The rain hadn’t let up by the time Elena followed Adrian out of the restaurant. His driver — a man in a dark suit with the build of a bodyguard — held an umbrella over him, barely sparing her a glance before ushering them both toward a sleek black Bentley parked at the curb.
Elena hesitated at the door. “This is insane.” Adrian opened it with a cool glance. “So is marrying a stranger. Get in.” Her pulse kicked up a notch. She slid into the plush leather seat, inhaling the faint scent of expensive cologne and new car. Adrian settled beside her, composed as ever, like this was an ordinary Tuesday night errand rather than an impromptu engagement. “Where are we going?” she asked again, folding her arms. “To buy you a ring,” he said simply, tapping his phone. “If I’m going to marry you tomorrow, we’ll do it properly.” “Tomorrow?” Elena nearly choked. “Don’t you think this is a little fast?” Adrian’s gray eyes slid toward her, cool and unreadable. “You’re the one who proposed, Elena. I don’t procrastinate when I want something.” Something. Not someone. The word sent a shiver through her. The car glided through the wet streets, bypassing traffic as if the world moved aside for Adrian Blackwell. Which, Elena realized uneasily, it probably did. Within twenty minutes, they pulled up to a jewelry boutique glowing with soft light despite the late hour. “This place is closed,” she whispered as Adrian stepped out first. “Not for me,” he said calmly. Sure enough, the doors opened before he even reached them. A nervous-looking manager appeared, bowing slightly as if greeting royalty. “Mr. Blackwell, welcome. Everything is ready for you.” Elena followed Adrian inside, her heels clicking on the marble floor. The entire store was empty except for two attendants who looked as if they’d been woken from sleep — and didn’t dare complain. “Something elegant,” Adrian instructed curtly. “Not gaudy. Platinum or white gold. Oval cut.” Elena blinked at him. “You have opinions?” Adrian shot her a faint smirk. “I don’t do anything halfway.” One by one, velvet trays appeared, glittering with diamonds that made her eyes hurt. She reached instinctively for a modest band, but Adrian caught her hand, his touch firm and warm. “No,” he said softly, selecting a larger ring and sliding it onto her finger. “This one. It suits you.” Elena stared at the stone — dazzling, almost obscene — and tried to protest. “Adrian, this is too much—” His gaze sharpened. “You’re marrying me. Get used to it.” The air between them thickened. For a moment, Elena forgot to breathe. The transaction took minutes — no paperwork, no delays. Adrian signed something with a flick of his pen, and the ring was hers. Or rather, his, on her hand. Back in the car, silence stretched between them, electric and heavy. Elena found herself sneaking glances at him, trying to read the man behind the tailored suit and ruthless calm. “You’re very sure of yourself,” she muttered at last. Adrian didn’t look up from his phone. “I don’t make decisions I’m unsure of.” “And me?” That earned her a glance, sharp and assessing. “You intrigue me.” Her cheeks warmed at the unexpected admission. “That’s not very romantic.” “I’m not a romantic man, Elena,” he said flatly. “But I protect what’s mine. That should be enough for you.” The car slowed outside a towering hotel — his, judging by the discreet Blackwell crest on the doors. Adrian stepped out first and held the door open for her. “Stay here tonight,” he said, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Elena stiffened. “Excuse me?” “You’ll need to be rested for tomorrow.” His tone left no room for argument. “We’ll go to the courthouse at ten. After that, you’ll be Mrs. Blackwell.” “Just like that?” Adrian’s smile was cool, almost predatory. “You started this, Elena. I’m just finishing it.” She opened her mouth to argue, but he was already guiding her inside with a hand at the small of her back. The touch was light, but commanding, and sent an involuntary thrill through her. The hotel suite he arranged for her was larger than her entire apartment. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the stormy skyline, and the bed looked soft enough to swallow her whole. Adrian lingered at the door as the bellhop set down her things — he’d somehow had her bag sent over without asking. Another reminder of how easily he bent the world to his will. “Goodnight, Elena,” he said softly, eyes glinting with something unreadable. “Tomorrow, everything changes.” And with that, he was gone. Elena didn’t even take off her coat before grabbing her phone. Her fingers shook as she dialed home. Her mother answered on the first ring. “Sweetheart,” her mother said brightly, almost too brightly, “we just heard the news!” Elena froze. “What news? I only decided this tonight—” “Mr. Blackwell’s assistant called us an hour ago,” her father cut in from the background. His voice was warm, but with an edge of something else—relief. “We’ll meet you both at the courthouse in the morning.” Elena’s stomach dropped. “You’re not… mad?” “Mad?” her mother laughed softly, though it didn’t reach her voice. “Darling, do you have any idea what this means? Our company has been hanging by a thread. Adrian Blackwell’s support could change everything. This marriage is—” “A lifeline,” her father finished bluntly. “So cooperate, Elena. Don’t mess this up.” She pulled the phone away from her ear, staring at it in disbelief. Her own parents weren’t warning her. They were celebrating. ****** The real shock came the next morning — when she stepped into the courthouse, expecting some quiet paperwork, and found it cordoned off, with security guards snapping to attention. Adrian Blackwell was already there, waiting in a crisp suit, papers ready, witnesses lined up — powerful men in darker suits who bowed slightly when he passed. He didn’t just agree to marry her. He’d orchestrated everything. “Good morning, Mrs. Blackwell,” Adrian said smoothly as she approached, his gaze burning through her. “Are you ready to make it official?” Before Elena could answer, the judge appeared, summoned like a servant. Everything happened fast — signatures, vows, rings exchanged again under Adrian’s relentless stare. And just like that, it was done. When they stepped outside, cameras flashed. Elena froze. “You didn’t say anything about press!” Adrian slipped an arm around her waist, pulling her close, his lips brushing her ear. “Get used to it, wife. The world watches everything I do.” She stiffened as his fingers tightened slightly, possessive. “Where are we going now?” Adrian’s smile turned wicked. “Home. To celebrate properly.”The morning after the Crown Vogue feature went live, the Blackwell residence was far from peaceful. The phone in the kitchen rang nonstop, notifications poured in on every device, and even the household staff whispered excitedly as they passed through the hallways.Elena was halfway through her first cup of coffee when Lila’s name flashed on her phone screen. She sighed. “Here we go again.”“Good morning to you too, superstar!” Lila’s voice was bright—too bright. “Elena, do you even realize what’s happening online right now?”Elena leaned back on the stool, one brow raised. “I assume the world has opinions about the interview?”“Oh, opinions would be putting it mildly,” Lila said dramatically. “Your interview broke Crown Vogue’s digital record overnight. The website literally crashed for a few minutes because of the traffic. And the photos—Elena, people are obsessed. They’re calling you and Adrian the ‘Power Couple of the Decade.’”Elena blinked. “Wait—what?”“Hashtag #BlackwellEmpire
Morning sunlight filtered through the sheer curtains of the Blackwell penthouse suite, painting soft streaks of gold across the room. Elena stretched lazily under the silk sheets, her body still warm from Adrian’s arms wrapped around her. He was awake before her, of course, his fingers gently tracing patterns down her spine as though memorizing every inch of her.“You’re awake early,” she murmured, her voice muffled against his chest.“I have a meeting at ten,” he replied quietly, pressing a kiss to her hair. “But I’d rather stay here.”Elena smiled sleepily. “You say that every morning.”He chuckled. “Because every morning, it’s true.”For a moment, neither of them moved. The air between them was still and warm — filled with the comfort of routine and the unspoken pull that never seemed to fade. Then, her phone buzzed from the nightstand, vibrating insistently.Elena groaned and reached for it. “Who’s disturbing my peace?”She squinted at the screen — Lila.“Your manager?” Adrian gue
The morning after the gala broke over the city in a haze of golden light and chaos.The Blackwell mansion was unusually lively for such an early hour. Phones buzzed nonstop, the staff moved briskly through the hallways, and the housekeeper had turned on the TV in the sitting room, unable to resist the unfolding media frenzy.Every channel was playing the same thing — the video of Adrian Blackwell publicly exposing Damien Holt’s corruption at the Luminara Hotel.Elena stood by the kitchen island in her silk robe, coffee cup in hand, as the screen replayed the footage for the tenth time that morning.“—in a dramatic twist at last night’s private investor gala, Blackwell Corporation’s CEO, Adrian Blackwell, confronted rival executive Damien Holt with evidence of forged documents and blackmail attempts. Sources close to the event describe the confrontation as ‘chillingly calm yet devastatingly precise.’”The reporter’s voice buzzed on.
The Blackwell mansion was quiet that night — but it wasn’t peaceful.The silence between Elena and Adrian wasn’t from anger or distance. It was the kind of silence that carried tension, the kind that wrapped around the walls like a storm waiting to break.Elena sat in the living room, curled up on the couch in her robe, staring blankly at her untouched cup of tea. The city lights from the glass walls flickered faintly over her skin, but her thoughts were somewhere far darker — circling Damien Holt’s email and the falsified contracts.Adrian had been in his study for hours. She knew better than to interrupt him when he was like this — cold, calculating, quiet. That was when he was at his most dangerous.When she finally heard the study door open, she turned her head sharply.Adrian walked in, his expression unreadable, his phone in one hand and his jacket slung over his arm.“Elena,” he said in that low, commanding tone that made her spine straighten instinctively.She set the teacup d
The next few days were a whirlwind.Maison Élitaire’s reveal had shaken the fashion world, but instead of collapsing, the brand had exploded into the spotlight. Orders tripled overnight. Interviews poured in. Every celebrity stylist wanted to dress their clients in Elena’s designs.But the attention was both a blessing and a storm.Everywhere she went, there were whispers. Some called her a visionary; others still said she’d ridden on her husband’s wealth. Yet, despite all that noise, she had never felt stronger.Because for the first time, she was living her truth — no masks, no anonymity. Just Elena Blackwell.That morning, she sat in her office at Maison Élitaire’s main headquarters — a sleek, glass-walled space overlooking the city skyline. Sunlight glowed through the curtains, falling over sketches scattered across her desk.Lila walked in with two cups of coffee, looking both exhausted and thrilled. “Elena, the demand
The next morning started out like peace itself.The soft hum of the espresso machine filled the kitchen, sunlight spilling across the marble counter where Adrian stood, shirt sleeves rolled up, scrolling through his phone while waiting for his coffee. Elena sat opposite him, wearing one of his shirts, her hair tousled and her smile light.Everything felt easy.After the previous night’s confession, the air between them had cleared — fragile but warm, like dawn after a storm. She had promised to take him to her design studio that afternoon, to finally show him everything she’d kept hidden.Adrian poured her a cup and handed it to her. “You didn’t sleep much,” he murmured, his tone gentler than usual.She smiled faintly. “Too nervous. I kept thinking about how you’d see the studio.”“I’ll love it,” he said without hesitation. “Because it’s yours.”Her cheeks flushed softly at the quiet certainty in his voice.She