LOGINElara Vance was never a bride...She was a transaction. To save her brother’s life and settle her father’s crumbling debts, she sold herself into a three year "Repayment Marriage" to the coldest man in the city, Julian Vane. For three years, she endured his frozen silence, his public indifference, and the cruel whispers of a high society that saw her as nothing more than a social prop. She played the role of the perfect, submissive wife, hiding her world-class talent and her breaking heart behind a mask of glass. She waited for a spark of warmth, a sign that the man who held her at night felt more than just obligation. Then came the morning after their final night together, the night she thought finally changed everything. Instead of a "good morning," Julian tossed a manila envelope onto the bed. "The debt is paid, Elara. Sign the papers and leave. I’m done with you." Julian thought he was finally rid of the woman he blamed for his past. He didn't expect her to sign the papers with a smile. He didn't expect her to vanish into thin air, leaving his massive mansion echoing with a silence that felt like a curse. But Elara didn't leave alone. She left with a secret, a tiny heartbeat that Julian would never know about. Now, the hunter has become the haunted. As Elara rises from the ashes of her old life to become a woman the world can't ignore, Julian is left to realize that the wife he threw away was the only thing holding his world together. The debt is settled. The game has changed. And this time, he’s the one who will have to pay... with his soul.
View MoreThe sheets were a battlefield of silk and crushed lace, a testament to the feverish, almost desperate way Julian had claimed her just hours before. In the dim, golden light of the master suite, Elara watched him. For the first time in three years, she felt a sliver of hope. He had kissed her with a hunger that felt like a confession. His hands had lingered on her skin as if he were trying to memorize her.
Julian leaned over her, his breath warm against her temple. He pressed a slow, lingering kiss to her cheek, his stubble grazing her skin.
"Julian," she whispered, her voice thick with an emotion she finally thought was shared.
He didn't answer. Instead, he sat up, the warmth vanishing instantly. The bed groaned as he stood, his back a cold, muscular wall. Without a word, he walked to the mahogany dresser, retrieved a heavy manila envelope, and tossed it onto the tangled sheets.
It landed with a dull thud right where his head had rested moments ago.
"Sign it," he said. His voice was flat, stripped of the passion that had filled the room at midnight.
Elara’s fingers trembled as she pulled the thick stack of papers out. The words at the top blurred, then snapped into agonizing focus. Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.
"What is this?" she asked, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird.
Julian was already pulling on his shirt, his movements crisp and mechanical. "The three years are up, Elara. The interest on your father’s debt has been cleared. Your brother’s clinic is fully funded for the next decade. Our arrangement has reached its natural conclusion."
"Arrangement?" Elara sat up, the duvet sliding down her shoulders. She didn't care about her nakedness; she felt exposed in a way that had nothing to do with skin. "Last night... Julian, you didn't touch me like I was an arrangement. You kissed me like you—"
"I kissed you like a man who hasn't had a drink in a long time," he snapped, finally turning to face her. His blue eyes were like chips of ice. "Don't mistake biological release for sentiment. It’s pathetic.
The word 'pathetic' felt like a physical blow. Elara scrambled out of bed, her legs weak. She grabbed his arm, her eyes swimming with tears. "Please, Julian. I know you’re angry about the past. I know what you think my father did, but I’ve been a good wife. I’ve done everything you asked. I’ve stayed in this house like a ghost for you!"
Julian shook her hand off as if it were a stray hair on his sleeve. "You were a debt to be paid, Elara. Nothing more. Every time I look at you, I see the man who ruined my family’s name. Did you really think a few nights in bed would make me forget that?"
"I love you!" she cried, the words tearing out of her throat. It was the first time she had said it, and she watched in horror as his lip curled in genuine disgust.
"Well, that was your first mistake," he said, grabbing his blazer. "I want you out by this week. Take the jewelry I bought you. Consider it a tip for services rendered."
"Julian, please! Just talk to me!" She reached for him again, sobbing now, the tears hot and blurring her vision.
"Enough!" he roared, his voice echoing off the vaulted ceilings. He stepped into her personal space, his towering frame casting a shadow that swallowed her whole. "Stop crying. It’s grating. You knew exactly what this was when you signed the first contract. You sold yourself to save your family, and I bought you. The transaction is over. If you aren't gone by the time I get back, I’ll have security remove you and your brother’s funding will be the first thing I cut."
He didn't look back. The heavy oak door slammed shut, the sound vibrating through the floorboards and into Elara’s soul. She collapsed onto the floor, the cold marble biting into her knees, and let out a sound that wasn't a cry, it was a howl of a heart finally shattering.
In the back of the Maybach, Julian stared out the window at the blurred grey of the city. His jaw was clenched so tight his teeth ached. He could still feel the phantom heat of her skin under his fingertips. He could still hear that broken, ragged "I love you."
Pathetic, he told himself. She’s a Vance. They’re all liars. She was just playing her last card to keep the Vane fortune.
He pulled out his phone, his thumb hovering over a contact. He needed to focus. He had a merger to finalize, a kingdom to run. He couldn't let the scent of her vanilla perfume, which seemed to have seeped into his very pores, distract him.
His phone buzzed. It was a private line.
"Is it done?" a raspy voice asked on the other end.
Julian closed his eyes for a split second, seeing Elara’s tear-stained face behind his eyelids. He forced the image away, burying it under a layer of cold stone.
"It’s done," Julian said, his voice like iron. "She’s signing the papers today. The house will be clear by this week."
"Good," the voice replied. "The board was worried you were getting too attached to the girl. We’re ready for the next phase. Once the divorce is public, the Vane-Sterling merger can move forward. You’re almost there, Julian."
"I’m ready," Julian said.
He hung up and stared at his reflection in the darkened phone screen. He told himself he was a winner. He told himself he had finally gotten his revenge.
So why did he feel like he was the one who had just lost everything?
Elara’s hands shook as she folded a simple cotton sweater, one she had owned before the world turned grey. She bypassed the velvet boxes on the vanity. The diamonds, the emeralds, the "tips for services rendered" she left them all. They felt like lead weights.A sharp, familiar wave of nausea hit her, forcing her to lean against the wardrobe. She clutched her stomach, her breath coming in shallow hitches. I’m just tired, she lied to the empty room. I’m just hollow.Her eyes drifted to the silk sheets, and the memories came unbidden, biting and cruel. Three years of nights where the silence of the day was drowned out by the heat of his skin. Julian never said "I love you," but he had claimed her with a desperation that felt like a prayer. She remembered a rainy Tuesday two years ago; he had come home drunk, his guard shattered. He had pulled her into his lap, burying his face in her neck, murmuring, "Elara, why are you so soft? Why are you the only thing that doesn't hurt to look at?"
Julian watched the gold-trimmed doors swing shut behind Elara, the image of her wine-stained dress burned into his retinas. For a second, the air in the ballroom felt too thin to breathe. A crack, faint but jagged shook the foundations of the wall he’d built around his heart for three years.“Julian? Are you even listening?” Diana Sterling’s voice was like sandpaper on silk. She leaned closer, her perfume cloying and artificial. “I was saying, the merger celebration should be at my family’s estate in the Hamptons. It would be the perfect ‘debut’ for us.”Julian looked down at Diana’s hand on his arm. He felt a flash of genuine revulsion. Her touch didn't burn; it felt like nothing. It was Elara’s absence that was blistering his skin.“I have to go,” Julian said, his voice sounding like it was coming from the bottom of a well. He didn't wait for her to pout or protest. He detached Diana’s hand with a clinical coldness and walked away.“Julian! The Chairman is expecting a toast!” Marcus
The sound of the heavy oak door creaking open made Elara’s heart lurch. She scrambled to her feet, frantically wiping the salt and ruin from her cheeks with the back of her hands. By the time Julian stepped into the room, she was sitting on the edge of the bed, her spine rigid, staring at a fixed point on the wall.Julian paused. The cold, sharp scent of rain and scotch followed him. He looked at her..really looked at her and for a split second, his jaw tightened. Her eyes were rimmed with a raw, swollen red that made his chest feel like it was being squeezed by an iron fist. But he strangled the feeling before it could reach his tongue."Get up," he said, his voice a jagged blade. "There’s a charity gala tomorrow night. The Vane Foundation. You’re attending."Elara let out a dry, hysterical laugh that caught in her throat. "Are you serious? You threw divorce papers at my face this morning, Julian. You told me I was a debt to be paid. And now you want me to play the happy wife for you
Elara sat on the edge of the bed, her body trembling so violently she had to grip the silk sheets just to stay upright. The silence Julian left behind was louder than his shouting, it was a heavy, suffocating thing that tasted like copper and dust.Her stomach lurched. A sudden wave of nausea rolled over her, sharp and acidic. She pressed a hand to her mouth, breathing through her nose until the dizziness passed. Stress, she told herself. It’s just the heartbreak. It’s the shock. She didn't have time to be sick. She had a week.Seven days to erase three years.Her eyes drifted to the nightstand, where a small velvet box sat half-hidden behind a lamp. With shaking fingers, she opened it. Inside was a simple gold locket Julian had given her for their first anniversary. He had come home late, smelling of expensive scotch and rain, his tie undone and his eyes unusually soft.He had pressed the locket into her hand, his thumb stroking her palm in a way that made her heart skip. “You’re the






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