LOGINI clutched my phone with both hands like it might slip away if I loosened my grip. What had I just agreed to? The words still felt unreal in my mouth: a fake relationship with Adrian Harrington. I’d left his office an hour ago, my mind reeling, and now I paced our tiny living room, wearing a path into the threadbare rug.
My footsteps echoed faintly against the apartment walls. Each pace made my stomach flutter like a trapped bird. My chest tightened, a cocktail of fear, thrill, and something I didn’t want to name.
There was only one person I trusted with something this ridiculous.
“Maya!” I called, my voice high and urgent. “Come here. Now.”
A muffled giggle floated from behind Maya’s bedroom door. “Emergency, or did you finally decide to organize your closet?”
“This is serious!” I snapped, pacing faster.
Seconds later, Maya appeared in the doorway, T-shirt slipping off one shoulder, braid messy, a pen still tucked behind her ear. She looked like chaos in human form—and entirely too amused.
“You look like you swallowed a thunderstorm. Spill.” She plopped onto the couch, eyes gleaming. “If you dragged me here because of a spider, I swear—”
“This is worse than a spider.” I sat across from her, voice hushed, guilty. “I agreed to something stupid.”
Maya leaned forward, eyes widening. “Stupid like you bought a juicer? Or stupid like you sold your soul to the internet?”
“Adrian Harrington,” I blurted, then clapped a hand over my mouth.
Maya froze. “Wait. THE Adrian Harrington? Billionaire, broody, terrifying cheekbones?”
I nodded miserably. “He asked me to… pretend to be his girlfriend. And I said yes.”
The silence lasted a single stunned heartbeat. Then Maya exploded—half laugh, half squeal. “You WHAT?”
“I know, I know—”
“You WHAT?” She threw her arms in the air. “You said YES? To the human embodiment of a stock market crash?”
I buried my face in my hands. “I didn’t plan it. He offered—connections, opportunities, security. For us. And I thought of rent, tuition, groceries, all of it, and—”
Maya slapped her knee dramatically. “This is literally fanfiction. Fake dating the billionaire boss? I’ve read this trope a hundred times!”
“This isn’t a trope, it’s my life!”
She snorted. “Same thing.” But then her humor faded, her expression turning sharp.
“Okay, real question. Are you safe with him? He’s not going to… I don’t know, lock you in a glass tower?”
I rolled my eyes, though the knot in my stomach tightened. “He’s not dangerous, Maya. Just—intense. Calculated.”
“Mm-hm.” She tapped her chin, eyes narrowing. “Promise me something.”
“Anything.”
“Text me every single time he so much as touches your sleeve. If I see one dramatic photo online of his hand near yours, I’ll march to Harrington Enterprises myself and serve him a cease-and-desist for emotional distress.”
Despite myself, I laughed. “Deal.”
Maya smiled, satisfied, and squeezed my hand. “You can do this. Remember when you tried to ‘cook’ spaghetti and almost burned the kitchen down?”
I groaned. “Please don’t remind me.”
“Consider this the same—except now the kitchen is a skyscraper and the spaghetti is a billionaire. And hey—if this comes with free designer dresses, you’d better bring at least one home for me.”
I chuckled weakly, but inside my nerves were a storm. I’d made a decision that couldn’t be undone, and Maya’s joking faith was the only thing keeping me steady.
Across town, Adrian stood by the glass wall of his office, the city lights glinting against his reflection. Marcus lounged at the conference table, arms crossed, grin infuriatingly smug.
“You actually convinced her?” Marcus asked, laughter bubbling.
Adrian adjusted his cufflinks. “Convinced is a strong word.”
Marcus barked a laugh. “Please. What did you do—promise her your private island? Or unleash the legendary Harrington charm? Oh wait—you don’t have any.”
Adrian’s glare was sharp enough to cut glass. “It’s a mutually beneficial agreement.”
“Sure,” Marcus drawled. “Totally business. Not personal at all.” He raised his glass in mock salute. “To fake love stories.”
Adrian didn’t rise to the bait. But Marcus’s next words landed harder.
“Don’t break her.”
Adrian’s hand tightened around his glass, a silent admission he wouldn’t say aloud.
Back at the apartment, Maya had already taken over “training” me. She queued influencer videos on “How to Survive Rich People Spaces” and scribbled a checklist in neon marker:
• Smile like you own it.
I groaned. “You’re ridiculous.”
“And you’re about to step into billionaire territory,” she retorted. “This is survival.”
Despite the sarcasm, I felt lighter. My sister’s absurd loyalty steadied me more than any contract clause.
That night, though, lying in bed, I couldn’t silence the unease. I thought of Adrian’s smirk, of the way he’d looked at me like he was already sure I’d fold. I thought of Maya’s fierce humor, her insistence on being my anchor.
And beneath all of it, a thrill pulsed—dangerous, unwanted, but undeniable. For once, my carefully built world was shifting. And for someone who had spent years trying to hold everything together, that shift felt terrifying and almost… promising.
I grabbed my phone and typed a quick message to Maya: Promise I’ll text if he ever touches my sleeve.
Her reply was instant: I’ll come swinging. Baseball bat ready.
I laughed softly in the dark. Tomorrow, the performance would begin. But tonight, I had Maya’s ridiculous, fearless faith—and that was enough.
Meanwhile, in Harrington Tower, Marcus lingered as Adrian prepared to leave.
“You really think this will work?” Marcus asked lightly.
Adrian didn’t look up. “It has to.”
Marcus’s smirk faded into something sharper. “Careful, my friend. Performances have a way of turning into truths.”
Adrian’s jaw tightened, but he didn’t answer.
The city outside both apartments glittered—half promise, half warning. And as I drifted into uneasy sleep, neither Adrian nor I knew just how quickly the line between pretending and reality was about to blur.
Walter Crane must have slept well that night. I couldn’t imagine a man like him resting without some scheme rattling in his head—plans for collapse, for ruin. When the first light touched the city, his plan hit like an avalanche.I woke to Adrian’s phone vibrating in a rhythm that said panic long before I caught the words. The air felt off—too still, like the city itself was holding its breath. He stood at the window, already dressed, the morning cutting his face into angles sharper than I’d ever seen. He answered call after call without looking at me.“What’s happening?” I pulled my robe tighter, hoping maybe if I clung to something familiar the world would remain steady.His voice had a quiet in it that made my stomach drop. “Stock crash.”My brain lagged. “What do you mean—stock crash?”He turned and I saw the dark that wasn’t in his eyes alone. “Walter Crane orchestrated a leak. Confidential reports, fabricated losses, whispers of fraud. Investors are panicking. Harrington Tower’s
The world outside Harrington Tower looked calm, but inside me, everything was burning. My phone buzzed nonstop—messages, calls, updates from Marcus—but none of it mattered. All I could think about was the way Adrian’s name had flooded the headlines again.Another storm. Another war. Another attempt to break us.I stared at my reflection in the mirror, the woman looking back at me almost unrecognizable. My eyes had dark circles under them; my hair, once perfectly styled, now hung in soft waves around my shoulders. I looked like someone who hadn’t slept in days. And the truth was—I hadn’t.Adrian had been at the tower since dawn, fighting the board and the investors who were ready to gut him alive. Every time I thought things couldn’t get worse, Walter Crane found another way to tighten the knife.Maya’s voice pulled me from my thoughts. “You’re shaking again,” she said softly, holding out a mug of tea.I took it, forcing a smile. “Thank you, baby.”She sat beside me, eyes full of worry
The city looked calm that morning, but I knew better. Storms don’t always start with thunder. Sometimes, they begin with silence—quiet, heavy, suffocating.I woke before dawn, my body aching from exhaustion I couldn’t sleep off. The penthouse was too quiet. Adrian hadn’t come to bed last night. Again. The space beside me was cold, the sheets untouched, as if even rest had become a luxury we couldn’t afford.I made my way downstairs, my robe brushing against the marble floor. The soft hum of the city seeped through the glass walls, distant and uncaring. For a moment, I just stood there, staring at the skyline that once looked like promise. Now it looked like a battlefield.Adrian was already in the study, shirt sleeves rolled up, tie discarded, eyes bloodshot but burning with focus. Papers were scattered across the table like fallen soldiers.“You haven’t slept,” I said quietly.He didn’t look up. “Neither have you.”I took a step closer. “What are you working on now?”“Trying to keep
Walter Crane sat in his office that night, lights dimmed, whiskey in hand. I could almost imagine him there — savoring his next move while the rest of us tried to breathe again. Savannah, no doubt, perched on his desk like she owned the room, scrolling through her phone with that snake-slick smile.“She’s untouchable in the court of sympathy now,” he must’ve muttered, his voice low and bitter.And he was right. For once, the world was starting to see me not as the villain, but as a woman standing her ground. My name was trending with words like bravery and strength instead of scandal. But Walter wasn’t the kind of man who lost gracefully. I knew that too well.Savannah probably leaned forward then, eyes glinting. “If we can’t destroy Elena, we destroy Adrian. Take away her shield, and she’ll crumble on her own.”And that’s exactly what they did.The next morning, I woke to chaos. My phone buzzed nonstop. Notifications exploded one after another. When I opened the first headline, my st
The victory barely lasted three days.I had just begun to breathe again—just started to believe that maybe, just maybe, the world was tilting in my favor—when the headlines hit like knives.“Maya Ramirez: Harrington’s Protected Pet?”“Anonymous Sources Claim Maya Uses Adrian Harrington’s Name for Privilege.”“School Scandal: Did Ramirez Sister Cheat Her Way In?”By noon, my phone wouldn’t stop vibrating. Every article twisted reality until I barely recognized the truth. Each lie was crafted so carefully, like poison meant to sink deep under our skin.When I finally found Maya, she was sitting on the couch, laptop open, eyes wide and glassy. Her hands trembled so hard I thought she’d drop the screen.“They’re calling me a parasite,” she whispered, voice shaking. “They’re saying I don’t deserve to be here.”Something inside me cracked. “Maya, don’t read that garbage. It’s all lies.”But even as I said it, the words felt empty. Because I knew the truth — once lies caught fire online, no
Walter Crane sat in his office, lights dimmed, whiskey glinting in a crystal glass. The faint hum of the city rose from below—cars, sirens, and the occasional echo of life—but inside, everything was still. Power had a sound, and tonight, Walter couldn’t hear it anymore.Savannah perched gracefully on the edge of his desk, her legs crossed, her smile sharpened like a blade. Her phone’s glow reflected off her eyes as she scrolled through the morning headlines—every one of them stamped with the same image. Elena Ramirez: The Woman Who Rose from Scandal.Walter’s jaw flexed. “She’s untouchable now,” he muttered, the words biting. “Every blow we land turns into a badge of sympathy.”“She’s good,” Savannah said lazily, scrolling. “But we’ve been playing the wrong game. You can’t destroy someone the public pities. You destroy the person protecting her. You take down Adrian Harrington, and Elena will collapse on her own.”Walter lifted his eyes, slow and dangerous. “You want to make her bleed







