LOGINMia’s POV
The knock was too steady to be from a neighbor. When I opened the door, it was him.
Alexander Blake.
Billionaire. Heir. Untouchable. The kind of man who didn’t knock unless he already knew the answer. His black coat hung like armor, rain still clinging to the fabric. On one hand, a manila envelope. In his eyes, something colder than pity, heavier than judgment.
He didn’t say hello. Didn’t ask if he could come in.
“I have a proposition.”
No easing into it. No testing the water. Just shoving me straight under. My fingers gripped the doorframe. “What kind of proposition?”
He extended the envelope. “One that requires you to stop hiding and take back what’s yours.”
The words slid under my skin before I could block them. I hadn’t asked for hope. I didn’t trust it. But his tone, quiet, sure, made me wonder if maybe I’d run out of reasons to keep saying no to life.
I took the envelope, opened it. My eyes skimmed the first line.
“A contract marriage?” The laugh that escaped me was brittle. “You’re serious?”
“Yes.”
Before I could react, he stepped inside. No hesitation. His presence filled the room, crowding out the air.
“I need a wife,” he said. “One year. Public appearances. No scandals.
“And in return?” My arms folded tight across my chest.
“You get your revenge,” he said, eyes locking on mine. “On Liam. On your sister. On every single person who watched you fall and pretended to feel sorry for you.”
My throat ached. “And money, I assume.”
“Yes.” His voice didn’t soften. “Enough to make sure no one dares to humiliate you again.” I should have told him to get out. Instead, I heard myself ask, “How much?”
He let the faintest shadow of a smile pass over his mouth. “More than you’ve ever been offered for your dignity.”
I swallowed. “And if I say no?”
He leaned in slightly, not enough to touch me, but enough that I felt his control pressing against my skin. “Then you go back to sleeping in that cramped apartment. You keep answering pity calls from people who enjoy your downfall. And you stay exactly where they left you, on the floor.”
I hated how my breath hitched. Hated that he was right.
“Put on something decent,” he said, glancing once at my worn sweater. “We’re going to my office.”
I don’t remember deciding to obey. One minute I was standing there, clutching the envelope, the next, I was buttoning up a clean blouse with hands that wouldn’t stop trembling.
The black car was silently waiting downstairs. I stepped into it, although the ride was smooth, he didn’t speak neither did I. His presence was enough, dense, unshakable, like the gravity in the room belonged to him.
When we stepped out of the car, the building stood before us, gigantic and expensive. His name - BLAKE was cut into the stone like it had been there for centuries.
We rode the elevator together, although it was quite more like he wasn't there, but I could feel him there, measured, immovable.
His office was on the top floor. The glass walls opened to the city like a dare. The air smelled faintly of petals and something sharper, control, maybe.
He took his seat at the head of a long, black table while I sat at the opposite end. He slid another envelope across the surface. “The terms. Read them.”
I didn’t touch it. “Why me?”
His gaze held mine. “Because you’re already a headline.”
“That’s not a reason.”
“It’s the only one that matters. You’re chaos wrapped in tragedy. The public can’t look away. That makes you useful.”
I flinched. “So I’m your PR stunt?”
“You’re my weapon.” The words hit harder than I wanted them to.
I shook my head. “You want me to sell myself just so you can inherit whatever’s at stake in your grandfather’s will.”
“I want you to stop bleeding in the open,” he said, voice low but unyielding. “And if that benefits me, good. I don’t pretend otherwise.”
“And if I say no?” I challenged.
His jaw tightened. “You won’t.”
The arrogance made me burn. “You don’t know me.” “I know you’d rather set yourself on fire than let them think they won.”
Silence dropped between us. My pulse was too loud in my ears.
I finally opened the file.
Duration: One year.
Stipend: Two million dollars, quarterly payments.
Conditions:
—No romantic entanglements outside the marriage.
—No physical intimacy unless mutually agreed upon.
—No press interviews without approval.
__No emotional involvement.
I frowned at the last one. “You actually wrote no emotional involvement?”
“Yes.”
“And if I fall in love with you?” His eyes didn’t waver. “You won’t.”
The bluntness made me sit back. “You’re that sure?” “I’m not sure,” he said. “I’m certain. Love is a weakness. I don’t offer it and it won't be tolerated.”
I almost laughed, but I heard it in “And you think that’s supposed to make me trust you?”
“I’m not asking for your trust. I’m offering power. Take it, or go back to drowning.” I really hated that part of me, I leaned toward him without moving an inch.
Leaning back on his chair, he kept staring at me, like he already knew my answer. “Sign it, Mia.”
The pen was beside the file. I stared at it until it blurred in my vision. Then I signed.
Not because I trusted him. Not because I’d stopped believing in love.
But because Alexander Blake had just handed me the sharpest weapon I’d ever been offered, and I was done being the one bleeding.
Leaving the office, my shoes hit against the marble floor, the sound loud as the hallway was quiet. My reflection in the glass was convincing, hair neat, lipstick intact.
But the eyes staring back?
They knew exactly what I’d just done. And they weren’t sure if I’d made the smartest decision of my life…
…or walked straight into a trap I’d never escape.
MIA’S POVI sat curled on the edge of the bed, knees drawn tight against my chest, arms wrapped around them like a shield I couldn’t lower. The sheets beneath me were rumpled, but I hadn’t been able to lie down, not with the restless storm inside me. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking, no matter how hard I pressed them against my legs. Every tremor felt like a betrayal, proof of how fragile I really was.The door clicked softly behind him. Even that quiet sound made me flinch. Xander didn’t storm in, he never did when I was like this. He closed the door with deliberate care, as though he were sealing us in a fragile bubble that couldn’t handle sharp edges.“Mia,” he said gently, his voice steady in a way mine could never be. “Talk to me.”I couldn’t lift my head. My throat ached too much, my chest heavy with words I didn&r
Xander’s POVI slammed the glass down onto the desk; it shattered with a harsh, final crack that made the room flinch. Tiny crescents of glass skittered across the polished wood and chimed against the lamp base. The sting of cold from the broken rim bit my palm through the cut of the impact, but the burn in my chest was worse, hot, raw, a pressure that pressed behind my ribs and left me hollowed out.Eric stepped in quietly, the soft sound of his shoes a contrast to the violence of the glass. He paused, taking in the wreckage and the way my shoulders hunched around some invisible weight. “Sir…” he began, careful as if the word itself might set me off again.“Don’t ‘sir’ me, Eric,” I snapped, voice ragged. I pivoted toward him, fingers still curled as if on the verge of another strike. “Tell me why every lead dies before it breathes.” The
Xander’s POVThe first light of morning bled through the curtains, pale and unwelcome, casting a thin wash of gray over the room. It crept across the walls, touched the scattered glasses on the table, and finally stretched to the couch where Mia lay. She was still asleep, curled into herself like a child seeking shelter, one arm tucked under her head, the other clenched around the thin blanket. Her breathing was uneven, catching now and then as if even in sleep she couldn’t quite escape the weight pressing down on her.I stood by the window, unmoving, jaw locked tight. My reflection stared back at me in the glass, hollow-eyed and restless. Her words from last night replayed again, soft but sharp enough to carve through me.“Then don’t let me drown.”I had promised her. Against every instinct to keep my distance, I had sworn I wouldn’t let her sink beneath this storm. Now the promise hung like an anchor around my chest, heavy, demanding, unrelenting.A knock broke the fragile silence.
Mia’s POVI couldn’t breathe. The room felt smaller, heavier, as if the walls themselves carried Liam’s name.“Clarissa,” I whispered, clutching the edge of the desk. “She helped him. All this time, she was helping him.”Xander’s hand brushed mine. “It seems so.”My stomach churned. “And I trusted her once. I defended her when people said she wasn’t loyal to him.” My voice cracked. “God, I feel sick.”“Mia.” Xander’s tone softened. “You didn’t know.”“That doesn’t make it easier!” I snapped, tears threatening. “She smiled at me. She comforted me when Liam broke me. All the while…”“All the while she was covering for him,” he finished
Xander’s POVEric’s voice came through the line, low but tense, the kind of tone that made my stomach knot before I even heard the words.“Sir, I’ve cross-referenced the photo Mia provided. The resolution is poor, grainy at best, but the stance, the build—it matches someone in the records.”I stopped pacing, my entire body stilling in the middle of the study. The phone felt heavier in my hand, my grip tightening until the edges pressed painfully into my palm. “Who?” I demanded, my voice clipped.There was a pause, longer than it should have been. I could hear Eric’s breath through the line, the weight of what he was about to say hanging between us. Finally, he spoke. “Preliminary analysis points to Liam.”The name slammed into me like a blow. For a heartbeat, everything inside me went still, as if
Xander’s POVI pushed the study door shut behind me, the soft thud sealing me away from the rest of the house. The air inside felt heavy, thick with the scent of old leather and paper. My phone was pressed to my ear, the only tether between me and the answers I couldn’t seem to reach.“Eric,” I said, keeping my voice low, controlled. “Any update?”There was a crackle on the other end, then his voice, steady but cautious. “No, sir. But the trail isn’t cold anymore. The photo Mia gave us, it’s something.”My hand curled into a fist at my side, knuckles straining until they ached. “Something isn’t enough,” I snapped, sharper than I intended. I paced the length of the room, the floorboards creaking under my steps. “I need names. I need connections. I need to know who that man was.”







