แชร์

Three

ผู้เขียน: Ese Gwede
last update ปรับปรุงล่าสุด: 2025-03-19 00:09:57

Mia Sinclair had been my best friend since we were kids, practically inseparable through every high and low. So when I called her in a panic, she didn’t hesitate to show up at my parents’ house, ditching work with zero regrets.

The moment she walked into my bedroom, balancing a bottle of wine and a basket of snacks, she fixed me with a curious look.

“Girl, what were you saying on the phone?” Mia demanded, setting everything down on my bed.

I rolled my eyes and grabbed a samosa from the basket, dodging her hand as she tried to smack me for being impatient.

“My marriage has been arranged to Reid Callahan,” I said flatly, my voice devoid of any emotion.

Mia blinked. “What the actual fu—”

“Language!” I cut in, frowning.

“Sorry, but WHAT?”

“It’s not happening,” I declared firmly, more to convince myself than her.

Mia’s eyes widened. “Wait… Are you talking about the Reid Callahan?”

“Who else?”

“Oh my God!” she screeched, making me wince and cover my ears.

“This is not good news,” I muttered darkly.

“Yes, it is!” she countered enthusiastically. “That man is loaded, and your family needs the funds right now.”

I froze. “What are you talking about?”

Mia gasped, staring at me like I’d just grown horns. “You don’t know?”

“Know what?”

“You seriously don’t know what’s been happening with your dad’s company? It’s been all over business news for months.”

My stomach sank. “Daddy must’ve kept it from me. I’m not exactly involved in the business.”

Mia gave me a comforting pat before pulling me into a side hug. “He went to my dad for help, but my father has his own struggles. The Callahans are the only ones who can save your dad’s company.”

My heart ached at the weight of those words. Dad was counting on me to help him get back on his feet.

“How long do you think the merger will take to stabilize everything?” I asked.

“Give or take two to three years if things move quickly. The Callahans are efficient.”

A lightbulb went off in my head. “I need to speak to Reid.”

Mia raised an eyebrow. “Do you even have his number?”

I deflated. “No. I guess I’ll have to wait until Sunday.”

“It’s two days away. Plenty of time to practice what you’re going to say,” she encouraged.

“I suppose you’re right.”

Sunday came faster than I wanted it to. My mother and Mia were practically buzzing with excitement as they helped me get ready for lunch with the Callahans.

“It’s just lunch, not an engagement party,” I grumbled as they cinched the waist of the knee-length corset dress that hugged my curves a little too perfectly.

“You look stunning,” Mom gushed.

“Why red, though?” I asked, frowning as the hairstylist curled my hair and the makeup artist added a bold matte red lip to match.

“It’s bold and confident—just like you,” Mia said cheekily.

“They’re here,” Mia announced, peeking through the window.

“I’ll go welcome them with your father,” Mom said, bustling off.

I narrowed my eyes at Mia. “What’s going on?”

“You’ll see,” she said with a mischievous grin.

I didn’t trust that look one bit.

Minutes later, I found myself descending the stairs toward the dining room, Mia trailing behind me with her phone out, recording without my knowledge.

The sight of Reid in broad daylight hit differently. His curly hair was neatly pulled back, and his grey eyes locked onto mine the second I entered.

I felt his gaze trail over me, but I looked away, ignoring how his tailored blue suit complimented my red dress.

As our families exchanged pleasantries and settled in for lunch, I barely touched my food, too preoccupied with finding a way to speak to Reid alone.

Before I could figure it out, Reid suddenly stood up, clearing his throat.

“Good day, everyone,” he said smoothly. “If I may?”

My father beamed, waving for him to continue.

Reid’s eyes found mine. “Fallon.”

My breath caught.

He walked around the table, approaching me with a confident stride. My pulse quickened.

“I wanted to do this in front of your parents and mine because it’s the proper thing to do,” he said, his deep voice sending a strange shiver down my spine.

To my utter shock, he dropped to one knee, holding up a velvet box with a glittering emerald-cut engagement ring inside.

“Will you marry me?”

The air left my lungs.

My gaze darted around the room. Both sets of parents were practically glowing with happiness, as if this were some romantic fairytale and not a business deal. Mia had her phone raised, capturing every second.

I was on the spot.

“Yes,” I finally breathed out, my voice barely audible.

อ่านหนังสือเล่มนี้ต่อได้ฟรี
สแกนรหัสเพื่อดาวน์โหลดแอป

บทล่าสุด

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Epilogue II

    ~One Year Later~ ~Fallon~ The rain had just stopped when I stepped onto the porch. The world looked rinsed clean—washed of everything heavy. The sky was still gray at the edges, but light had begun to filter through in soft streaks, like gold ink bleeding through vellum. The air smelled like lavender and wet grass. Somewhere down the hill, a wind chime danced gently in the breeze—delicate, hollow, musical. It sounded like a lullaby. Like grace. Like the beginning of something quiet and holy. In my arms was everything I didn’t know I’d been missing. My daughter. Wrapped in a blush knit blanket, warm and impossibly small, her tiny cheek pressed against my collarbone. Her breath was soft and even, rising and falling like she had all the time in the world. As if she already understood something the rest of us hadn’t quite figured out—how to simply be here. I couldn’t stop looking at her. She had Reid’s lashes—absurdly long and unfair for someone so new to the planet. My nose. Ful

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Epilogue

    ~One Month Later~~Fallon~The first rays of morning sun spilled through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting warm gold across the hardwood floors of the master suite. Outside, Los Angeles was still stretching, still yawning awake—just like the man asleep in our bed.I stood barefoot on the balcony, wrapped in the oversized white shirt I’d stolen from him—again. His scent still clung to the fabric, and my fingers curled around the coffee mug as if it were anchoring me in this moment.The city looked different now. Not because it had changed. But because I had.This time last year, I was heartbroken. Untethered. Unsure if I’d ever trust myself—or love—again.Now, I was someone’s wife. Again. But not in the way I used to be.This time, I had chosen it with open eyes. With healing behind me. With love that had been tried and tested and still said yes.The wedding had been everything people said it would be—stunning, sacred, a media frenzy. But the moment I kept replaying wasn’t the kiss

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Three hundred and one

    ~Fallon~ The sun rose like it had been waiting for us. Soft gold spilled across the white curtains of the bridal suite, painting the walls in honey and warmth. I was already awake. Not from nerves—but from stillness. Anticipation. The weight of knowing this wasn’t just a wedding. It was a return. Today, I became Fallon Callahan again. Only this time… I was choosing it. The room buzzed around me—stylists fussing with palettes and pins, Mia barking orders like a Hollywood director, soft music threading through the air—but it all felt like background noise. Like the world had faded into soft focus, and all I could see was the path ahead. The life ahead. Mia peeked through the curtains and gasped dramatically. “Okay. The paparazzi have officially formed a human wall at the gate. It’s giving royal wedding meets Vogue editorial.” I laughed, curling my legs under me on the sofa, silk robe falling around my knees. “They’ve been waiting for this since the first breakup. I’m surprised t

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Three hundred

    ~Reid~I stood on the edge of the balcony at my father’s estate—the same one I used to loathe visiting when I was younger.Nothing had changed.The garden below was still painfully perfect. Trimmed hedges in uniform rows. Stone pathways that curved with clinical precision. Not a petal out of place. It was beautiful in that sterile, expensive way—his way.Too controlled. Too silent. Like everything in his world.But I wasn’t here to judge his landscaping. I was here because he asked.That alone made it strange.We didn’t “talk,” not like normal families. Ours was a home of polite efficiency. Quiet discipline. Appearances over intimacy. Every conversation had an unspoken deadline, and emotion was considered a tactical error.So when he called that morning and simply said, “Come over. Let’s talk,” I’d paused. No tone. No warmth. No motive I could read.But I’d come anyway. Because we were getting married soon. Because I had changed. Because it was time.I heard the soft click of the slid

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Two hundred and ninety nine

    ~Fallon~“Do we want an orchestra or a live band?”Reid was sitting cross-legged on the couch, flipping through a high-end wedding planner binder his assistant had couriered over that morning. His reading glasses—yes, he wore those now when he wasn’t trying to prove a point—slid dangerously low on his nose. He looked so serious, like we were negotiating a hostile merger.One leg was propped on the coffee table. His hair was slightly damp from a shower, his sleeves rolled, and for a second I just watched him. This man I had loved, lost, and found again—now buried in calligraphy options like it was the fate of the nation.I looked up from my Pinterest board, amused. “You own half of California, and you’re asking me about bands?”He didn’t look up. “I figured I’d try being a collaborative fiancé.”I tilted my head, mock-suspicious. “Since when?”“Since Mia threatened to lock me out of my own wedding.”“She will,” Mia called from across the room, where she was sitting cross-legged on the

  • Fallon’s Reid: An Arranged Contract   Two hundred and ninety eight

    ~Fallon~The curtains were still drawn.Pale morning light painted soft streaks on the walls, the kind of quiet blue-gray that felt more like a sigh than a sunrise. Outside, the city was starting to stir, but in here, time had no shape.It didn’t feel like morning.It didn’t feel like anything I could define.Just warmth. Stillness. That low hum of peace that only comes after you’ve survived the wreckage and found your way back to shore.Reid’s arm was wrapped around my waist, loose and sure. His body curved into mine like we’d been sculpted that way. The sheets were tangled around our legs, our skin pressed together in all the places that mattered. I could feel his breath against the back of my neck—slow, even, steady.Like safety. Like home.I didn’t move. Didn’t speak.Not because I was afraid to break the moment, but because I didn’t have to.The room was quiet except for the sound of his breathing and the occasional creak of the old wood beneath the bed. The air smelled faintly o

บทอื่นๆ
สำรวจและอ่านนวนิยายดีๆ ได้ฟรี
เข้าถึงนวนิยายดีๆ จำนวนมากได้ฟรีบนแอป GoodNovel ดาวน์โหลดหนังสือที่คุณชอบและอ่านได้ทุกที่ทุกเวลา
อ่านหนังสือฟรีบนแอป
สแกนรหัสเพื่ออ่านบนแอป
DMCA.com Protection Status