MasukThe tension in the limousine didn't fade; it solidified into an icy, suffocating wall between them.
Alexander’s hand lingered on her jaw for one more terrifying second, his thumb brushing against her skin before he suddenly pulled away. He leaned back into the shadows of the plush leather seat, his face turning toward the rain-streaked window. He didn't say another word for the rest of the ride, leaving Vivian to listen to the frantic beating of her own heart. When they arrived back at the estate, Vivian practically fled the car. She hurried up the grand marble staircase, her heels clicking loudly in the quiet house, and didn't stop until she was safely inside her private quarters with the heavy double doors shut tight behind her. She stripped off the heavy navy gown, throwing it onto a chair as if it were a poisonous snake, and washed the heavy makeup from her face. Staring into the bathroom mirror, she looked at her real self—tired, pale, and thoroughly terrified. "The birthmark," she whispered, her fingers tracing the smooth, unblemished skin just below her left collarbone. Valerie had a crescent-shaped birthmark there. If Chloe noticed it was missing in a dimly lit restroom, it was only a matter of time before Alexander noticed it too. They were living in the same house. Summer was approaching. She couldn't wear high-collared coats and scarves forever. Vivian walked over to the vanity table where her sister's belongings were scattered. She opened a small, black velvet cosmetic bag Valerie had hidden in the bottom of the luggage. Inside, beneath several expensive lipsticks, her fingers brushed against something hard and metallic. A tattoo stencil kit. And a small vial of dark, semi-permanent cosmetic ink. Vivian poured the contents onto the table. There was a handwritten note from Valerie crushed at the bottom: In case you need to touch up the cover-up. Don't ruin this. Valerie hadn't forgotten the birthmark; she had assumed Vivian would use the specialized waterproof makeup kit left in the penthouse. But Vivian had been rushed out by Uncle Richard before she could grab it. Looking at the stencil, Vivian made a desperate decision. She couldn't rely on makeup that could smudge during a sudden downpour or a confrontation with Alexander. She needed something more durable. Taking a deep breath, she cleaned the skin over her collarbone, aligned the stencil, and carefully applied the dark cosmetic ink. It wasn't a real tattoo, but the high-grade pigment would stain the top layer of her skin for at least two to three weeks before fading. It stung slightly as it dried, darkening into a perfect, deceptive crescent moon. Just as she finished recapping the vial, a sharp, heavy knock rattled her bedroom door. Vivian’s heart leaped into her throat. She quickly shoved the ink and stencil into a drawer, throwing a silk robe over her shoulders and tying it tightly around her waist. She opened the door. Alexander stood in the hallway. He had changed into a dark gray cashmere sweater, his hair slightly damp as if he had just run his hands through it. In his right hand, he held a manila folder. His eyes dropped to the collar of her robe, then rose back to her face, heavy with suspicion. "We need to talk," he said, stepping past her into the room without waiting for an invitation. Vivian closed the door slowly, keeping her back to it. "It's late, Alexander. Can't this wait until morning?" "No," he said, tossing the manila folder onto her bed. "My security team just finished a sweep of the perimeter. Thomas reported that when he picked you up from your uncle's penthouse this morning, you weren't carrying the designer luggage set I personally bought for you last week. You had two worn, vintage leather bags." He walked over to the closet, throwing the door open to reveal the rows of immaculate, expensive dresses. Then, his eyes locked onto the corner of the closet where her old, battered suitcases sat. "Valerie Vance doesn't keep junk," Alexander said, turning around to face her, his voice dangerously calm. "She gets rid of last season's items the moment a new trend arrives. Yet, you insisted to Mrs. Gable that these specific bags were 'irreplaceable.' Why?" Vivian felt the ice closing in around her again. Every single detail was a landmine. "They belonged to my mother," Vivian said, the truth slipping out before she could stop it. Her voice carried a sudden, genuine note of sorrow that made Alexander pause. "She gave them to me before she passed. Even someone as materialistic as you think I am can have a sentimental attachment, Alexander." Alexander studied her expression, his eyes tracking the raw emotion in her face. The harshness in his gaze softened by a fraction of a millimeter, replaced by a strange, quiet confusion. "Your mother died five years ago," he said slowly, stepping closer to her. "You never mentioned her once during our initial meetings. In fact, your uncle told me you refused to attend her memorial because it conflicted with a fashion show in Paris." Vivian bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted copper. God, Valerie was a monster. "I was young, selfish, and drowning in regret," Vivian lied, forcing her voice to turn cold and defensive. "People grow up, Alexander. Or are you going to penalize me for developing a conscience now?" Alexander stopped just two feet away from her. The scent of cedarwood and expensive scotch drifted from him, wrapping around her senses. He reached out, his long fingers suddenly grasping the lapel of her silk robe. Vivian froze, her breath catching in her throat. With a slow, deliberate movement, he pulled the silk fabric slightly to the side, his eyes dropping toward her left collarbone. He was looking for the flaw. He was testing the theory he had formed while watching her in the mirror at the gala. There, resting perfectly against her pale skin, was the dark, crescent-shaped mark. Alexander’s thumb brushed directly over the stain. The ink held, completely dry and unmoving beneath his touch. His grey eyes narrowed slightly, staring at the mark for a long, silent moment. He had expected it to be missing. He had expected to catch her in a lie. "Is there a problem, husband?" Vivian asked, her voice a whispered challenge, though her knees felt like water. Alexander slowly let go of her robe, stepping back. The frustration returned to his features, darker this time. He didn't like being wrong, and every instinct he possessed told him something was fundamentally altered about the woman standing before him, yet the physical evidence refused to align with his suspicions. "Tomorrow evening, we have a private dinner with my grandfather," Alexander said, his voice returning to its iron, corporate tone. "He is the one who holds the shares to the company. If he suspects for a single second that this marriage is a sham, the deal is off. Sleep well, Valerie. You'll need your wits about you." He turned and walked out, the heavy mahogany door clicking shut behind him. Vivian sank to the floor, her hands shaking violently as she pressed them against her face. She had survived tonight by the skin of her teeth, but the circle was tightening. Alexander was watching her every move, and the real test hadn't even begun.The lock on the connecting door didn't click open again for four days.During that time, the eastern wing of the Vance estate became a luxurious vacuum. Fresh meals appeared on the silver cart in the small dining alcove three times a day, brought by silent staff members who kept their eyes strictly on the polished floorboards. Vivian’s phone remained dead, its signal completely jammed by the security node Alexander had activated in the hallway ceiling. The only window to the outside world was the massive balcony overlooking the manicured, rain-drenched gardens, where two black-suited security guards stood at the perimeter gates like stone sentinels.Vivian spent the ninety-six hours pacing the perimeter of the silk rugs, her mind frantic. Her only anchor to reality was the memory of Leo. Without a phone, she had no way of checking if the initial slice of the wire transfer had reached the hospital’s accounting department before Alexander flagged the accounts. If her uncle’s greed had c
The victory celebration lasted long into the midnight hours, but for Vivian, the champagne tasted like battery acid.They returned to the estate in a silence so dense it felt physical. Alexander didn't touch her, didn't look at her, and didn't offer a single word as they climbed the grand staircase. The moment the heavy double doors of her suite closed, Vivian stripped off the emerald gown, scrubbed the heavy cosmetics from her skin until her face burned, and collapsed into bed. She expected sleep to rescue her from the exhaustion of the trial, but her mind remained a chaotic trap, replaying the fraction of a second when Alexander’s lips had brushed her cheek under the camera flashes.By 3:00 AM, the silence of the mansion was shattered.A violent, rhythmic pounding vibrated through the mahogany door connecting her room to Alexander’s private wing. Vivian bolted upright, her heart hammering against her ribs. Before she could throw her silk robe over her shoulders, the brass deadbolt c
The morning sun offered no warmth as it sliced through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the master suite. It simply highlighted the dust motes dancing in the heavy, silent air. Vivian hadn't slept. She had spent the remaining hours of the night pacing the hardwood floor, her mind replaying the raw fury in Alexander’s eyes and the terrifying heat of his touch against her jaw.She stood in her expansive walk-in closet, staring blankly at the rows of designer clothes. Tonight was the final corporate board vote that would secure Alexander’s chairmanship—the very reason this entire charade existed. The pressure was mounting, a suffocating weight that made it hard to draw a full breath.Needing to ground herself, Vivian bypassed the glamorous silks and pulled out a simple, oversized cream knit sweater and a pair of dark trousers. She left her hair down, letting the natural waves fall past her shoulders, and wore absolutely no makeup. For a few hours, she needed to feel less like the ghost of
The ancestral estate of Arthur Vance looked less like a home and more like a fortress carved from granite and history. Situated on a secluded hillside far from the modern glass towers of the city, it was surrounded by ancient oaks that cast long, twisted shadows across the gravel driveway. This was where the Vance dynasty had begun, and it was where the true power still resided.Vivian sat in the back of the town car, her hands clasped so tightly in her lap that her fingernails bit into her palms. Tonight, she wore a high-necked, long-sleeved dress of deep burgundy velvet. It was a choice born of survival; the high collar completely obscured the cosmetic crescent moon on her collarbone, eliminating at least one catastrophic risk.Beside her, Alexander was a statue of quiet tension. His tailored charcoal suit was immaculate, his tie knotted with geometric perfection. Throughout the forty-minute drive, he had done nothing but review financial documents on his tablet, completely ignoring
The tension in the limousine didn't fade; it solidified into an icy, suffocating wall between them.Alexander’s hand lingered on her jaw for one more terrifying second, his thumb brushing against her skin before he suddenly pulled away. He leaned back into the shadows of the plush leather seat, his face turning toward the rain-streaked window. He didn't say another word for the rest of the ride, leaving Vivian to listen to the frantic beating of her own heart.When they arrived back at the estate, Vivian practically fled the car. She hurried up the grand marble staircase, her heels clicking loudly in the quiet house, and didn't stop until she was safely inside her private quarters with the heavy double doors shut tight behind her.She stripped off the heavy navy gown, throwing it onto a chair as if it were a poisonous snake, and washed the heavy makeup from her face. Staring into the bathroom mirror, she looked at her real self—tired, pale, and thoroughly terrified."The birthmark," s
The grand ballroom of the Grand Hyatt was a sea of shifting silk, diamonds, and the low, synchronized murmur of the city’s elite. Crystal chandeliers hung low from the vaulted ceilings, casting a sharp, unforgiving light over the guests. For the high-society crowd, tonight’s charity gala wasn't about philanthropy—it was the official debut of the new Mrs. Vance.Vivian gripped the small silk clutch in her hand until her knuckles turned white.Beside her, Alexander stood like an iron pillar. His hand was resting firmly on the small of her back, his fingers warm through the thin fabric of her backless, navy blue gown. To anyone watching, it was a gesture of possessive affection. To Vivian, it felt exactly like a handler holding a captive. His grip tightened slightly every time a photographer walked past, a silent command to smile."Keep your shoulders back, Valerie," Alexander murmured smoothly, his lips barely moving as he nodded toward a group of approaching executives. "You’re represe







