เข้าสู่ระบบ~ Amara ~
The black sedan arrived at exactly ten o'clock. It didn’t honk. It didn’t idle loudly. It just sat there at the curb of Linden Row, a sleek, dark gap in the scenery of our neighborhood. I stood by the front window, my suitcase handle gripped so hard the plastic dug into my palm. My father was behind me, his hand resting on my shoulder. His touch felt heavy—not with comfort, but with the weight of the debt I was about to carry away for him. "It’s time," he said. I didn't turn around. I knew if I looked at him, I’d see that mixture of guilt and relief again. I didn't want to see the relief. "Where’s Noah?" "He’s in the backyard," my father whispered. "He couldn't watch the car pull away." I nodded. That was fair. Noah was the only one who had called this what it was: a sale. I walked out the front door without saying goodbye. The air was cool, smelling of damp pavement and the neighbor’s overgrown lawn. The driver was already out, holding the back door open. He didn't offer a greeting. He didn't even look at my face. He just took my bruised, black suitcase and tucked it into a trunk that probably cost more than our house. I slid into the backseat. The leather was cold and smelled like nothing. No coffee, no old paper, no dust. Just expensive, sterile air. As we pulled away, I looked back once. My father was standing on the porch, looking smaller than ever. Noah was nowhere to be seen. The drive to Helix Tower took forty minutes. We left the cracked sidewalks of Linden Row behind and entered the glass-and-steel heart of Ravenport City. The tower was the tallest building in the skyline, a shimmering needle of corporate power. The driver led me through a private entrance and up a dedicated elevator. When the doors opened, I was in a lobby that felt more like an art gallery. A woman in a sharp gray suit met me. "Miss Kline? I’m Mr. Moore’s assistant. Follow me." She didn't wait for a response. We walked down a long hallway with thick carpets that swallowed the sound of my sensible shoes. She stopped at a set of double oak doors and pushed them open. Gideon Moore was sitting behind a desk that looked like a slab of dark marble. He didn't stand up. He didn't smile. He was exactly as he appeared in the business journals: flint-dark eyes, a sharp jawline, and a presence that made the room feel pressurized. He was looking at a tablet, his fingers scrolling through data. "Sit," he said. He didn't look up. I sat in the chair across from him. It was ergonomic and uncomfortable. I folded my hands in my lap and waited. Silence was my specialty, and I used it now. I watched him. He appears to be in his thirties, but he carried himself like a man who had already seen everything and found most of it unimpressive. After a full minute, he set the tablet down and finally looked at me. His gaze was clinical. He wasn't looking at a woman; he was inspecting an asset. He looked at my hair, my plain blouse, and my eyes. He didn't linger on any of it. "You’ve read the contract?" he asked. His voice was a low, controlled baritone. "I have," I said. My voice was steady, which surprised me. "Then you understand the expectations. Discretion. Stability. You will live at Moore Crest. You will attend the events my office schedules. You will not discuss the nature of this arrangement with anyone, including your family." "I understand." He slid a single sheet of paper across the marble. It was the signature page. Beside it sat a heavy fountain pen. "Sign here. The wire transfer to your father’s creditors will be initiated the moment the ink is dry." I picked up the pen. It was heavy. I thought about page nine—the clause about family assets and management transfers. I wanted to ask about it. I wanted to ask if my father really knew what he was giving up in the fine print. But Gideon was already looking at his watch. I was there to be quiet. I was there because I didn't make trouble. I signed my name. Gideon took the paper back, glanced at the signature, and nodded. "The ceremony is tomorrow at eight. It will be private. My driver will take you to the estate now. A stylist will meet you there to prepare you for tomorrow." "Am I not going home tonight?" I asked. "You are a Moore now, Amara," he said, and for the first time, he used my name. It didn't sound like an endearment. It sounded like a label on a file. "There is no reason for you to return to Linden Row." He picked up his tablet again. The meeting was over. Moore Crest Estate was a fortress of limestone and iron gates. It sat on a hill overlooking the city, surrounded by perfectly manicured gardens that looked like they had never been played in. The head housekeeper, a woman, she introduced herself as Maribel Cross, she met me at the door. She seems to be in her forties, with a face that looked like it had been carved out of wood. She didn't offer a hand. She just looked at my suitcase with a thin, tight lip. "This way, Mrs. Moore," she said. The title felt like a lie. I followed her through the foyer, past oil paintings of grim-faced ancestors and under chandeliers that cast jagged shadows. The house was cold. Not just the temperature, but the atmosphere. It felt like a museum where the guests had all gone home. "Mr. Moore has his own wing," Maribel explained as we climbed a grand staircase. "You will be in the east wing. Your meals will be served at seven, one, and seven. If you require anything, you are to use the intercom. Do not wander into the west wing without an invitation." She led me to a suite of rooms that was larger than the entire ground floor of my father's house. Everything was white, cream, and silver. It was beautiful, but it felt like a hospital suite. My suitcase looked pathetic sitting on the silk rug. "The stylist will be here at four," Maribel said. She paused at the door, her eyes sweeping over me one last time. "Try to look rested. The Moore family has an image to maintain." She closed the door, and I was alone. I walked to the window. From here, I couldn't see Linden Row. I couldn't see the warehouse. I could only see the sprawling grounds of the estate and the high stone walls that kept the rest of the world out. I felt a sudden, sharp pang of panic. I had traded my life for my father’s ledgers. I had walked into a cage, and I had been the one to lock the door. THE NEXT DAY (WEDDING DAY). The wedding morning was gray. I sat in a chair for three hours while a team of people I didn't know worked on me. They poked at my skin, pulled at my hair, and painted my face. They didn't talk to me. They talked about me, discussing my "undertones" and my "unfortunate" lack of volume in my hair. I stayed silent. I let them do it. The dress was a column of heavy silk. It was beautiful, expensive, and felt like armor. The ceremony took place in the estate’s private chapel. It wasn't a wedding; it was a closing. There were no flowers, no music, and no guests. Just a judge, Gideon, and me. Gideon was already standing at the altar when I walked in. He wore a black suit that fit him perfectly. He looked like he was waiting for a board meeting to start. He didn't look at me as I walked down the short aisle. He kept his gaze fixed on the judge. I stood beside him. I could smell his cologne—sandalwood and cold rain. The judge began to speak. The words were the standard ones: honor, cherish, through better or worse. They sounded hollow in the empty stone chapel. Every time the judge asked a question, Gideon answered with a crisp, "I do." He didn't fumble. He didn't hesitate. He was a man performing a task. When it was my turn, my throat felt like it was full of sand. I thought about Noah. I thought about the "safety" of silence I had practiced my whole life. "I do," I whispered. "The rings," the judge said. Gideon produced a band of platinum. He took my hand. His fingers were warm, but his grip was firm and impersonal. He slid the ring onto my finger. It was heavy. It felt like a shackle. I placed a matching band on his finger. He didn't flinch. "I now pronounce you husband and wife," the judge said. "You may kiss the bride." I braced myself. I expected something—a touch, a look, a moment of acknowledgement that we were now bound together for three years. Gideon leaned in. He didn't touch my waist. He didn't take my hand. He leaned just far enough to press his lips briefly against my cheek. His skin was dry. He pulled away before I could even take a breath. He didn't look me in the eye once. "The car is waiting for the judge," Gideon said, turning to the man in the robes. "My assistant has the paperwork." Then he turned and walked out of the chapel. He didn't wait for me. He didn't offer his arm. He just left me standing at the altar in a silk dress that cost more than my father’s fleet. I stood there in the silence of the chapel. I looked down at the platinum ring on my finger. I had promised to be his wife. He had promised nothing at all. I walked out of the chapel alone, the heavy silk of my dress hissing against the stone floor. The three years had officially begun. I knew how to be quiet. I knew how to take up no space. But as I watched Gideon’s back disappear down the hallway, I realized that in this house, silence wasn't going to be my safety. It was going to be my sentence.~ Gideon ~ The house was too quiet when I returned to Moore Crest. Usually, I preferred the silence; it was a sign of a well-oiled machine, a household that didn't demand anything from me. But tonight, the stillness felt heavy, like the air before a storm that refuses to break. I walked through the foyer, the click of my shoes on the marble sounding sharper than usual. I didn't see Maribel, which was fine. I wasn't in the mood for her sandpaper voice or the way she always looked for a reason to gossip about the staff. I headed straight for the stairs, my mind still running through the quarterly projections I’d left on my desk at Helix Tower. As I passed the library, a sliver of light caught my eye. I stopped. The door was slightly ajar. I pushed it open just enough to see inside. Amara was there. She was sitting in the same oversized leather chair she always occupied, her small frame swallowed by the dark wood. She wasn't reading. She wasn't painting on that canvas she tried so ha
~ Amara ~ The invitation had arrived on cream-colored cardstock, embossed with a silver crest that felt sharp under my thumb. Selene was hosting a tea at Moore Crest. She called it a "welcome to the circle" event, but the air in the garden felt more like a courtroom. I stood before the full-length mirror in my dressing room, smoothing the fabric of a pale lavender dress. It was one of the "options" Selene had sent over—thin silk that clung to every curve I usually tried to hide. I felt exposed. My reflection looked like a stranger, someone fragile and easily broken. "Mrs. Moore?" Maribel’s voice came from the doorway, clipped and cold. "The guests have arrived in the rose garden. Mr. Moore is waiting for you in the foyer." "Thank you, Maribel," I whispered. I didn't look at her. I knew if I did, I would only see the same dismissive boredom she always wore when Gideon wasn't looking. I found Gideon standing near the grand staircase, checking his watch. He wore a charcoal suit th
~ Amara ~ “You look adequate,” Gideon said, not lifting his eyes from the financial report on his tablet. We were sitting in the back of the Maybach, the leather seats cold against my skin. It had been exactly one month since I signed my life away on a mahogany desk in Linden Row. One month of being a Moore. One month of learning that silence could be a physical weight. I smoothed the silk of my dress, a deep emerald green that Helena had picked out for me. It felt like a costume. Everything about my life now felt like a performance for an audience that wasn't even watching. “Thank you,” I replied quietly. My voice sounded small in the sealed cabin of the car. Gideon didn’t acknowledge the response. He just tapped the screen and kept reading. The blue light reflected off his sharp jawline, making him look more like a statue than a man. He was a master of efficiency; even our transit time was optimized for data consumption. The car pulled up to The Gilded Oak, a restaurant whe
~ Amara ~ The air in Linden Row always smelled different than at Moore Crest. It smelled like asphalt, old exhaust, and the neighbor’s jasmine vine. At the estate, the air was filtered, chilled, and entirely sterile. Stepping out of the black car and onto the cracked sidewalk felt like finally taking a full breath after weeks of shallow gasping. I walked up the familiar porch steps. The wood groaned under my feet, a welcoming sound compared to the silent marble of Gideon’s foyer. I didn't knock. I just turned the knob and stepped into the small living room. Noah was sitting at the kitchen table. A stack of spreadsheets was spread out before him, lit by the yellow glow of a single overhead bulb. He looked up, his eyes widening when he saw me. He didn't smile; he just stood up, his chair scraping loudly against the linoleum. "Amara," he said. His voice was thick. "Hi, Noah." I stayed by the door, my hands clutching my coat. I felt like a stranger in my own home. I looked too polish
~ Gideon ~ "The optics are perfect, Gideon. The board hasn’t been this settled in years." Adrian leaned back in the guest chair of my office at Helix Tower, his heels resting on the edge of my mahogany desk. He looked far too relaxed for a Tuesday morning, but he was right. I didn't look up from the merger projections on my screen. The numbers were clean, the risk was low, and the market was responding to the stability of Moore Logistics with a steady climb in share price. "Stability is the only metric that matters," I replied. My voice was a flat baritone, the same tone I used for every business transaction. "Is it?" Adrian reached for the morning's financial paper, tossing it onto my desk. "Because you’re being praised for more than just your quarterly earnings. Page six." I glanced down. It was a photo from the Charity Gala—the one where Amara had spilled wine. The photographer had caught us at the curb, just as I was stepping into the car. Amara stood a foot behind me, her h
~ Amara ~ The silence of Moore Crest was never truly empty. It was a thick, heavy thing that sat in the corners of the high-ceilinged rooms, pressing against my chest until I felt like I was breathing in dust. I had lived here for weeks now, and I still felt like a trespasser in my own home. Gideon’s home. I walked down the grand hallway of the east wing, my footsteps muffled by the thick cream runner. I was looking for Maribel. I needed to ask for more towels for my bathroom, but the intercom in my suite had been dead since morning. I didn’t want to make a fuss. Making a fuss was the opposite of what I was here for. I was here to be the quiet, stable wife that Gideon’s board expected to see. As I neared the service stairs leading down to the kitchen, I heard voices. They were sharp and clear, cutting through the usual hush of the estate. I stopped, my hand hovering near the banister. "She’s just... beige," a younger voice said, followed by a giggle. I recognized it as one of the







