LOGINAmara’s POV
The encounter with Eleanor Wolfe left me feeling like I’d been scrubbed raw with steel wool. I stayed in my studio until the sun dipped below the horizon, the golden light turning into long, eerie shadows across the marble floor. I didn't want to leave. In this room, surrounded by silk and pins, I was Amara the Designer. Outside those doors, I was a ghost haunting a billionaire’s halls.
Hunger eventually forced me out. My stomach had been knotted all day, but now it was a dull, insistent ache.
I made my way down the grand staircase, my footsteps echoing in the cavernous foyer. The house was too quiet. It lacked the smells of a real home—there was no scent of garlic or simmering soup, only the sterile fragrance of expensive floor wax and fresh lilies.
I found the dining room, but the table was cleared. Not even a glass of water remained.
"Looking for something?"
I jumped, spinning around. A woman in a black-and-white uniform stood by the sideboard. Her name tag read Mrs. Gable. She was the head housekeeper, and her expression was a perfect mirror of Eleanor Wolfe’s: cold and unimpressed.
"I missed dinner," I said, trying to sound more confident than I felt. "I was wondering if I could get a sandwich or some fruit?"
Mrs. Gable folded her arms. "Dinner is served at seven. Mr. Wolfe is very particular about the schedule. The kitchen staff has already finished for the night."
I blinked. "It’s only 8:30. Surely there’s something in the refrigerator?"
"The kitchen is off-limits to residents after hours to ensure it is pristine for the morning prep," she said, her voice dripping with artificial politeness. "Perhaps you should have checked the handbook Mr. Thorne provided."
"A handbook for eating?" I felt a flash of heat in my chest. "I’m not a guest, Mrs. Gable. I live here."
"Of course, Madam," she said, the title sounding like an insult. "But even the mistress of the house must follow the rules."
She turned and walked away before I could respond, leaving me standing in the dark dining room. The disrespect was subtle, but it was there—a quiet rebellion from the people who were supposed to serve me. They knew what I was. They knew I was bought.
The Midnight Encounter
I ended up in the kitchen anyway. I didn't care about the handbook. I found a carton of yogurt and a spoon, sitting on the edge of the darkened island and staring out at the moonlit terrace.
"I thought I told you the kitchen was off-limits after hours."
The deep, gravelly voice made me nearly drop my yogurt. Adrian stood in the doorway. He had discarded his suit jacket, his white shirt unbuttoned at the collar and sleeves rolled up to his elbows. He looked less like a CEO and more like a man—dangerous, tired, and devastatingly handsome.
"Mrs. Gable already gave me the lecture," I said, scraping the bottom of the carton. "I’m a rebel. I eat at 9:00 PM."
Adrian walked into the room, the movement fluid and predatory. He didn't turn on the lights. He moved through the shadows as if he owned them—which, I suppose, he did. He stopped a few feet away, leaning against the counter.
"My mother was here today," he said. It wasn't a question.
"She’s a delight," I replied dryly. "She compared me to a stray dog and a smudge on the family name. I think we’re going to be best friends."
Adrian’s jaw tightened. "She’s protective of the brand. Ignore her."
"The brand? Adrian, she was talking about me. As a human being." I stood up, the yogurt carton hitting the trash can with a decisive thud. "Is that what I am to you? A smudge you have to manage?"
He stepped closer, invading my space. The air between us suddenly felt thick, charged with a tension that wasn't just anger. Up close, I could see the faint lines of exhaustion around his eyes.
"To me, you are a solution to a problem," he said, his voice dropping an octave. "But don't mistake my mother’s bitterness for my own. You’re here because I put you here. That makes you my responsibility."
"I don't want to be a responsibility," I whispered. "I want to be... I don't even know."
Adrian reached out. For a heartbeat, I thought he was going to touch my face. My breath hitched. His fingers hovered near my jaw, then shifted to pull a stray thread off the shoulder of my dress.
"You’re a Wolfe now, Amara. Whether you like it or not." He looked down at me, his eyes dark and unreadable. "And a Wolfe doesn't eat yogurt in the dark. If you’re hungry, tell the staff to cook. If they refuse, tell me."
"I can handle myself," I said, my heart drumming against my ribs.
"Can you?" He leaned in, his scent—sandalwood and cold air—swirling around me. "We’ll see. Tomorrow, we have our first public appearance as a couple. A charity gala for the children's hospital. Every camera in the city will be looking for a crack in our story."
He straightened up, the moment of intimacy—if that’s what it was—shattering instantly.
"Wear something expensive," he added, turning to leave. "I want them to see exactly what my money can buy."
He left before
I could tell him that his money hadn't bought all of me. Not yet.
Amara’s POVMoving into the East Wing felt like crossing a border into enemy territory.While the rest of the mansion was cold and grand, Adrian’s private suite was a fortress of shadows and steel. The walls were a deep, midnight charcoal, the furniture all low-profile leather and brushed metal. It was a room designed for a man who didn't want to be found, even when he was at home.I stood in the center of the massive bedroom, clutching a box of my personal sketches. Two footmen were currently moving my clothes into the secondary walk-in closet."Put those in the sitting area," Adrian’s voice came from the doorway. He was leaning against the frame, watching the invasion of his space with a look of guarded neutrality."I can do it," I said, my voice sounding small in the vast room."The staff will handle it. It needs to look lived-in by tonight."I looked at the bed. It was enormous—a California King that could easily fit four people without any of them touching. It was covered in a he
Amara’s POVThe morning after Adrian’s return felt different. The "Grey Wall" of the staff had crumbled, replaced by a frantic, terrifying efficiency. My tea was piping hot at exactly 8:00 AM. My studio was spotless, the stained table polished until it gleamed like a mirror.But the silence that followed was even heavier. I realized that Adrian hadn't just defended me; he had weaponized the house. They didn't respect me more; they just feared him more.I was in my studio, staring at the empty space where the emerald silk had been, when the door opened. Adrian didn't knock. He never did. He stepped inside, looking refreshed in a crisp navy suit, holding a leather-bound folder and a small, magnetic keycard."We need to discuss the boundaries," he said, skipping any greeting."I thought we did that. Article 7, right? No feelings, no babies, no life," I said, not turning away from the window."The media leak changed the parameters. We’re being watched closer than ever. My security team fo
Amara’s POVThe kitchen was silent for exactly three seconds after I walked out, but I felt the heat of their glares on my back like a physical burn. I had drawn a line in the sand, but in a house this large, sand was easily shifted.I returned to my studio to assess the damage. The emerald silk was a total loss. The black ink had blossomed across the fabric like a malignant tumor, seeped into the grain of the fibers, and even stained the wood of the cutting table beneath. It wasn't just an accident; it was a message.You don't belong here.I spent the afternoon scrubbing the table with lemon and salt, my muscles aching, my mind drifting to the fact that I was doing manual labor in a mansion with forty servants. But I didn't want them in here. Not today. Every time I heard a footstep in the hallway, I tensed, expecting another "accident."The Silent TreatmentBy evening, the house had taken on a new, eerie atmosphere. The staff had shifted their tactics. They were no longer late or ru
Amara’s POVThe media interview had been a victory for Adrian Wolfe, the CEO. But for Amara Wolfe, the woman, it was a death sentence. The public might have bought the "fairytale," but the people inside the walls of the Wolfe Mansion knew the price of every brick.And they were determined to make sure I felt the weight of them.It started with the small things. My morning tea, usually brought at 8:00 AM, began arriving at 9:30 AM—lukewarm and bitter. My laundry, which should have been returned to my dressing room, was left in baskets in the hallway for me to carry myself.I was being treated like a guest who had overstayed her welcome, rather than the mistress of the house."Mrs. Gable?" I called out, finding the head housekeeper in the gallery, meticulously dusting a collection of Ming vases.She didn't stop her work. "Yes, Madam?""My studio hasn't been cleaned in three days. There are threads everywhere, and the trash hasn't been emptied."Mrs. Gable finally turned, her eyes cold a
Amara’s POVThe morning of the interview felt like a walk toward a guillotine. The mansion was swarming with people—makeup artists, lighting technicians, and a PR team that looked like they hadn't slept in forty-eight hours.I sat in a velvet chair in the library, staring at my reflection. They had dressed me in a soft, blush-pink silk dress. "Vulnerability," the PR head had told me. "We need you to look like a woman in love, not a woman in a business deal."Adrian walked in, adjusting his cufflinks. He looked effortlessly composed, but the vein pulsing in his jaw told a different story. He dismissed the stylists with a sharp flick of his hand."Are you ready?" he asked, his voice low."I feel like a fraud, Adrian.""We are all frauds, Amara. The difference is how well we sell it." He stepped behind me, his hands resting on my shoulders. I could see us both in the mirror—the powerful billionaire and his delicate bride. It was a perfect picture. It was also a lie. "Remember the story.
Amara’s POVThe platinum watch felt like a shackle. I stared at it as the Rolls-Royce glided through the city streets. Adrian’s world was one of cold surfaces and hidden depths, and I was starting to realize that the "protection" he offered was really just a way to keep his secrets under lock and key.When I arrived back at the mansion, the atmosphere had shifted. The air was thick with a tension that hadn't been there a few hours ago. Thorne was on his phone before the car even came to a complete stop, his face a mask of professional panic."Mrs. Wolfe, please go straight to your room," Thorne said, his voice clipped."What happened? Is it my father?" My heart leaped into my throat."No, Madam. Just... stay away from the television and the internet for the next hour."Of course, that was the one thing I couldn't do.The Digital FirestormI didn't go to my room. I went to the library, the only place I knew had a large screen and felt somewhat isolated from the prying eyes of the staff







