LOGINThe headquarters of the Blackwood empire rose above the city like a monolith of glass and cold ambition. Ava smoothed her skirt as she stepped into the lobby, Upstairs, the secretary didn’t bother with a polite smile, she offered a look that suggested Ava was something the janitor had failed to scrub off the floor.
"Mr. Blackwood is expecting you," the woman said, gesturing toward the door. Ava pushed them open. The office was cavernous, smelling of expensive tobacco and old money. Dominic was already there, pacing the length of the Persian rug like a caged animal. The moment he saw her, he stopped dead, his face contorting into a mask of pure anger. "What the hell are you doing here?" he barked, his voice echoing off the high ceilings. "Dominic, sit down and mind your manners," George said from behind his massive desk. He didn't look up from the file he was reading, but his tone brook no argument. He gestured to the empty chair beside Dominic. "Sit, Ava. Thank you for coming." Ava took her seat with practiced modesty, her ankles crossed, her hands resting in her lap. She offered George a small, tentative smile. "Of course, Mr. Blackwood." George closed the file and leaned forward, his eyes moving between his son’s simmering rage and Ava’s quiet composure. "I’ve spent the night thinking about the incident on the balcony. My family’s reputation is built on a specific standard of conduct. What happened last night—what my son did to you—cannot be undone, but it can be rectified." Dominic scoffed, leaning back and crossing his arms. "Rectified? I told you, she’s a—" "I’ve decided," George interrupted, his voice dropping, "that the only way to salvage this situation and protect this young woman’s honor is for the two of you to marry." The silence that followed was deafening. Ava let out a sharp, audible gasp, her hand flying to her throat. Dominic, however, didn't just speak, he exploded out of his chair. "Never," he spat. "You’ve lost your mind. I am not marrying a woman who practically fell out of the sky to ruin my life." "Then you’ll lose the company," George said calmly. "If you can’t show the basic restraint and responsibility required to lead this family, I’ll hand the keys to Silas. He’s been looking for an excuse to step up, hasn’t he?" Dominic’s face went pale, then a dangerous shade of red. "You’re blackmailing me? Over a girl who probably orchestrated the whole thing?" "I am holding you accountable for assaulting a guest and stealing her innocence," George countered, his eyes hardening. "Ava told me herself—you took her first kiss. You took something she was saving for her husband. So, you will be that husband." "I didn't touch her!" Dominic roared, slamming his fist onto the desk. Ava looked between them, her bottom lip trembling. "Please," she whispered, her voice small and breaking. "Mr. Blackwood, I don’t want to be the cause of a war between you. If he hates me this much... maybe the wedding shouldn't happen. I’ll just go. I’ll try to forget." "No," George said, his gaze softening as it landed on her. "You shouldn't have to forget. You deserve a man who takes responsibility. The wedding will be announced by the end of the week. Dominic, I suggest you start getting to know your fiancée. You’re dismissed." Dominic didn't say another word. He turned on his heel and stormed out, the door slamming behind him with a force that rattled the windows. George sighed, rubbing his temples. "I apologize for his temper, Ava. He’ll come around once he realizes I’m not joking. Are you truly alright with this?" Ava nodded pitifully, dabbing at a dry eye. "If you think it’s best, sir. I just want to do the right thing." "You’re a good girl. I’ll have my driver take you home." "Oh, no," Ava said quickly, standing up. "That’s not necessary. I have a few errands to run nearby. I’d prefer the walk to clear my head." George nodded, distracted by a ringing phone. "Very well. We’ll speak soon." Ava exited the office, her heart racing. She made it to the elevator and pressed the button for the lobby, watching the floor numbers count down. 12... 11... 10... The elevator jolted to a stop at the sixth floor. The doors slid open, and before she could even see who was standing there, a hand shot in, grabbed her arm, and jerked her out into a deserted hallway. She was shoved into a darkened conference room, the door clicking shut behind her. A large hand clamped over her mouth, pinning her against the wall. "What is your game?" Dominic hissed, his face inches from hers. His scent—expensive cologne and cold anger, clouded her senses. He let go of her mouth but kept her pinned with his body. "What are you after? Money? The Blackwood name or me?" "I’m not after anything," Ava gasped, trying to shove him back, though he was like a brick wall. "I was invited there. You’re the one who cornered me on the balcony." "And you lied to my father’s face," he countered, his grip on her shoulders tightening. "That I kissed you ? Give me a break. Why the hell would you say that?" Ava straightened her posture as much as she could, her eyes flashing with a sudden, sharp light. "Because your father was standing right there, What was I supposed to say? 'Oh, don't worry, your son was just being a prick and pinning me to the wall for fun'? I had to protect my reputation. He would have thought I was some wh@re who threw herself at you." Dominic’s lip curled. "Aren't you?" The slap echoed through the room before he could even blink. Dominic’s head snapped to the side, his hand flying to his jaw. He looked back at her, his eyes dark with a promise of violence. "You little—," he whispered. "Don't ever call me that," she fired back, her breath coming in hot bursts. "And don't think you can scare me." Dominic stepped even closer, his height looming over her, cutting off the air. "Go back in there. Tell him you lied. Tell him you want out, or I will make every single day you spend in my house a living hell. You won't see a dime of my money, and you won't see a second of my respect. I can’t even give you the world nor the stars." Ava didn't flinch. She leaned in, her nose almost touching his. "I don't need anything from you, Dominic." She let a slow, lethal smirk spread across her face. "You can’t give me the stars you say? But I promise I can make you see stars, right here right now." Dominic’s eyes dropped to her lips, his pulse visible in the vein of his neck. His hand moved from the wall to her jaw, his thumb digging into her chin to force her gaze up. "You’re so bold. Too bold. Since you’ve already told the world I took your first kiss," he growled, his voice a low, gravelly threat, "I might as well make sure the lie is based on some truth." Before she could scream or mock him, he crashed his mouth against hers.“He shouldn't be able to get out of bed for at least a month or two,” Dominic said, turning on his heel toward the heavy oak door.“Hey! You said you'd let me go!” Silas’s voice cracked, a desperate, raw sound that bounced uselessly off the dry stone walls.Dominic paused, his coat swirling around his ankles, though he did not grant the man the satisfaction of a backward glance. “I never said I would release you, Silas. I said I would consider it.” He adjusted his cuffs, his movements deliberate. “I did. And I have come to the conclusion that a man who flings himself about like a petulant child requires a disciplined hand to correct his course, lest he ruin himself entirely.”He stepped out into the corridor, closing the door firmly behind him. Silas’s muffled cries of agony bled through the wood, but Dominic felt entirely hollow, an icy numbness settling deep into his bones. The sound of his own breathing felt detached, distant.The words he had received earlier echoed like a cruel,
The days that followed blurred together into a whirlwind of preparations. Ava barely recognized her own life anymore.From sunrise until evening, she was shuffled from one appointment to another by an army of planners, designers, caterers, and consultants who all seemed determined to create the perfect wedding.She tasted cakes until sugar coated the back of her throat, sampled wines she couldn't remember the names of, approved floral arrangements, rejected table settings.Selected invitations.Tried on gowns.Then tried on more gowns.And then even more gowns.At some point, the entire process stopped feeling real. It felt as though her body belonged to someone else.Someone who deserved a second wedding, who wasn't living beneath the crushing weight of a lie.Everywhere she looked, the estate buzzed with activity.Workers carried decorations.Designers rushed in and out.Staff members spoke excitedly about guest lists and seating arrangements.Everyone seemed happy except her.Becau
Dominic's jaw tightened almost immediately. The irritation of being interrupted was obvious on his face.Ava looked between him and the guard."What anomalies?" she asked.The guard shifted awkwardly."Nothing to worry about, ma'am."Dominic shot the man a warning look that seemed to say he'd already said too much. Then he looked back at Ava.For a brief moment neither of them spoke. The confession sat between them like a fragile glass sculpture waiting to shatter.Ava's stomach twisted painfully.She had imagined this moment dozens of times in her head, over and over again.Sometimes she imagined herself blurting everything out at once.Other times she imagined carefully explaining every mistake she'd made, every lie she'd told, every reason she'd convinced herself to keep going.None of those rehearsals had prepared her for the reality of sitting across from Dominic and seeing how completely he trusted her.That trust made the truth infinitely harder to tell.She knew exactly what t
#34.Walking out of the building he was set to rule over very soon, everything felt right for the first time in as long as he could remember. For the first time in a long while, everything in his life seemed to be headed in a great direction. He had the company, he had the perfect wife, and it seemed he had the perfect life.Dominic thought about the first step he needed to take before taking the mantle as CEO. Telling George he wanted to give Ava a proper wedding seemed to have shifted something fundamental between them. His father hadn’t said the words, George was never a man to waste breath on sentimentality but the look of approval that followed Dominic’s declaration spoke volumes. In that brief moment, Dominic hadn't just secured a corporate empire; he had finally earned the elusive respect of the man who built it.He was on top of the world. The sleek glass skyscraper of the family conglomerate glinted in the afternoon sun behind him, a monument to the legacy that was now rightf
The drive to his father’s corporate headquarters was a blur and simmering resentment. Dominic didn't slow down as he navigated the sterile, glass enclosed hallways of the executive floor. He reached the double doors of the primary office and shoved them open without a flicker of hesitation. Manners were for those who still had something to lose, and Dominic felt as though he were walking through the wreckage of his own life.Inside, George was huddled over a spread of architectural blueprints with three senior board members. The air in the room was thick with the scent of expensive floor wax and stale ambition.George looked up, his brow furrowing as he took in his son’s disheveled state and the cold, flat look in his eyes. He didn't need to be told that the atmosphere had changed. With a curt wave of his hand, he dismissed the men. They scurried out like mice, the door clicking shut behind them and leaving the father and son in a vacuum of silence."Sit down, Dominic," George said, h
Ava braced herself for the impact of Dominic’s fury. She waited for the door to fly open, for him to step out and roar the word "traitor" into the salt-heavy air until her lungs gave out. She imagined his hands, which had been so tender only hours ago, wrapping around her throat with a different kind of intensity.But the door didn't open. The silence of the docks was broken only by the lapping of the tide against the rotting wood and the distant, lonely cry of a gull.Then, the back door finally clicked open. A figure stepped out, but it wasn’t the broad, imposing silhouette of her husband. It was Silas.A sharp breath escaped Ava’s lips. It was a relief, but a shallow, bitter one. In many ways, Silas was the greater ghost to face; Dominic was a storm, but Silas was the rot beneath the floorboards. He straightened his designer suit, his movements languid and oozing a oily confidence.He didn't speak at first. He simply smirked, a slow, spreading expression that made Ava feel like she
Ava stiffened, her lungs seizing as she drew in a ragged, shallow breath. "You must be out of your mind!" she roared, the sound tearing from her throat in a rasp.She lunged for the door, her fingers clawing at the polished wood, desperate for the hallway, for the street, for anywhere that wasn't
The silence of Dominic’s departure the following day had lingered for a full day, He had been absent, ava retreated to the velvet sofa, her mind looping through the man’s instructions.The sudden knock at the front door shattered the quiet. Before she could rise, a small procession of women entered
The memory of their last encounter still burned against Ava’s lips, a phantom pressure that refused to fade. It wasn’t just the audacity of the kiss itself, it was the way Dominic had claimed it, as if it were a debt she hadn’t known she owed. She had walked away then, her heels clicking in an angr
Ava stood frozen under the spray, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. Then, she heard it, the distinct, heavy click of the bedroom door settling into its frame.She reached out with a trembling hand and wrenched the handle, killing the flow of water instantly. The sudden sile







