirty minutes felt like five.
The black Mercedes S-Class that collected me at the hospital entrance was immaculate, the leather smelling expensive and new. When the silent driver deposited me on the sixty-second floor of Conti Tower, I stepped out.
The view of Seattle sprawling below was mesmerizing. Alessandro was waiting in a large conference room, not his primary office. He was flanked by two impeccably dressed lawyers.
His jaw still showed a faint, stubborn bruise where my hand had landed. The sight of it gave me a fleeting, bitter satisfaction. “You’re on time,” he noted, his gaze sweeping over my worn sweater and jeans.
His expression suggested he was comparing me to a flaw.
“We are here to execute a binding legal agreement.”
“You’re trading your inheritance for a disposable prop. I’m trading my life for my brother’s. Let’s stick to the terms.” I picked up the revised contract.
I spent the next twenty minutes reading every clause, every line, ignoring the lawyers who shifted impatiently and Alessandro, who simply watched me, his chin resting on his hand.
The silence was thick, broken only by the rustle of paper. One year. No cheating. No pregnancy. Absolute confidentiality. Public display of affection is required at all official functions. "Clause 7.B," I said, looking up.
"The 'Public Display' requirement. Define 'affection’. Does this mean I have to endure your touch?" Alessandro leaned forward, his elbows resting on the table. For the first time, his cold gaze seemed to sharpen, acknowledging me not as an asset but as a potential challenge.
“It means whatever the social situation demands. Holding hands. A kiss on the cheek. Perhaps, on occasion, a kiss that convinces my grandfather, or the press, that we are a genuinely devoted couple,” he explained, his voice dropping slightly.
My stomach fluttered, an unwelcome, traitorous response. He was physically magnificent, I couldn't deny it. But the thought of his perfect, cold mouth on mine sent a shiver of dread mixed with something else.
“You won’t enjoy it any more than I will,” I said dismissively, trying to suppress the flicker of unexpected tension. “But I will play my part. I am a convincing actress when the stage is high enough.”Alessandro’s eyes didn't leave mine.
"Good. Then we understand each other. I expect absolute professionalism. If you fail to convince my grandfather, the contract is voided, and you forfeit access to the fund.”
“The fund is ready?” The notary slid a tablet toward me, showing a bank transfer confirmation.
“The initial transfer to the specified medical account has been processed, Ms. Vance. The funds are legally designated and accessible for Leo Vance’s care.” I didn't bother to check the amount. The fact that Dr. Reed could now access the funds was all I needed to know.
My relief was a tidal wave, momentarily washing away all the shame. I picked up the expensive silver pen, but before I signed, I looked at Alessandro one last time.
“Sign the papers, Elara.” I scrawled my name. Sold.
As the papers were collected, Alessandro stood. He reached across the table, a surprisingly slow, deliberate movement, and placed a heavy, golden envelope containing a credit card onto the contract where my signature had just dried.
“This is your operational account. Unlimited funds, only to be used for the duration of the year. This is your allowance. Buy what you need. You will be moving into the Conti Manor tomorrow. You need clothes, jewelry, and a public image. Start shopping immediately.”
He didn't thank me. He didn't apologize. He simply gave me my marching orders and my payment.
“Get your belongings from your house, and say your farewells. The performance begins now.” He walked out, leaving me in the suffocating space.
I walked out of there immediately, heading to the car stationed outside, I needed to see Leo.
After minutes of staring out and watching the city pass in a blur, the car stopped at the hospital. I dashed out, heading towards Leo's room. I walked to the bed, watching as Leo's eyes fluttered open.
The mask was gone, replaced by a nasal cannula, and his color was better.
“Ellie?” he whispered, his voice thin but recognizable.
“I’m here, sweetie,” I said, kissing his hand gently. “I fixed it. Everything is fixed. You are getting the best medicine in the world, starting tomorrow. You are going to fight this thing, and you are going to win.” His eyes, bright and curious, fixed on mine.
“How, Elara? The big price tag.” I took a deep breath. This was the hardest part. The lie.
“I found a way, Leo. A very old, very generous family friend wants to help us. They offered us a place to stay while you recover, a huge house, so you can be comfortable while you’re getting well. We’re moving to a much better home tomorrow. You’re going to have the best view of the stars from your window, I promise.”
Leo’s small face broke into a fragile smile. “A big house? Like the ones on TV?”
“Even bigger,” I promised. “It’s a fresh start, Leo. A new chapter.” He closed his eyes, his breathing evening out.
“A new chapter… with a telescope?”
“With the biggest telescope you can imagine, Leo-bug,” I choked out, fighting back new, happy tears. “Now sleep. Your body needs rest. I’ll come back tomorrow morning to move you to your new room, and then we’ll pack up the old house.”
I kissed him one last time, my mission solidified. I had sold myself to the devil, but I had saved my angel.
It was late when I finally got back to my own small house. I stripped off the clothes I hated and stood in the shower, trying to wash off the scent of Conti Tower and the icy touch of Alessandro’s gaze.
My phone buzzed on the counter. I dried my hands and glanced at the screen. It was an unfamiliar number.
Unknown Number (Alessandro): Be ready at 9 AM tomorrow. I am sending a driver with a selection of clothing and a makeup artist to prepare you for the first meeting with my grandfather. This is not optional. You must look the part. And Elara, leave your battered luggage behind. My team will take care of your old belongings later. You are now Mrs. Alessandro Conti, even if only on paper. Act like it.
I dropped the phone onto the plush bathmat. Mrs. Alessandro Conti. The title felt strange. The thought made my stomach clench.
This is going to be an Oscar-worthy performance, and if I failed, Leo paid the price.
I ran a hand through my wet hair. Tomorrow, the performance begins.
And I had no idea how to explain any of it to a ten-year-old boy who saw the stars, but not the contracts.
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







