LOGINAva Bennett never imagined that saving her family would cost her freedom. Drowning in debt after her father’s failed business collapses, Ava is desperate to keep the last thing her family owns from being taken away. Just when everything seems lost, a powerful and dangerously private billionaire offers her a deal that could change everything. Ethan Vale, a ruthless CEO known for building empires and destroying rivals, needs a wife. Not for love, but for strategy. A one-year marriage will secure his position in a high-stakes corporate merger and silence the board members who question his leadership. The terms are simple. One year of marriage. Perfect public appearances. No emotional attachments. In return, Ava’s family will be saved. What begins as a cold business arrangement soon becomes far more complicated. Living under the same roof with a man as powerful as Ethan forces Ava into a world of luxury, control, and hidden secrets. Behind Ethan’s icy composure lies a past he refuses to share, and the deeper Ava gets pulled into his life, the more she begins to see the man behind the billionaire mask. But power always comes with enemies. As corporate rivals plot to destroy Ethan’s empire and the media circles like vultures around their unusual marriage, Ava realizes that their contract is far more dangerous than she ever imagined. Feelings begin to grow where rules once stood, and the line between pretending and reality slowly disappears. Now Ava must decide if love is worth risking everything for. Because when the contract ends, she may have to walk away from the only man who has ever truly seen her. And Ethan Vale is not a man who easily lets go.
View MoreThe night everything began to fall apart smelled like rain and antiseptic.
Hospitals always had that strange scent, a mixture of cleaning chemicals and something heavier that clung to the air like quiet fear. I sat on one of the stiff plastic chairs in the emergency hallway, staring down at the stack of papers resting in my hands.
Medical bills.
Too many of them.
I had counted the total three times already, hoping the number would somehow change if I looked long enough.
Thirty two thousand dollars.
The number felt unreal, like it belonged in someone else's life and not mine.
I rubbed my tired eyes and leaned back against the cold wall behind me. The fluorescent lights above buzzed softly. They made everything look pale and lifeless, including me.
Across from me, my younger brother Liam paced the hallway. His sneakers squeaked every time he turned around. Back and forth. Back and forth.
He had been doing that for the past twenty minutes.
"Did the doctor say when they'll come back?" he asked.
I glanced up at him. His face looked tense and far too worried for a seventeen year old.
"Soon," I said quietly.
It was not the truth.
Doctors always said soon when they did not want to tell you the worst possibilities.
The truth was that our mother had collapsed earlier that afternoon while trying to stand up from the kitchen table. One moment she had been smiling at me, telling me not to worry about the overdue electricity bill. The next moment she was on the floor and Liam was shouting her name.
The ambulance ride had felt like a blur of sirens and panic.
Now we were here.
Waiting.
Waiting had become a terrible habit in the past three months.
Waiting for calls from banks.
Waiting for creditors.
Waiting for news about our father.
The thought of him made my chest tighten.
Three months ago my father had disappeared without warning. One morning he left the house for work like he always did. By evening he was gone.
At first we thought he had been in an accident.
Then the phone calls started.
Banks demanding payment.
Companies claiming he owed them money.
People I had never heard of asking questions about his location.
That was when the truth began to show itself piece by piece.
My father had been drowning in debt.
And he had left all of it behind.
Including us.
Liam stopped pacing and sat beside me.
His voice was low. "Those men came again today."
My fingers tightened around the papers. "Which men?"
"You know which ones." His jaw clenched. "The ones who were asking about Dad."
I did know.
Two men had come to our apartment building that afternoon while I was leaving for work. They had expensive suits and polite smiles, but there had been something wrong in their eyes.
Cold eyes.
One of them had asked if I knew where my father was.
When I told him I did not, he simply nodded and said they would be in touch.
The way he said it had made my skin crawl.
"They won't do anything," I said, trying to sound confident.
Liam looked at me. "How do you know?"
I did not.
But someone in this family had to pretend things would be okay.
My phone buzzed suddenly in my hand.
My heart jumped before I could stop it.
Hope can be dangerous when life keeps proving you wrong.
Maybe the bank had approved the emergency loan I applied for.
Maybe my old boss had reconsidered after firing me last week.
Maybe something good had finally happened.
I looked down at the screen.
Unknown number.
The hope faded instantly.
I hesitated before answering. "Hello?"
A man's voice came through the speaker.
Cold and calm.
"Miss Ava Bennett."
It was not a question.
"Yes," I said cautiously.
"Your father owes our company a significant amount of money."
My stomach tightened.
"I have already explained this," I replied carefully. "I do not know where he is."
There was a short pause on the other end of the line.
"That is unfortunate," the man said.
His tone remained calm, almost polite.
"But his debts still exist."
"My father's debts are not mine," I said.
"Legally, perhaps not."
His voice lowered slightly.
"But debts have a way of returning to family members."
A chill slid down my spine.
"Are you threatening me?"
"I am informing you," he replied.
The calmness in his voice made it worse.
"If the debt is not repaid within seventy two hours, we will begin collecting it through other means."
My heart pounded.
"You cannot do that."
"We can do many things, Miss Bennett."
The call ended before I could respond.
I slowly lowered the phone.
Liam watched me with concern. "Who was it?"
I forced a weak smile. "Wrong number."
Another lie.
I was starting to hate how easily they came.
The emergency room doors opened at that moment.
A doctor stepped into the hallway, scanning the room until his eyes landed on us.
"Miss Bennett?"
I stood immediately. "Yes."
Liam stood beside me.
The doctor approached with a serious expression that made my chest tighten again.
"I am afraid your mother's condition has worsened," he said gently.
My heart skipped.
"We need to perform surgery tonight."
Relief rushed through me so quickly it almost made me dizzy.
"Then do it," I said.
The doctor hesitated.
There it was.
The moment when hope turns complicated.
"There is a financial authorization required before we can proceed," he explained.
My throat went dry. "How much?"
He glanced down at the tablet in his hand.
"Thirty two thousand dollars."
The same number sitting in the bills on my lap.
For a moment I could not speak.
"I am working on it," I said quietly.
The doctor gave me an apologetic look.
"I am sorry, Miss Bennett. Hospital policy requires payment before the surgery."
He nodded politely and walked away.
Just like that.
The hallway suddenly felt much colder.
Liam stared at me. "What does that mean?"
My voice felt stuck in my throat.
Without the money, the surgery would not happen.
Without the surgery, my mother might not survive.
I looked down at my phone again, my mind racing through every possible solution.
There were none.
My phone buzzed once more.
Another message from an unknown number.
I opened it slowly.
One sentence appeared on the screen.
I can solve your problems, Ava Bennett.
Below the message was an address.
And a name.
My breath caught when I read it.
Ethan Vale.
The billionaire.
The most powerful man in the city.
A man whose name appeared in newspapers almost every week.
Successful.
Ruthless.
Untouchable.
I stared at the message for a long moment.
Why would a man like that contact me?
Nothing about this made sense.
Yet my mother was lying in a hospital room down the hall, waiting for a surgery we could not afford.
Sometimes life pushes you toward choices you never imagined making.
I slowly stood up.
Liam looked at me. "Where are you going?"
I slipped the phone into my pocket.
"To fix this," I said quiet
ly.
Even though I had no idea what fixing it would cost me.
Outside the hospital, the rain had started falling harder.
I stepped into the cold night and looked at the address again.
Ethan Vale.
For some reason, I had a feeling that meeting him was about to change everything.
AvaThe drive back from Adrian’s office was quiet. Not awkward, but heavy with unspoken words. The city lights blurred past the car windows, painting the interior with shifting patterns of gold and silver. I pressed my palms together in my lap, trying to calm the restless energy that had taken over my body.Ethan drove without a word, his gaze fixed on the road ahead. He didn’t need to reassure me. I could feel his focus radiating in waves, controlling the atmosphere in the car almost as easily as he controlled the boardrooms. Yet the tension in the air was undeniable.I tried to gather my thoughts. Adrian’s words from the meeting echoed in my mind. “Be careful who you learn from.” That was not just advice. That was a warning. And the fact that he had looked directly at me while saying it made my chest tighten.“You handled yourself well today,” Ethan said finally, breaking the silence.I blinked, turning my head toward him. “I didn’t do anything remarkable. I mostly just sat there.”
AvaThe moment I spoke, I knew there was no taking it back.“That makes one of us.”The words hung in the air, sharper than I intended, heavier than they should have been. For a split second, I felt it that invisible shift. The kind that happens when a line is crossed, even subtly.And Adrian noticed.Of course he did.His smile didn’t fade. If anything, it deepened, like I had just confirmed something for him.“Good,” he said softly.I blinked. “Good?”“I prefer honesty,” he replied. “It’s rare.”Something about the way he said that made it feel less like a compliment and more like a warning.Ethan stepped slightly closer beside me.“Shall we?” he said, his tone controlled.Adrian’s gaze lingered on me for just a second longer before he stepped aside.“After you.”The building was exactly what I expected and somehow worse.Minimalist. Polished. Quiet.Everything about it screamed control.Even the air felt different. Still. Measured.We were led into a private conference room, the wa
AvaThere’s a difference between being told you’re part of a game…And actually feeling it begin.By mid-morning, that difference became very clear.“Sit,” Ethan said, gesturing to the chair across from his desk.His tone wasn’t harsh, but it wasn’t soft either. It was focused. Intentional. Like everything else about him.I sat.“You’re going to start learning how this works,” he continued.I raised a brow slightly. “Now?”“Yes. Now.”No easing into it. No gentle transition.Of course.I leaned back slightly, crossing one leg over the other. “Alright. Teach me.”Something flickered briefly in his eyes.Approval.Then it was gone.“First rule,” he said, moving around his desk. “Everything you say matters.”I tilted my head. “That sounds exhausting.”“It is,” he replied simply.I let out a quiet breath. “Okay… what else?”He stopped in front of me, his gaze sharp.“Second rule: everyone has an angle.”I frowned slightly. “Even you?”“Yes,” he said without hesitation.That caught me off
AvaSleep should have come easily after the gala.It didn’t.My body was tired, but my mind refused to slow down. Every moment replayed itself the second I closed my eyes. The conversations. The stares. The pressure of standing beside Ethan like I belonged there.And Adrian.Especially Adrian.I turned in bed, staring at the ceiling as the faint glow of city lights filtered through the curtains. His voice still echoed in my head. Calm. Controlled. Interested.Too interested.I sat up abruptly, pushing the covers aside. Sleeping wasn’t going to happen.Not like this.I walked toward the window, wrapping my arms around myself as I looked out over the quiet city. Everything seemed so normal from up here. Cars moving. Lights flickering. People living their lives.Meanwhile, mine felt like it had been thrown into something I still didn’t fully understand.A soft knock broke the silence.I frowned slightly. It was late.“Come in,” I said.The door opened slowly.Ethan stepped inside.For a












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