SINFUL ACQUISITIONS

SINFUL ACQUISITIONS

last updateLast Updated : 2026-04-03
By:  BarryUpdated just now
Language: English
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Mara Kade built her company from the ground up and refuses to lose it again, especially to Adrian Vale, a billionaire known for control. Adrian does not believe in love until Mara becomes the one woman who challenges him. When a high stakes deal pushes them into a contract marriage, they are bound together in both business and private life. What begins as a calculated strategy slowly evolves into tension, attraction, and something deeper. With past lovers resurfacing, hidden manipulation unfolding, and power struggles tightening around them, love becomes the riskiest move of all.

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Chapter 1

Chapter 1

POV: Adrian Vale

“Run it again.”

The analyst’s finger hovered above the keyboard, trembling. “Sir… we’ve run the projections seven times already.”

“I said run it again.”

The boardroom went deathly still. The low, mechanical hum of the air-conditioning suddenly felt too loud. The long mahogany table reflected the cold glow of the projector like a mirror made of ice. No one dared breathe.

The slide refreshed on the sixty-inch screen. Kade Systems appeared in sharp, aggressive red and black. Revenue curves plunging. Key patents exposed. Loyal employees highlighted for elimination. My six-month kill plan laid out in neat, merciless columns.

I stood at the head of the table, arms loose at my sides, the faint scent of polished wood and expensive cologne filling the air. Six months. That was all it would take to swallow Kade Systems whole, gut it, rebrand it, and fold every valuable piece into Vale Capital where it belonged. Mine.

One of the senior executives cleared his throat, the sound brittle in the silence. “That timeline is… aggressive, sir.”

I turned my gaze on him slowly. He shrank back into the leather chair as if I had physically pushed him.

The analyst swallowed hard and continued, voice shaky. “Her past failure five years ago suggests she will break under sustained pressure. After trusting the wrong person, she lost everything. Funding, patents, even her reputation. The pattern indicates—”

The glass door slammed open with a violent crack that echoed like a gunshot through the entire floor.

Every head snapped toward the entrance.

Mara Kade stormed in, heels striking the marble floor like bullets. Two security guards stumbled desperately behind her, one with his sleeve torn at the shoulder, both red-faced and panting as if they had sprinted the length of the corridor. She must have fought her way past reception, past the private elevator, past every protocol I paid millions to enforce.

She didn’t slow. She didn’t apologize. She didn’t even glance at the guards.

Her eyes locked first on the glowing screen.

Then on the executives.

Then on me.

“Stop.”

Her single word cracked through the room, sharper than the door had.

No one moved.

Mara marched forward without hesitation, snatched the remote from the center of the table, and clicked it hard. The screen went instantly black, plunging the room into sudden, uneasy shadow.

The executive closest to her shot to his feet, chair rolling backward. “What the hell do you think you’re doing? This is a private meeting!”

She didn’t spare him a glance. “What does it look like?”

I stepped forward slowly, rounding the end of the long table, my pulse giving one unexpected kick before I locked it down. This was not how anyone ever entered my building. Let alone my boardroom.

“This is a private meeting, Miss Kade,” I said, voice calm but edged with steel.

“And that,” she jabbed a finger toward the darkened screen, “is my company. My people. My blood on those charts you were dissecting like corpses.”

A junior analyst dropped his pen. It clattered across the polished mahogany and rolled off the edge, the sound absurdly loud. Someone else shifted uncomfortably, the leather creaking.

Mara turned to face the entire room, chin lifted, shoulders squared beneath her tailored black blazer. Her dark hair was pulled back tightly, not a strand out of place, yet she looked like she had just walked off a battlefield.

“All of you sitting here like this is just numbers on a spreadsheet. You’re planning to fire the engineers who stayed with me when we had nothing. No funding, no safety net, no investors who believed. When the banks laughed us out of the room. When I had to choose between paying salaries or keeping the lights on. And you think I’m going to let you carve us up like meat?”

Her voice remained controlled, but underneath it burned something raw and dangerous. I could see the faint tremble in her fingers where she still gripped the remote, the only crack in her armor.

I moved closer, close enough to catch the sharp citrus edge of her perfume cutting through the room’s sterile air. “You are a target, Miss Kade.”

She pivoted fully to me now. Our eyes locked across the narrow space that remained between us.

“I am not a target,” she said, voice low and steady. “I am competition.”

The air thickened. The room felt smaller, hotter, the walls pressing in. For the first time in years, the carefully scripted meeting had slipped entirely out of my control, and the sensation was unsettling.

“You don’t have the structure or the capital to survive what’s coming,” I told her flatly.

“You’re wrong.”

“No,” I replied, taking another deliberate step. “I’m informed.”

She didn’t retreat. Not even an inch. Her heels stayed planted, spine straight, gaze unflinching. Up close, I could see the gold flecks in her brown eyes and the faint flush of adrenaline on her cheeks.

“You studied my past,” she said quietly, each word precise. “But you don’t understand it.”

“I understand failure.”

Her eyes flashed with something fierce. “That wasn’t failure. That was betrayal.”

The words landed heavier than they should have. For half a second, something shifted inside my chest. Not pity, but a dangerous spark of recognition. I pushed it down immediately, burying it beneath layers of ice.

“And yet you still lost everything,” I pressed.

“I rebuilt everything,” she shot back without hesitation. No tremor. No doubt. Just raw, unshakable truth.

“You think that makes you strong?”

“I know it does.”

Most people would have dropped their gaze by now, would have started calculating how to retreat gracefully. Mara Kade did neither. She held my stare like a challenge, like a dare.

The tension in the room was electric, crackling between us. I could hear the faint, rapid beat of my own pulse in my ears.

“Everyone out,” I ordered, voice low but carrying absolute finality.

Chairs scraped back instantly. Papers rustled in hurried hands. Footsteps hurried toward the door in a disorganized wave. The two security guards lingered for a split second at the threshold, eyes wide, but one sharp look from me sent them vanishing, pulling the heavy door shut with a soft, final click.

Silence descended.

Now it was only the two of us.

Mara crossed her arms, head tilted slightly, studying me with the same intensity I was studying her. “You like control.”

“Yes.”

“You think you can control me too.”

The corner of my mouth twitched despite myself. “Yes.”

She let out a soft, dangerous laugh that sent an unexpected ripple down my spine. “That’s your first mistake.”

I studied her, really studied her. The way her pulse jumped visibly at the base of her throat despite the calm mask she wore. The way her fingers tightened on her arms. The way she stood as if she owned the building and everything in it.

“You walked into my headquarters uninvited,” I said, voice dropping lower. “Interrupted my team. Challenged me in front of my executives. Security had to chase you down the corridor like a common intruder.”

“And you planned to take everything I built,” she countered, stepping closer now so we were barely two feet apart. “That’s not business. That’s theft dressed up as strategy. That’s control for the sake of control.”

We stood there, neither of us yielding, neither looking away. The air between us felt charged, almost tangible. Her perfume wrapped around me again, expensive, furious, impossible to ignore.

“You’re not afraid,” I murmured.

“I am,” she answered without hesitation.

That surprised me more than the door slamming open had.

“But I’m not weak,” she added, her voice softer now, yet somehow even sharper, cutting straight through the layers I kept around myself.

Something about those words landed deeper than they should have. A hairline fracture in the ice I had maintained for years. I felt it. And I hated that I felt it.

“You will lose,” I told her, stepping that final inch closer.

“Not to you.”

I held her gaze, close enough now to see the faint rise and fall of her chest, close enough to feel the heat radiating from her body.

“This isn’t over,” I said quietly.

“I know.”

Her voice had gone quieter, but it carried no surrender, only a clear, dangerous awareness of the storm we had both just stepped into willingly.

She turned on her heel and walked toward the door, every step deliberate, spine straight, unshaken. The sharp click of her heels echoed in the empty room.

“Mara.”

She paused, hand resting on the brushed-steel handle, but she didn’t turn around.

“This ends one way,” I continued, my voice steady despite the unfamiliar tightness in my chest. “With me in control.”

She finally glanced back over her shoulder. For a single, suspended heartbeat, something deeper flashed in her eyes. Not fear. Not simple anger.

Something far more dangerous.

“We’ll see,” she said.

Then she was gone.

The door clicked shut behind her with merciless finality.

The silence that followed felt heavier than any silence I had ever known. Unfinished. Charged. Alive with possibilities I had not planned for.

I stared at the black screen for a long moment. The numbers, the projections, the neat columns, they no longer mattered.

My phone lit up on the table beside me.

Richard: Proceed aggressively.

I read the message once. Then again. I looked at the door she had just walked through. Then back at the file that flickered back to life on the screen.

Mara Kade.

Not predictable.

Not controllable.

And that made her a problem.

Or something far worse.

Because for the first time in years…

I was not completely certain how this would end.

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