MasukShe married him to save her father. He married her to save his reputation. Neither of them planned for what happened next. Emily Carter signed a contract. One year, no emotions, no attachments. She told herself she could do it. She told herself she was strong enough to live beside a man like Alexander Kane and feel absolutely nothing. She was wrong. And then she was pregnant. She overheard him call her replaceable. So she did the only thing she had left. She disappeared. Five years later, Emily is back. Not the same woman. Not broken. Not desperate. She has built a life, a career, a son with his father's dark eyes. She has come back with one goal. But Alexander Kane has a goal of his own. He wants her back. He wants his son. And he will burn down everything in his path to get them. The only question is whether love can survive what they did to each other.
Lihat lebih banyakPOV: Emily
"Miss Carter, Mr. Kane will see you now."
I didn't move at first. My dress was soaked through, my hair plastered to my neck, and my hands wouldn't stop shaking. The receptionist looked at me the way people look at something they'd rather not touch. I stood up anyway.
The elevator ride to the thirty-second floor felt like ascending to a sentencing. I watched my reflection in the polished steel doors. Red eyes. Pale face. A woman who had run out of options three days ago and was only now admitting it.
The doors opened. The office was enormous and cold. Floor-to-ceiling windows showed a city drowning in rain, and the man behind the desk looked like he belonged to it. Alexander Kane didn't look up when I walked in. He was reading something, pen in hand, jacket perfectly pressed like the storm outside was a personal insult he had chosen to ignore.
I stopped a few feet from his desk. He still didn't look up.
"Sit down," he said. His voice was low. Not unkind. Just empty of anything that wasn't instruction.
I sat.
He turned a page. I watched the side of his face. Sharp jaw, dark hair, a stillness about him that made the room feel smaller. He was younger than I expected. Maybe early thirties. But his eyes, when he finally looked up, were the eyes of someone who had never once been caught off guard.
"Emily Carter," he said. Not a question.
"Yes."
"Your father owes three million dollars to four separate creditors. Two of those creditors have already filed for enforcement. The third is scheduled to appear at your family home tonight." He set his pen down. "You came here because Marcus Holt told you I was the only person who could stop it."
"Yes," I said again. My voice came out smaller than I wanted.
"Do you know what I want in return?"
I looked at my hands. "Marcus told me."
"Then let's not waste each other's time." He opened a drawer and placed a document on the desk between us. It was thick, bound, marked with little yellow tabs. "One year. We marry, make the required appearances, and maintain the image of a functional couple. After twelve months, we divorce quietly and you walk away with two hundred thousand dollars and your father's debts cleared."
I stared at the document.
"No emotional involvement," he continued. "No interference in my personal or professional life. You will attend events when I require it, smile when necessary, and answer questions from the press without embarrassing either of us."
"And outside of that?"
"You're free."
"Free," I repeated.
Something about the word felt like a joke neither of us was laughing at.
"You'll have your own room," he said. "Your own schedule. I have no interest in your personal life, and I expect the same respect."
I looked up at him. "This is a business arrangement."
"Everything is a business arrangement."
I picked up the edge of the contract. The paper felt heavy. I flipped past the first page, then the second. Words like cohabitation obligations and discretionary conduct clausesblurred in front of me.
"What happens if I say no?" I asked.
He leaned back in his chair. "Then you leave, and your father is arrested by morning."
My stomach dropped.
"There are other ways," I said. "Loans. Legal options."
"You've tried them. That's why you're here." He wasn't being cruel. That was the worst part. He was just stating facts, the way someone reads a weather report. "Miss Carter, I don't enjoy this any more than you do. I need a wife for reasons that are my own. You need money and intervention that only I can provide. This is a clean transaction."
"Clean," I said softly.
I thought about my father. About the sound of his voice on the phone two nights ago. He hadn't cried, which somehow made it worse. He had just said, Emily, I don't know what I've done, in a voice so quiet it barely reached me.
I thought about my mother's house. The garden she planted the year before she died. The kitchen where my father still kept her apron hanging on the same hook. I pressed my fingers flat on the desk.
"I have questions," I said.
"You have three minutes."
I looked at him. "Why me?"
For the first time, something shifted in his expression. Not much. Just a small tightening around the eyes. "That's not relevant to the terms."
"It's relevant to me."
He held my gaze. "You were selected because you're credible, educated, and have no public profile that complicates mine. You are, for lack of a better word, manageable."
The word landed like a small slap.
"Manageable," I said.
"Is that an objection?"
Before I could answer, my phone rang.
I almost ignored it. Then I saw the name on the screen.
Mrs. Adeyemi. Our neighbor. The woman who had keys to my father's house.
I answered without thinking. "Hello?"
"Emily." Her voice was hushed, urgent. "There are men here. Two of them, with papers. Your father, he's arguing with them and I don't think..."
"What kind of men?"
"Police. Emily, they have handcuffs."
The phone nearly slipped from my grip. I grabbed it tighter.
"Tell him I'm sorting it," I said. "Tell him to please not argue. Please. I'm sorting it right now."
I hung up. Alexander Kane was watching me. His expression hadn't changed, but he wasn't pretending to look away either.
My hands were shaking again. I hated that they were shaking.
I pulled the contract toward me. I picked up the pen he had left on the desk. The tip hovered over the signature line and I stared at my own name printed there in clean black letters. Emily Rose Carter.
I thought about what I was signing away. A year of my life. My name. The version of love I had always quietly believed in, the slow kind, the real kind, the kind that wasn't arranged in a boardroom while rain hammered the windows thirty-two floors up.
I signed. The pen scratched across the page and then it was done. I set it down. I didn't look at him.
"You'll contact whoever you need to contact," I said. "Tonight. My father doesn't spend a single hour in a cell."
"It's already been arranged." He reached across and took the contract without ceremony. "My assistant will send a car to your address tomorrow morning. Be ready by nine."
I stood. My legs felt strange, like they belonged to someone else.
"Tomorrow morning for what?" I asked.
He looked up at me, and for the first time since I had walked into his office, something that might have been satisfaction crossed his face.
"The wedding is tomorrow."
POV: EmilyI moved faster than I had ever moved in my life. The test went into my robe pocket in one motion. I stood up from the floor and turned on the tap and splashed cold water on my face just as Alexander stepped fully into the bathroom doorway."What are you doing on the floor?" he asked."I slipped." I reached for the hand towel and pressed it to my face. "The tiles are wet."A pause. I felt his eyes on my back."You didn't eat today," he said again."I wasn't hungry." I folded the towel and hung it back carefully. My hands had stopped shaking, which surprised me. "I'll eat something now."Another pause. Longer this time."Fine," he said. And he left.I gripped the edge of the sink and looked at myself in the mirror for a long moment. Then I reached into my pocket and closed my fist around the test and walked to my room and pushed it to the very back of my underwear drawer beneath a folded scarf.I stood in the middle of my room and breathed.++++++Three days passed. I watched
POV: EmilyThe nausea hit me first in the elevator. I had been standing there, coffee in hand, on my way down to meet Alexander's driver for a scheduled appearance at some charity luncheon. The elevator started moving and my stomach turned so violently I had to press my free hand flat against the wall.I made it through the luncheon by drinking water and rearranging food on my plate and smiling at the right moments. Nobody noticed. I had gotten very good at performing fine.That was three weeks after the night I had decided not to think about.+++++++By the second week of feeling wrong, I started paying attention. Not to the nausea alone. To the tiredness that sat behind my eyes no matter how much I slept. To the way certain smells hit me like something physical. Clara had made fish one evening and I had walked out of the kitchen so fast she called after me asking if I was alright."Just a headache," I said.I said that a lot now.At night I lay in bed and counted backwards and then
POV: EmilyThe penthouse didn't feel like anyone lived there. That was the first thing I noticed when the elevator opened directly into the living room. Everything was grey and white and glass. Clean lines, no clutter, no photographs on the walls. A large window ran the full length of one side, showing the city below like a painting someone had hung there purely for aesthetic value. Beautiful. Distant. Untouchable.A woman named Clara, who introduced herself as the housekeeper, showed me to my room. It was large, well-furnished, and had its own bathroom stocked with things in my size that I had never asked for. Someone had done their homework.I sat on the edge of the bed and listened to the silence.++++++++Alexander found me in the kitchen an hour later. I was making tea, mostly because I needed something to do with my hands. He walked in, loosened his tie, and stopped when he saw me standing at the stove."Clara handles meals," he said."I'm not making a meal. I'm making tea."He
POV: EmilyThe dress cost more than my father's first car. I knew because the stylist told me, cheerfully, while tightening the corset at the back. I stood in front of the mirror and looked at a woman I didn't recognize. White lace, fitted waist, hair pinned up with small pearls threaded through it. Beautiful, in the way that things purchased with money tend to be.Outside the church doors, I could already hear them. Cameras. Voices. The low roar of a crowd that had gathered because Alexander Kane was getting married and that was apparently news worth standing in the cold for."Sixty seconds," someone said near the door.I picked up my bouquet. White roses. No one had asked what I liked.The doors opened. The noise hit me first. Camera shutters firing like rainfall, voices rising, a blur of faces pressed against barriers lining the path. I walked, because that was the only option. I kept my chin level and my shoulders back and I thought about my father, who was home this morning, safe












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