The Blackwell estate didn’t just sit on the hillside — it dominated it. Three levels of glass and steel jutted out over the valley below like a fortress daring the world to come closer. Elena had driven past it before, back when she’d been a girl with more ambition than sense, and wondered what sort of man needed to build something like this.
Now she knew. The Bentley purred up the driveway. Iron gates taller than most buildings swung inward without a sound, as though reality itself parted at Adrian Blackwell’s command. Elena rolled her eyes. Of course. Subtlety clearly isn’t his thing. “This is home?” she asked finally, her tone dry enough to scratch glass. “For now,” Adrian said, still scrolling on his phone. “Until I decide otherwise.” Elena tilted her head, studying his profile. “Does everything in your life expire that quickly? Homes, cars… wives?” He didn’t glance up. “Only if they stop being useful.” Elena smirked. “Then I suppose I’ll have to stay endlessly entertaining.” The car stopped. A uniformed butler hurried forward to open her door before she could touch the handle. Adrian stepped out first, then turned and held out his hand. Not gallant — commanding. Elena stared at it a beat too long, then accepted it with a grip that was almost aggressive. “Chivalry or surveillance?” she asked sweetly. “Both,” Adrian replied without missing a beat. Inside, the mansion felt less like a home and more like a high-security museum. Chandeliers glittered overhead, and the marble floor gleamed with such precision she could see her reflection glaring back. Every surface was sleek, cold, and absurdly perfect. “Do you live here alone?” Elena asked as her heels clicked against the echoing floor. “Until now,” Adrian said smoothly. Before she could fire off a retort, a voice spoke from the sweeping staircase. “Ah. The new Mrs. Blackwell.” A tall man descended, lean and sharp-featured, his dark suit doing little to hide the weight of a concealed weapon. His polite smile didn’t touch his eyes. “This is Marcus,” Adrian said. “Head of security. If you need anything, you ask him.” “Welcome to the family,” Marcus said, though it sounded suspiciously like a test. Elena offered a razor-edged smile. “I’m sure it’s an honor for you.” Marcus’s brow quirked, just slightly. “Adrian doesn’t usually bring… guests.” “Good thing I’m not one,” Elena shot back. “I’m the wife. You might want to update your employee handbook.” A flicker of surprise crossed Marcus’s face — quickly masked. Adrian didn’t even react, except to say coldly, “Prepare the east wing.” Then, as Marcus started to leave, Adrian added, “No. Elena stays with me.” Elena turned sharply. “Excuse me? Since when does marriage of convenience mean roommates?” Adrian finally pocketed his phone and stepped closer. “Since I don’t marry anyone I can’t keep under my own roof.” Elena didn’t flinch. “You’re adorable. You actually think you can keep up with me.” Something almost like amusement ghosted across his face before he opened the door to a private study. “Inside. Now.” The study smelled of leather and expensive whiskey. A massive desk dominated the space, and floor-to-ceiling shelves lined with books gave the room a deceptive air of sophistication. Adrian gestured toward a chair, the way one might for an employee. Elena sat, crossing her legs slowly. “You’re very bossy for someone who just got proposed to.” “I spoke to your parents this morning,” Adrian said without preamble. She arched a brow. “Oh? Let me guess — they kissed your shoes and offered you naming rights to their next child?” “They were grateful,” Adrian replied calmly. “They know this arrangement benefits them as much as it benefits me.” “Ah yes,” Elena said, her tone sugar-coated poison. “Nothing says true love like joint financial desperation.” Adrian ignored the jab. “Their company is drowning. I don’t let assets drown.” “Call me an asset again,” Elena warned, “and I’ll make sure your next press photo features a black eye.” For the first time, Adrian’s lips curved — not a smile, but something colder. “Feisty. Good. It’ll make tonight’s press conference more interesting.” Elena rose abruptly. “You’re insufferable.” “And you’re smart,” Adrian said evenly, standing as well. He closed the distance between them, brushing his thumb against the diamond on her finger. His voice dropped, silk over steel. “Smart enough to know control keeps people alive.” Elena met his gaze, unblinking. “Then you’d better control yourself, Blackwell. I bite.” The air thickened. Neither moved. Neither blinked. Finally Adrian stepped back, straightening his cufflinks as though bored. “Dinner. Seven o’clock. Your parents will be there. So will the press. Wear something… convincing.” He strode to the door — then paused. “And Elena?” “Yes, dear husband?” she said sweetly. “Try to smile,” he said, his voice dropping to a warning. “Convincing wives are less dangerous than ambitious ones.” Elena laughed, low and sharp. “Oh, Adrian. You married the wrong girl if you wanted safe.” Adrian said nothing — but the faintest trace of something dangerous flickered in his gray eyes before he left. Elena sank into the leather chair, staring at the door long after it closed. She wasn’t afraid. Not even close. But for the first time, she wondered just how far Adrian Blackwell would go to keep his precious control. And she was determined to find out.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