Masuk“This is a marriage of convenience. I just need you to be my wife for a year. That’s it. Nothing more, nothing less.” One year. No strings attached. Just a deal—until love changes everything. Isayanna Romero, desperate to save her grandmother, turns to her boss, Jaydon Alexander Grey, a billionaire Mafia boss who swore off love. Their marriage of convenience sparks a passion neither expected. When the year ends, will they walk away… or will the tiny seed of life growing inside her bring them back together?
Lihat lebih banyakIsayanna
I bite my lower lip until it stings, staring at the high-resolution photo of Jaydon Alexander Grey on my laptop screen. He looks perfect. Cold. Untouchable. I let out a jagged breath and spin my chair away from the desk, my tiny office suddenly feeling like a cage.
Julie’s voice echoes in my head, raw and suggestive.
"Men like Jaydon don’t give charity, Isayanna. They make trades. If you want that money for your grandma, stop acting like his assistant and start acting like his weakness. Find out what he wants in the dark, and give it to him."
The thought makes my palms slick with sweat. Just thinking about asking him for help—or offering 'that' kind of trade—makes my heart hammer against my ribs.
Jaydon isn't the type to offer a helping hand. He’s the type to freeze the blood in your veins with a single look. I can still feel the burn in my chest from yesterday when he snapped at me for being clumsy. My cheeks flush at the memory of his eyes tracking me as I scrambled on the floor. He probably thinks I’m a joke.
I twist a strand of black hair around my finger, my heart aching as I think of Grandma. The doctor’s words are a heavy weight in my pocket. She needs that surgery. If I don’t get this money, I’m watching her die in slow motion.
I close my eyes, trying to find some courage, but my mind slips back to last weekend. Julie took me to that club to "practice" her advice. I found a guy with a sharp jawline and a designer shirt, someone I thought I could handle. Then he opened his mouth.
He wanted me to get on my knees right there in the middle of the crowded club.
The memory makes my stomach churn. The way he looked at me, like I was a convenience, makes me want to scrub my skin raw. He wasn't the answer. He was just trash.
But Jaydon... Jaydon is different. He’s a king, and if I’m going to sell my soul to save Grandma, I’d rather sell it to a king than a peasant.
The sharp buzz of the intercom makes me jump. I hit the button with a shaky hand.
"Ms. Romero," Jaydon’s voice pulses through the speaker. It’s deep, smooth, and carries an authority that makes my thighs press together instinctively.
"Yes, sir," I say, trying to keep the tremble out of my voice.
"My office. Now."
The line goes dead.
This is it. I’m going to do it. I’m going to lay it all out and pray he has a heart buried somewhere under that three-piece suit. Because if he says no, the only other person I can turn to is George Almero, and that’s a nightmare I’m not ready to survive.
I grab my notebook and head down the hall. The click of my heels against the floor sounds like a countdown. When I brought him his coffee this morning, he didn't even look at me. Now, my skin is prickling with a weird, restless energy as I reach his door.
I knock. Once. Twice.
"Come in."
The room is huge, but with him in it, there’s no oxygen left. Jaydon is hunched over his desk, his brow furrowed as he scribbles on a document. The hum of his laptop is the only sound in the suffocating silence. He doesn't look up, so I just stand there, clutching my notebook against my chest like armor. My heart is thudding so hard I’m sure he can hear it.
"Take a seat," he says without glancing up.
I slide into the chair opposite him, feeling small.
"Vincent Piatriz sent an email," he says, his voice clipping every word like a blade. "You didn't give me a heads-up."
My stomach drops. I was so busy staring at his photo, trying to build up the nerve to follow Julie’s lead, that I completely missed it.
"I... I must have overlooked it," I stammer. I can feel the heat climbing up my neck, staining my skin. "It won't happen again."
Jaydon stops writing. He narrows his eyes, letting the silence stretch until I feel like I’m going to snap. His gaze drops to my mouth, then back up to my eyes.
"I checked the inbox before I left Saturday," I add quickly, my hands shaking so much I have to hide them under the desk. "It must have come in this morning."
He leans back in his leather chair. His posture is relaxed now, which is somehow even more intimidating. He looks at me the way a predator looks at something it’s about to break.
"Have you been in your office today?" he asks.
"Yes. I have."
"So," he says, his voice dropping into a casual, low tone that sends a shiver straight down my spine. "What have you been up to?"
The silence in the room isn't heavy like usual. It’s thick. Jaydon isn’t snapping at me or making some biting comment about my incompetence. He’s just watching.
Is this a trap?
I shift my weight, wondering if I should bring up Grandma now or wait until I prove I can actually do my job.
"Here. Take this." He slides a thick manila folder across the mahogany desk.
I reach for it, my fingers grazing the smooth cardstock. "Take a look at the mail before you touch this. Sort them alphabetically and get a reply out. I need this file back on my desk by noon."
"Yes, sir," I whisper, hugging the folder to my chest like a shield.
"Cool." He gives a short nod, already looking back at his screen. "You're good to go."
I should move. My brain tells my legs to walk, but I stay rooted to the carpet. My teeth sink into my lower lip. If I walk out that door, the courage Julie fueled in me will evaporate.
"What?" He doesn't look up, but his pen stops moving. "You still here, Romero?"
"S-sorry," I stammer. I turn for the door, but my feet feel like they’re stuck in drying cement.
"Wait."
His voice is a low vibration that stops me dead. I close my eyes for a second, inhaling the scent of his expensive cologne and cold air conditioning. 'Do it for Grandma. Just say it.'
I turn back, my head bobbing in a nervous nod. "Sir, I... there's something I need to ask."
The room goes dead quiet.
Jaydon drops his pen. He props his chin on his linked fingers, his sharp eyes pinning me to the spot. He doesn't say a word. The stillness is terrifying. It makes the blood rush in my ears, a frantic, steady rhythm.
"I need a favor," I force out. My voice cracks, sounding small and desperate in the vast office. "My grandma needs surgery. For her legs. The doctor says we need thirty-five thousand dollars."
His dark brows twitch upward. A flash of genuine surprise breaks through his mask before he shuts it down.
"Thirty-five?" He leans forward, his shadow stretching across the desk. "You’re asking for an entire year’s salary in advance?"
The way he says it makes my stomach turn. It sounds like a fortune when he puts it like that. It sounds impossible. I nod anyway, feeling the heat of humiliation crawling up my neck.
He leans back, tilting his head as he studies me. His gaze travels slowly from my messy hair down to my shaking hands, then back to my eyes. It feels like he’s stripping away every lie I’ve ever told myself. The silence stretches until it feels like a noose tightening around my throat.
Then, his voice cuts the tension. "Sure. I’ll give it to you."
My heart leaps. The relief is so violent I almost lose my balance. A sob of pure joy bubbles up in my throat and I can’t stop the massive, shaky grin from breaking across my face.
"Thank you! Thank you so much, sir! You have no idea... I’ll work every hour, I’ll do anything, I—"
"But."
The word is a cold bucket of water. I freeze. My pulse spikes, moving from relief to a sharp, jagged dread. There is always a catch.
Jaydon’s face is a blank slate, his expression unreadable and dark.
"I want you to be my wife, Ms. Romero."
He says it with the same casual tone he’d use to order a black coffee.
The air leaves my lungs. I feel like I’ve been hit by a freight train. My brain stutters, trying to process the sounds coming out of his mouth. 'Wife?'
"W-what?" I choke out.
"You heard me," he says, leaning back into his leather chair, looking every bit the predator Julie warned me about. "It’s only for a year."
"Wait... what?" I repeat it like a broken record. I can't help it. My jaw is literally hanging open.
He just stares back at me, unfazed, his eyes dark and hungry. I came in here begging for a loan, and I just got a marriage proposal from the devil himself.
JaydonAfter falling for the third time, I was finally escorted out of the delivery ward where Isayanna had been taken. My legs felt like jelly, and my mind was a chaotic mess. I could not tell if I was trembling from exhaustion or from the sheer weight of everything happening around me. My heart pounded so hard it felt like it might burst out of my chest, and my brain spun with a thousand thoughts, each one more frantic than the last.The anticipation was unbearable. It was slowly killing me. I could not decide which was worse—falling unconscious again or being left in this agonizing limbo, wondering if Isayanna was okay, if she was pushing through the pain, if our baby was safe. The uncertainty was a heavy chain around my neck, pulling me deeper into a sea of fear and doubt.I could not bear the thought of fate repeating itself. I needed both mother and child to be okay. I was not sure I could survive another tragedy. Isayanna meant everything to me, and now, so did this baby. They
Isayanna When Jaydon and I stepped inside his parents’ mansion, the sounds of life immediately wrapped around us. Cries, giggles, adult laughter, and the hum of conversation spilled out from the dining room, creating a chaotic yet warm symphony. The noise was both comforting and overwhelming, like walking into a family reunion where everyone was already in full swing. I could not help but feel a little out of place, like I was intruding on a moment I had not fully earned the right to be part of.The mansion itself was just as I remembered it—grand, imposing, and filled with history. The old furnishings stood proudly alongside more modern touches, creating a strange but beautiful blend of eras. Tall chandeliers hung from the ceiling, their crystals catching the light and scattering it across the room like tiny stars. The walls were adorned with beautiful paintings, each one telling a story I could only guess at. It was the kind of home that felt more like a museum, a place where every
Isayanna Pretending has never been easy for me. It is not something that comes naturally, not something I have ever been good at. But Jaydon taught me how to pretend. He taught me how to fake it, how to mask my feelings, how to bury everything deep inside until it felt like I was someone else entirely. He showed me how to act like I do not feel anything for him anymore. But I do. Yes, I still do. And yet, I rejected him. I said no as he knelt on the floor, holding a diamond ring in his trembling hands, promising me forever. It was not because I do not love him. I do. I love him so much it hurts, so much it feels like my chest might split open sometimes. But I turned him down because I still have doubts. I refused him because I need time—time to figure out if this is real, if this is true, if this is something that will last. I need to know if his feelings for me will change, if they will fade, if they will disappear like they did before. The first time, I made the mistake of r
Jaydon The drive to the lakehouse is completely silent. At one point, I glance over at Isayanna and notice she is not just silent but also nodding off, her head tilted slightly against the window. She looks peaceful, unaware of where we are headed or what this trip might mean. I wonder if she even realizes we are on our way to the lake cottage. Her breathing is soft, rhythmic, and for a moment, I let myself imagine that things between us are as they used to be—simple, easy, and full of trust. But that is just a fantasy, and I know it.When I decided to miss work today, I told myself it would be worth it. I showed up at her place unannounced, something I rarely do, and told her I wanted to take her somewhere. She hesitated, her eyes narrowing with suspicion, but she agreed. I could tell she was reluctant, but I also noticed something else—something that gave me a flicker of hope. Isayanna seemed… calmer. The raw edges of her anger, the desperation, the betrayal, and the frustration th












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