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The first time Isabella Carter saw Dominic Blackwood, she knew her life was about to fracture.
He stood at the center of the grand hotel lobby like a force of nature, tall, broad shouldered, perfectly tailored in a black suit that screamed silent wealth. His presence bent the air around him. Conversations softened. Footsteps slowed. Even the chandeliers above seemed to bow in respect. Men like him didn’t walk. They commanded space. Isabella swallowed hard, clutching the thin brown envelope in her trembling fingers. Inside were medical bills she could no longer pay, eviction notices, and a single business card with one name stamped in silver ink: Dominic Blackwood. Billionaire, CEO, Power broker and Predator. The man who had summoned her. She had spent three nights debating whether to come. Three nights of fear, hope, and humiliation wrestling inside her chest. But when the hospital called that morning, when they told her her mother’s condition was worsening and demanded payment, the fight ended. Desperation won. “Miss Carter.” The voice was deep. Controlled. Sharp enough to slice through bone. Isabella turned and found him watching her. Not glancing. Not noticing. Studying. His eyes were dark, unreadable, and devastatingly intense. They roamed her face, her posture, her clothes, a simple cream blouse, faded jeans, worn flats with slow, unapologetic scrutiny. Like he was evaluating merchandise. Heat crawled up her neck. “Y-Yes,” she breathed. He didn’t smile. “Follow me.” He turned without waiting, long strides carrying him toward a private elevator guarded by two suited men. Isabella hurried after him, pulse racing, heart pounding against her ribs. The elevator doors closed, sealing them inside a silent glass box ascending toward the sky. Thirty seconds. That was all it took for the tension to become unbearable. She could feel his presence like a storm behind her. “You’re late,” he said. “I’m sorry. Traffic...” “Excuses bore me.” Her throat tightened. She stared straight ahead, refusing to meet his gaze. The elevator chimed. The doors opened to reveal a private penthouse office so vast it looked unreal. Floor to ceiling windows displayed the city like a glittering kingdom beneath their feet. This man didn’t rule companies. He ruled worlds. He gestured toward a leather chair. “Sit.” She obeyed instantly, hating herself for how easily the command slipped into her bones. He moved behind his massive desk, unbuttoning his jacket with slow precision before sitting. His movements were elegant. Dangerous. Calculated. “I assume you know why you’re here.” Isabella nodded. “Your assistant said you had a proposition.” “A deal,” he corrected. “One that will solve all your problems.” Hope flickered in her chest, fragile, trembling. “I’ll do anything,” she said quickly. “Work, clean, sign contracts” “I want to marry you.” The words struck like thunder. The room spun. “I... I’m sorry?” Dominic leaned back, fingers steepled, gaze unwavering. “A legal marriage. One year. No emotions. No expectations.” Her pulse roared in her ears. “Why me?” His eyes darkened. “Because you’re invisible,” he said. “No powerful family. No connections. No ambition for fame. You are… disposable.” The word sliced deep. “And,” he continued, “because desperation makes people obedient.” Shame burned through her veins. “You need money,” he said calmly. “Your mother is dying. You’re drowning in debt. You’re two weeks from eviction.” Her chest constricted. “How do you...” “I know everything.” Fear slithered down her spine. “I need a wife to secure my inheritance and silence certain enemies,” he said. “You need survival. We trade.” Isabella stood abruptly. “No. I can’t... I won’t sell myself like this.” Silence. Then he stood. And suddenly, the space between them disappeared. Dominic stopped inches from her. His height swallowed her. His scent, clean, dark, masculine clouded her thoughts. “You already have,” he murmured. “The moment you walked in.” Her breath caught. “You think this is about romance?” he continued quietly. “It isn’t. It’s about power. Control. Protection.” His fingers lifted her chin, forcing her to look at him. “I will give you everything,” he said. “Money. Safety. Influence. Medical care beyond anything you can afford.” Her eyes burned. “And in return?” “You will belong to me,” he said. Not as a threat. As a promise. Her heart slammed violently. “Legally. Publicly. Completely.” Something dark flickered behind his eyes obsession, possession, hunger. “Think carefully,” he whispered. “Because once you say yes, there is no escape.” Tears gathered in her lashes. Her mother’s frail face filled her mind. The hospital machines. The debt collectors. The eviction notice. “I don’t have a choice,” she whispered. Dominic’s lips curved not into a smile, but into something far more dangerous. “No,” he agreed. “You don’t.” He stepped away, retrieving a sleek black folder from his desk and sliding it toward her. “Sign,” he said. “And your old life ends today.” Her hands shook as she opened the contract. Page after page of legal terms blurred before her eyes. One clause froze her breath. Cohabitation. No separation. Full discretion. Obedience to public and private expectations. She swallowed. “This isn’t just marriage,” she whispered. “No,” Dominic said softly. “It’s surrender.” Her pen hovered. One signature would save her mother. One signature would bind her to a man who radiated danger and dominance. One signature would end her freedom forever. Her chest tightened painfully. And still She signed. The pen barely left the paper before his hand closed over hers. Warm. Firm. Possessive. “Good,” he said. “Now you’re mine.” Her breath hitched. He released her, already turning toward the windows. “Our engagement announcement goes public in three hours,” he said. “Your things will be moved to my estate tonight.” Her heart skipped violently. “Tonight?” “Yes.” She stared at his back. “I don’t even know you.” Slowly, Dominic turned. His gaze pinned her in place. “You will,” he said. “Every dark part of me.” A knock sounded at the door. “Sir,” his assistant said nervously. “There’s been a security breach at the west estate.” Dominic’s expression hardened instantly. “How many injured?” “Two guards. One missing.” Silence fell. His jaw tightened. Then he looked at Isabella and something cold and lethal sparked in his eyes. “Welcome to my world,” he said quietly. “It’s time you learned why no woman before you has ever survived being mine.” Her blood turned to ice. And in that moment, Isabella realized... she hadn’t just signed a marriage contract. She had signed her life away...Isabella didn’t move.Her reflection in the dark hospital window stared back at her, pale, trembling, eyes wide with fear.But the shadow behind her reflection did not move like a reflection should.It moved independently.Slowly.Deliberately.Her heart pounded so loudly she thought it might shatter her ribs.The phone vibrated again in her hand.Turn around.Her breath came shallow.Every instinct screamed at her to run.But her feet felt frozen to the floor.The shadow stepped closer in the glass.Closer.Closer.Finally, she turned.A man leaned casually against the wall beside the door.He had entered silently.Tall.Elegant.Perfectly composed.His dark suit looked expensive, tailored with effortless precision. His hair was slicked back, his face calm, almost amused.He looked like someone who belonged in a boardroom.Not a nightmare.Isabella stumbled back.“How did you get in here?”The man smiled faintly.“Security is a fascinating illusion,” he said smoothly.His voice was c
The alarms wouldn’t stop.Red lights washed over the hospital room, staining everything in warning.Internal override activated.The words echoed like a verdict.Isabella couldn’t breathe.“I didn’t do anything,” she whispered, but her voice sounded distant, small even to her own ears.Gabriel had already stepped toward the door, speaking sharply into his earpiece.“Trace the signal. Lock all sectors. No one leaves this floor.”Dominic never looked away from her.That was worse than if he had shouted.His gaze was unreadable.Calculating.Cold.“You believe me,” she said, the words trembling as they left her.It wasn’t a question.It was a plea.Dominic’s jaw tightened slightly.“I believe,” he said slowly, “that systems don’t lie.”Her stomach dropped.“And I believe you’re not a traitor.”A fragile thread of air slipped back into her lungs.“But,” he continued quietly, “someone is using you.”The room felt smaller.“I don’t understand,” she said. “How could they use me? I’ve never h
There is a specific kind of silence that follows gunfire.Not peace.Not relief.Just shock.Isabella couldn’t hear the sirens anymore.She couldn’t hear the shouting guards.She couldn’t hear her own sobbing.All she could hear was Dominic’s breathing.Shallow. Unsteady. Wrong.Her hands pressed against his wound, trying desperately to stop the blood. It soaked through her fingers anyway, warm, sticky, terrifyingly real.“Stay with me,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “You don’t get to leave. You don’t get to decide that.”His head lolled slightly, but his eyes found hers.Even now, they were intense.Focused.Possessive.“You’re crying,” he murmured faintly.“Of course I’m crying!” she choked. “You’re bleeding.”A faint ghost of a smirk touched his lips.“Good,” he whispered. “That means you care.”Her heart cracked open.“Don’t joke,” she sobbed. “Please don’t joke.”Footsteps thundered into the room.Medics. Guards.Orders were shouted.Hands pulled her away from him.“No!” sh
Isabella did not sleep again.Every time she closed her eyes, she felt hands dragging her backward into darkness.Every shadow looked like death.Every sound felt like a threat.She sat curled on the bed, knees drawn to her chest, staring at the locked doors while armed guards patrolled just outside. The mansion no longer felt like a palace.It felt like a fortress.A prison.Dominic stood by the window, speaking quietly into his phone. His voice was cold. Deadly.“I want his network burned to the ground,” he said. “Every ally. Every supplier. Every hidden account.”A pause.“No survivors.”He ended the call and turned slowly.His gaze softened when it found her, but the darkness in his eyes remained.“Come here,” he said gently.She hesitated.Then moved.He opened his arms, and she stepped into them.The moment she did, something inside her broke.She clutched his shirt, shaking as silent sobs tore through her chest.“I’m scared,” she whispered.His arms closed around her instantly.
Beeping.That was the first thing Isabella heard.Slow. Rhythmic. Endless.Her eyelids felt heavy, glued shut. Her body ached in places she couldn’t name. Every breath burned like her lungs were learning to exist again.Voices echoed faintly.“...critical but stable.”"...poisoned dart, sir. Rare compound.”“...lucky she survived.”Survived.The word floated through the fog of her mind.Pain followed.A dull, spreading ache in her chest, her neck, her veins.Isabella groaned softly.Instantly, movement.Warm hands closed around hers.“Isabella.”The voice was deep, hoarse, raw.Her eyes fluttered open.White light flooded her vision. Machines surrounded her. Tubes snaked into her arms. Monitors blinked and hummed beside the bed.And standing over her is Dominic.His hair was disheveled. His jaw unshaven. Dark shadows carved beneath his eyes. His suit jacket was gone, his white shirt wrinkled and faintly stained with blood.Her blood.“You’re awake,” he breathed.Something in his expr
Sleep never came.No matter how tightly Isabella shut her eyes, the image of that phone screen haunted her.She is next.The words carved themselves into her mind like a threat carved into stone.She lay stiffly in Dominic’s massive bed, staring at the ceiling while the mansion breathed quietly around her. Security patrolled the halls. Guards stood outside the door. Cameras watched every corner.Still, she felt exposed.Unprotected.Beside her, Dominic lay awake.She could feel his presence like heat through the dark. Silent. Unmoving. Alert.Neither of them spoke.There was an unspoken understanding between them, this was no longer a game. No longer a contract. Danger had crossed the threshold.“You don’t have to be afraid,” Dominic said eventually, his voice low.She laughed softly, bitterly. “That’s easy for you to say.”Silence again.“They won’t touch you,” he said. “Not while you’re mine.”The word sent a shiver through her.“Who are they?” she whispered.His jaw tightened. “Gho







