LOGINEmma Chen never wanted to marry a billionaire, especially one that treats love like a burden. But when her terminally ill brother collapses and a single signature on a marriage certificate can save his life, she agrees to Damien Cross’s terms; Contract marriage for one year; Ten million dollars. Most important term of the contract: Do not fall in love. Damien’s family despises her and deems her unworthy. And when Damien gives her a sapphire necklace that vanished the night Katherine Cross died, they show her hell. The stone of the necklace draws stares, silences rooms, and carries a weight Emma can’t explain. And as Damien keeps her at a careful distance, the house closes in around her. Secrets surface. Someone is watching. And the necklace isn’t just a relic of the past…it’s a warning. By the time Emma realizes why she was chosen, it may already be too late.
View MoreTwenty-two years ago
She fell, her silk sleeved hands trying to catch on to the railing. The boy watched in horror as he watched her fall off the balcony, ten floors above the ground. Her long hair whipped across her face, eyes wide with panic, lips shaping into a scream. The impact sent her twisting through the air, crashing against the marble floor. THUD! CRACK! Blood flowed across her chest, spilling over the floor, over the sapphire necklace that gleamed cold against her pale skin, staining lace and silk. He watched as she lay there, a mangled mess, breath shaking as his heart pounded. The room smelled of blood and fear. The sapphire necklace slid free, spinning in crimson, untouchable and gleaming. He stumbled backward, chest heaving, terrified, staring at the woman who had always held him……his mother……lying broken, bleeding, lifeless. He could not move. Could not speak. Could not understand. And across the room he could hear his mother’s whispered last words. “DAMIEN…..RUN…” …………. “Ah! Finally done for today!” Emma Chen said as she added the finishing touch to her painting. Her hand was stained with paint and desperation. She stretched. Then stood up and looked back at her canvas. “I’m so glad I’m done with this painting. Took me ages to complete.” Being a struggling artists was not easy. She had to put up with so many entitled clients. The gallery owner who wanted this painting had been clear that the painting must be ready by Friday or: “You can forget the two grand if it’s even an hour late!” She sighed. She looked around her cramped studio apartment. She dipped her hands in her trousers. Broke. Totally broke. She had been paid on Saturday and now on Tuesday, she had already spent all her money. “I’m tired of living from hand to mouth,” she groaned in frustration. She had nothing. Just paint-stained hands and a headache that wouldn’t quit. Her phone lit up. Tyler, her sickly younger brother with a terminal illness. Fourth message in an hour. She grabbed it, wiping paint on her jeans. “I’m working.” “Em.” His voice sounded wrong. Thin. “I need you at the hospital. Dr. Morrison wants to talk.” The paintbrush hit the floor. “What happened? Did they find a donor?” “Just come. Please.” The line died. Emma caught her reflection in the window. Twenty-six and she looked ancient. So much older than her age. Had dark circles, messy black hair and worn clothes. St. Luke’s Hospital still smelled the same way. The way it had always smelt; of bleach and crushed hope. Emma knew these hallways too well. The nurses nodded as she passed. Tyler’s room was on the cardiac floor, third door on the left. He looked smaller than last week. Paler. Machines beeped around him, trying to keep his heart going just a little longer. “Hey.” Emma forced herself to smile. “What’d the doctor say?” Tyler wouldn’t look at her. “There’s this surgery. Experimental, but it could work.” Emma’s eyes lit up with hope. “That’s amazing! When……” “Five hundred thousand dollars.” The hope died fast. “Insurance won’t cover it,” Tyler continued. “Too new, too risky. But Em, it’s my only shot. Without it, Morrison says I’ve got maybe six months.” Emma sank into the chair by his bed. Five hundred thousand. She made thirty thousand a year juggling three jobs and her painting. She had already spent all her savings. Had sold all her things. They were orphans. Their parents had died eight years ago in a fire accident leaving nothing but debts for them. “We’ll figure it out,” Emma spoke, taking her brother’s cold hand. “I’ll pick up more shifts. Sell some paintings. There’s always a way.” Tyler’s laugh came out bitter. “You’re already killing yourself. I can’t ask for more.” “You’re not asking. I’m your sister.” Evening came and Emma trekked to her workplace. A fancy restaurant that catered to the rich. She didn’t even know why they hired her. Because such restaurants were known for hiring only experienced workers. She’d worked there three years, watching people spend casually what she desperately needed. “Emma, you’re on the Ashford party,” Marco said as she tied her apron. “Twenty guests, private room. Big spenders. Don’t fuck it up.” The Ashford party was already drunk when Emma walked in with champagne. Designer suits, luxury dresses, jewelry that could fund Tyler’s surgery twice over. “More wine.” A woman snapped her fingers without looking up. Emma grabbed the bottle a bit annoyed. She regretted it few seconds later because the action caused the wine to spill out of the bottle. The room went silent. The woman stood, wine dripping, face twisted in rage. “You clumsy idiot! This dress cost eight thousand dollars!” “I’m so sorry……” “Sorry? Do you know who I am?” “Relax, Vanessa.” A male voice cut through the tension, cold and bored. “It’s just a dress.” Emma looked up to see the person. She froze, a blush appearing on her cheeks. “Oh my! Is he human?!” The man was extremely handsome. Talk, dark haired with piercing grey eyes and long lashes. He was so beautiful he took her breath away. Her eyes fell on his suit. Its texture showed that it probably cost years of her rent. “Just a dress?” The woman, Vanessa, whirled on him. “Damien, this is Valentino!” Damien. Emma knew that name. Damien Cross, billionaire CEO, his face on every business magazine in the city. He looked at Emma for the first time. “How much do you make?” “Excuse me?” “Your salary. I know it’s some measly sum but I still want to know.” Emma’s face burned in embarrassment. “That’s none of……” “Humor me.” “Thirty thousand a year.” His lip curled slightly. “Then you just destroyed a quarter of your annual income. Impressive.” Something in Emma snapped. She was done. Done being invisible, done being poor, done with people like him looking through her like she was nothing. “You’re right,” she said. “I can’t replace her dress. I can barely keep my brother alive. But at least I know what things actually cost. At least I’m not so dead inside that I measure everything in dollar signs.” The room went silent. Damien’s eyes narrowed. “Excuse me?” “You heard me. All that money but you can’t even buy basic manners. Fuck off.” She took off her apron and threw it at his feet. “I quit.” She walked out with her head up, even though her hands shook and she’d just lost one of her three jobs. In the employee room, Emma let herself shake. What had she done? Tyler needed that money. She couldn’t afford pride. “Emma Chen?” A woman stood at the door. Auburn hair, green eyes, tight fitted clothes. But most of all, she had a kind face. “What do you want with me?” “Hello. Nice to meet you,” she said, holding out a business card. “Claire Winters. Mr. Cross’s personal assistant.” She smiled, but it didn’t reach her eyes. “He’d like to meet with you tomorrow. Eleven AM, Cross Tower.” Emma stared at the card. “To sue me?” “To make you an offer.” Claire’s smile widened. “Trust me, you’ll want to hear this.“Young Emma arrived at the foundation at six the next morning. She hadn't slept much. She'd lain awake running the timeline in her head, trying to map what they now knew against what they'd believed for years. Every time she thought she had the shape of it, another edge shifted. Catherine Mitchell had been Vivian's ward from 1968. The photograph was dated 1971. Catherine was murdered in 1974. That meant Vivian had controlled her for at least six years before having her killed. Six years was not a transaction. Six years was a system. Gabriel was already at his desk when Young Emma arrived. He had the university copies spread across the conference table and a legal pad filled with notes in his tight, precise handwriting. "How much did you sleep?" Young Emma asked. "Enough," Gabriel said, which meant not at all. "Sit down. There's more." She sat. "The guardianship filing lists a reason," Gabriel said. "Most of these filings from that era don't. But this one does. Catheri
Young Emma was still holding the phone. "A ward," she said. "Not a family member. Not an employee. A ward." "Legal guardianship," Samuel confirmed. "Vivian filed the paperwork through the law firm in the spring of 1968. Catherine is listed only by first name in the initial filing. The surname was redacted in every subsequent document. Someone went through that file deliberately." "Someone paid to have it redacted." "That would be my guess," Samuel said. "I'm trying to find the original unredacted filing but it's going to take time. These records are old and the county archives are not well organized." Young Emma thanked him and ended the call. She sat for a moment in the silence of her office. Then she walked down the hall to Elena's door. Elena looked up and read her face immediately. "Tell me," Elena said. Young Emma told her everything Samuel had found. She watched Elena absorb it the way Elena absorbed all difficult information — quietly, with her hands flat on
Young Emma picked up the photograph with both hands. The building was unmistakable. The arched doorway. The stone steps. The iron railing she passed every morning without thinking about it. This had been a private residence before the foundation acquired it, but she'd never thought to ask who had lived here before. Now she was looking at Vivian standing on those same steps. Younger than any photograph Young Emma had seen of her. Somewhere in her thirties, maybe. Poised and unsmiling in the way of women who'd been taught that smiling was weakness. And beside her, the other woman. Young Emma looked up at David. He was watching her with the careful stillness of someone who had already processed his shock and was now waiting for her to process hers. "Who is she," Young Emma said. It wasn't quite a question. "I don't know her name yet," David said. "But look at the way she's standing." Young Emma looked again. The angle of the jaw. The set of the shoulders. The way the wo
Young Emma was three pages into the program outline when Sophie started crying. She pushed back from her desk, lifted her daughter from the crib, and stood by the window holding her against her chest. The city was quiet at this hour. Streetlights. A delivery truck moving slowly down the block. The kind of stillness that only existed after midnight. Sophie settled within minutes. Young Emma didn't put her back down. She stood there thinking about Samuel's letter. About his point that cycles didn't just travel backward through history. They traveled forward. Every choice made now was being inherited by someone who hadn't been born yet. She looked at Sophie's face. Eyes closed, mouth slightly open, completely unaware of everything her family had done and undone before she arrived. "You don't get to start clean," Young Emma whispered. "None of us do. But you get to start knowing. That's different." She put Sophie down, went back to her desk, and kept writing. By morning sh
Young Emma met with Samuel at the archives where he'd been conducting his research. He had a stack of historical documents related to colonial expansion in New England. "The Morrison family wasn't just affected by violence," Samuel explained. "They perpetrated it. They were colonizers. They d
Young Emma met Vivian's biological mother in a hospice facility. Her name was Caroline Cross. She was ninety-eight years old and barely conscious most of the time. But when Young Emma entered her room, Caroline's eyes opened. "Thank you for coming," Caroline said. Her voice was barely a whi
Young Emma arranged to meet Vivian's last surviving child immediately. Her name was Eleanor. She was seventy-eight years old and had been living in a small town in Montana under an assumed name for fifty years. "I've been watching your foundation's work," Eleanor said when they met. "I've bee
Young Emma met General Richard Cross at the Pentagon. He was a three-star general, impressive and commanding, but with kind eyes. "I've read your work," General Cross said. "I've read about my ancestor. And I've recognized myself in the patterns you've documented." "Tell me," Young Emma sai












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