ログインShe signed the contract because she had no other choice. One year as the wife of a ruthless billionaire. Smile in public. Stay quiet in private. Never expect love. To everyone else, their marriage looked perfect. The money. The mansion. The headlines. The golden couple everyone envied. But behind closed doors, she was just a name on paper. He didn’t kiss her unless someone was watching. Didn’t hold her unless cameras were near. And every time she started to forget it was fake, he reminded her exactly where she stood. Then one night changes everything. A secret is exposed. A betrayal cuts too deep. And the quiet wife he thought would always stay finally walks away. Only then does he realise the woman he never wanted has become the one woman he can’t lose. But she is done being his convenient wife. This time, if the billionaire wants her back, money won’t be enough.
もっと見るElena Vale knew she had made a mistake the moment the chapel doors opened.
Not because of the flowers, though there were too many of them — white roses hanging from every arch, spilling over the pews, perfuming the air until it felt almost sweet enough to choke on. Not because of the guests either, all polished smiles and diamond watches, turning to stare as if she were something expensive being delivered.
It was him.
Damian Blackwood waited at the altar like he was attending a funeral instead of his own wedding.
Tall, still, unreadable. Black suit. Dark eyes. A mouth that looked as if it had forgotten how to be kind.
For a second, Elena’s steps faltered.
Her fingers tightened around the bouquet. Somewhere behind her, the wedding planner made a sharp little sound, probably terrified the bride was about to ruin the most photographed marriage deal of the year.
Marriage deal.
That was all it was.
One year. One signature. One ruthless billionaire paying off her family’s debts in exchange for a wife he could parade in front of the board, the press, and his dying grandfather.
Her father’s hospital bills would be covered. Her childhood home would be saved.
And Elena would belong to Damian Blackwood until the contract expired.
She forced herself forward.
The whispers followed her down the aisle.
“She’s beautiful.”
“Where did he find her?”
“Poor girl looks terrified.”
Elena kept her chin high. If they wanted a show, she would give them one. She had not survived debt collectors, hospital corridors, and the humiliation of begging strangers for time just to fall apart in front of people who drank champagne for breakfast.
When she reached Damian, he finally looked at her properly.
His gaze moved over her face first, slow and searching, then dropped for half a second to the bare line of her shoulders, the lace hugging her waist, the trembling hand wrapped around white roses. Something changed in his expression. It was so quick she almost missed it.
Heat.
Then control.
Then nothing.
“You’re late,” he murmured.
Elena almost laughed. Of course those would be his first words to her.
“I considered not coming.”
His eyes sharpened. “And yet here you are.”
“Yes,” she whispered, stepping closer so only he could hear. “Lucky you.”
The corner of his mouth twitched, but there was no warmth in it.
The priest began speaking. Elena barely heard him. The chapel blurred at the edges, candlelight flickering against marble, cameras clicking softly from somewhere near the back. Damian’s hand closed around hers when the vows began, and she hated herself for noticing how warm he was. How steady. How real.
Her voice shook when she promised to love him.
His did not.
That hurt more than it should have.
When the priest said, “You may kiss the bride,” the room seemed to hold its breath.
Elena lifted her eyes to Damian’s. “Make it convincing,” she whispered.
His hand slid to her waist.
“Careful,” he said, low enough to touch something under her skin. “I might.”
Then his mouth was on hers.
It was supposed to be nothing. A brief, polite lie for the cameras. But Damian kissed like a man who didn’t believe in half measures. His fingers pressed into the silk at her waist, firm enough to make her breath catch. His lips moved against hers once, slow and controlled, and the whole chapel vanished into the heat of him.
Elena hated it.
Hated that her body softened for him before her pride could stop it.
Then he pulled away.
The applause crashed around them like thunder.
Damian turned to the guests, already composed, already cold, while Elena stood beside him with her lips still burning.
Hours later, she found him on the balcony outside the reception hall.
The party roared behind the glass doors — music, laughter, champagne, people celebrating a love story that did not exist. Out here, the city stretched beneath them in gold and black, all sharp rooftops and glowing windows.
Damian stood with his tie loosened, whisky in hand, looking every inch the man who owned the night.
“You disappeared,” Elena said.
He didn’t turn. “You were surrounded.”
“By strangers.”
“You handled them well.”
She stepped onto the balcony, the cold air catching under her dress. “That isn’t the same as being protected.”
That made him look at her.
For a moment, neither of them spoke.
His eyes dropped to her mouth, and she felt it like a touch. It made her angrier than it should have. She didn’t want him to want her. She didn’t want to want him back, not even for a second, not even because he looked at her like she was a match he was trying not to strike.
“I know what I am to you,” she said. “A signature. A favour. A convenient wife. But if you leave me alone in a room full of wolves again, don’t expect me to smile while they bite.”
Damian set his glass down.
Then he walked toward her.
Elena’s back met the balcony rail, but she refused to move away. He stopped close enough that she could see the faint shadow along his jaw, the small loosened button at his collar, the dangerous calm in his eyes.
“You think I don’t know what they are?” he asked.
“I think you don’t care.”
His voice dropped. “If I didn’t care, I wouldn’t have married you.”
Her breath caught before she could stop it.
Then he reached into his jacket and pulled out a folded document.
Reality returned cold and fast.
“What is that?” she asked.
“The final copy of our agreement.”
“I already signed it.”
“This one has been updated.”
Elena stared at him, then took the paper with stiff fingers. She read the new clause once.
Then again.
The words blurred, but their meaning was brutally clear.
If she left before the year was over, every payment he had made would be reversed. Her father’s treatment. The mortgage. Everything.
Her throat tightened.
“You added this after I signed.”
Damian said nothing.
“You trapped me.”
His face didn’t change, but something dark passed through his eyes.
“No, Elena,” he said softly.
The music swelled behind them.
“I made sure you couldn’t run.”
Elena knew, before she opened the envelope, that something inside it would ruin her.Some truths had weight. You could feel them before they touched you. This one sat in Vivienne’s hand, thin and cream-coloured, the black wax seal cracked like it had been waiting years to break.Damian had gone very still.That frightened her more than if he had shouted.All night, he had been impossible to read. Cold at the altar. Controlled in the ballroom. Dangerous in the hallway. But now, standing in the rain with his wet shirt clinging to him and his face drained of colour, he looked less like a man and more like a boy watching a locked door open.“Don’t read it,” he said.His voice was low.Not a command this time.A warning.Elena looked at him. “Why?”He didn’t answer.Vivienne gave a small, bitter smile. “Because Clara’s truth is the one thing this family never survived.”The rain fell harder, striking the stone steps, flattening the hem of Elena’s wedding dress against her legs. Somewhere b
Elena could not stop looking at her father’s face.That was the cruelest part of it. Not the forged signature. Not the hospital forms soaked soft at the edges from the rain. Not even the message written on the back of the photograph like a threat slipped under a door.Tell your wife to behave, Damian.It was her father’s face.He was asleep in the picture, turned slightly towards the window, one hand resting above the blanket. Small. Grey. Tired in a way he never allowed himself to be when she visited. Her father always smiled for her. Always squeezed her fingers and told her not to worry, even when his voice was thin and the machines beside him told the truth his mouth would not.Someone had stood beside his bed and taken this.Someone had watched him while he slept.Elena’s fingers curled so tightly around the photograph that the corner bent.“Who took it?” she asked.The rain battered the stone steps, turning the driveway into a black river. Damian stood in front of her with water
Rain blew in through the open door and struck Elena full in the face.For one stupid second, she was grateful for it. The cold gave her something simple to feel. Something that wasn’t humiliation. Something that wasn’t Damian’s hand at her waist, or his grandfather’s voice turning her womb into a family investment.Then she saw Vivienne standing at the bottom of the steps.Silver dress soaked dark at the hem. Blonde hair loosened by the rain. One arm wrapped around herself, the other clutching a black file against her chest like it was the only thing keeping her upright.Elena froze.Behind her, Damian stopped too.The whole world seemed to narrow to the rain, the porch light, and the file in Vivienne’s hand.“What is that?” Elena asked.Vivienne looked at Damian first.Not with smugness this time. Not with the polished cruelty she had worn all evening like perfume. Her face looked stripped bare by the rain, younger somehow, and bitterly tired.“The reason you should have kept running
Elena did not remember letting go of Damian.One moment she was in his arms, trapped beneath the chandelier light while the ballroom cheered for the child she had never agreed to have. The next, her hand was slipping from his shoulder, her wedding dress brushing cold against her legs as she stepped back from him.The applause kept going.That was what made it worse.People were smiling. Laughing softly. Raising champagne glasses as if Damian’s grandfather had said something charming, something sweet, something a bride should blush over.An heir.Elena felt the word crawl over her skin.Damian’s hand caught hers before she could move farther.“Elena,” he said, low enough that no one else would hear.She looked at him.His face was calm, because of course it was. Damian Blackwood could probably stand in the middle of a fire and look mildly inconvenienced. But his eyes were different. Darker. Tighter. Fixed on her like he knew she was one breath away from breaking.Across the room, Vivie












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