로그인To escape a loveless arranged marriage to a man old enough to be her father, Elara Vance makes a bold, desperate choice, she offers herself in a contract marriage to Julian Hartmann, the most feared tycoon who is secretly in love with her... and also her family's sworn enemy. The deal is simple, one year, purely contractual, no love, no interference, no secrets. she gets her freedom and protection, Julian gets a compliant wife and a shield against his rivals. But controlling a fiery, stubborn woman is harder than Julian imagined. Elara soon realizes that Julian is more than the ruthless businessman everyone fears, he's intelligent, attentive, and frustratingly tempting. Julian, on the other hand, begins to feel things he swore he never would, tenderness, jealousy, and a desire that cannot be ignored. Bound by paper but entangled by secrets, Elara and Julian must navigate a dangerous web of family betrayal, past grudges, and simmering desire. As the contract nears its end, one question lingers, can a marriage built on duty and revenge survive when hearts are at stake?
더 보기E L A R A
"Elara, darling, wake up." I groaned as I pulled my silk pillow over my head, blocking out my mother's voice and the morning sunlight slipping through my bedroom windows.
"Leave me alone, Mother. It's not even morning yet." I said, my voice groggy.
"It's nine thirty, and we have your final dress fitting set for eleven," mother said, her heels clicking against the hardwood floor as she crossed my bedroom.
"You can't be late. Senator Blackwell's mother will be there as well."
Senator Blackwell.
My future husband.
Ugh
The words tasted like ash in my own head.
I sat up reluctantly rubbing my eyes.
My mother stood at the edge of my bed, perfectly put together as always, cream Chanel suit, not a hair out of place, diamonds glittering on her neck.
At fifty-two, she was still beautiful, but there was something about her beauty.
Something I cannot really place, maybe broken, that she tries to hide behind designer labels and fake smiles.
"Mother, about the wedding—"
"No." She held up one perfectly manicured hand.
"We're not having this conversation again. Your father has made his decision. The merger with the Blackwell family will secure the Vance empire for generations. You're doing this, Elara. End of discussion." She said with finality in her voice.
I wanted to scream, to throw something, to remind her that I was twenty-seven years old, not some damsel in distress to be sold off to the highest bidder at an auction full of old dudes.
But I'd learned years ago that arguing with my mother, Vivienne Vance was like arguing with a marble statue, beautiful, cold, and extremely immovable.
"Fine," I said, throwing off my duvet. "I'll be ready in an hour." I added.
"Thirty minutes," she corrected. "And wear something appropriate. The Blackwells have standards."
She left, closing the door with a soft click that instead felt like a prison cell locking.
I dragged myself to the bathroom, catching my reflection in the mirror.
My dark auburn hair caught in a tangled mess, green eyes still heavy with sleep, ring, my grandmother's emerald ring, the only piece of jewelry I actually cared about glinting on my right hand.
"You're really going to do this?" I asked my reflection. "Marry a man old enough to be your father because Daddy says so?"
My reflection had no answer.
I showered quickly, going through the motions like I was on autopilot. This was my life now, had been for the past three months since Father announced my engagement to Senator Lawrence Blackwell at a family dinner, right between the soup course and the main dish, like I was just another item on the menu.
"Elara will marry Senator Blackwell in October," he'd said, cutting into his steak. "It's already arranged."
I had been too shocked to argue then. Too programmed to obey, but that was three months ago.
Now, as I pulled on a pale blue dress that Mother would approve of, I felt something shift inside me, a small crack in the perfect daughter facade I'd been maintaining for twenty-seven years.
My phone buzzed on the nightstand. A reminder I'd set for myself last week,
Research Day. 10:00 AM. Don't chicken out.
I'd been putting this off for weeks, telling myself I was being paranoid, that my instincts about Senator Blackwell were wrong, but last week, at a charity luncheon, I'd overheard two society matrons whispering about him, about his previous wives. About how unfortunate their deaths had been.
I grabbed my laptop and sat on my bed, still in my towel, hair dripping. Mother would kill me if she knew I wasn't getting ready, but this was more important than any dress fitting.
I typed carefully into my laptop, Lawrence Blackwell wife death
The results made my blood run cold.
Wife 1, Margaret Blackwell (née Morrison) died 1998, age 29. Fell down stairs at Blackwell Estate. Death ruled accidental.
Wife 2, Catherine Blackwell (née Stewart) died 2015, age 34. Drug overdose. Death ruled accidental, though Catherine's sister contested the ruling.
I clicked on the second article, my hands shaking, there was a buried court document, sealed but summarized in a investigative piece from a small newspaper.
Catherine's sister had filed a wrongful death suit, alleging that Lawrence had been emotionally abusive, that Catherine had been terrified of him, that she would never have taken her own life.
The case was dismissed because there was lack of evidence.
Both wives had left their entire fortunes to Lawrence in their wills.
"Oh God," I whispered.
My bedroom door flew open. "Elara, what are you...why aren't you dressed?"
I slammed my laptop shut, but not before Mother caught a glimpse of the screen.
"What are you looking at?" Her voice was sharp.
"Nothing. Research for a... a charity project."
"Don't lie to me." She crossed the room in three strides, tried to open my laptop, but I held it closed.
"Mother, please—"
"The dress fitting is in forty-five minutes. Get. Dressed. Now." Each word was clipped, precise, furious.
I nodded, not trusting my own voice.
She left, slamming the door this time, while I sat there, laptop burning in my hands, my heart hammering against my ribs.
Two dead wives, both young, both ruled as "accidents" and Father wanted me to be wife number three.
No.
The word echoed in my head, growing louder with each repetition.
No. No. No.
I will not do this, I will not smile and nod and walk down that aisle to a man who might have murdered two women.
I will not become another tragic accident.
But how do I escape?
Father controlls my trust fund until I turn thirty.
I have a small allowance, but not enough to disappear, not enough to start over somewhere he couldn't find me.
Running away isn't an option either, father and that old dog, they have too many connections, too much reach.
I need protection. Real protection.
The kind of protection that even Richard Vance couldn't circumvent.
I need... My phone buzzed.A news alert,
HARTMANN ENTERPRISES CLOSES RECORD BREAKING DEAL. CEO JULIAN HARTMANN PROVES ONCE AGAIN WHY HE'S THE MOST FEARED MAN IN MANHATTAN.J U L I A NI watched Elara Vance walk away, my mind still processing what had just happened.She proposed marriage. To me.A Vance proposed marriage to a Hartmann.My grandfather, Eduard would have had a heart attack.I pulled out my phone from my pocket and called Dec."Come back here. Now," I said.Two minutes later, Dec appeared, looking way too amused for my liking."So," he said, leaning against the wall with a stupid grin on his face."Want to tell me what that was about?""Not particularly.""Was that really Elara Vance dressed as a waitress?" He asked as if wanting to be sure."Yes.""And did she really just ask you for a private meeting?""Yes.""And you said yes because...?"I looked at him. "Business opportunity."Dec laughed, like he actually laughed.What happened to the questions he was asking while messaging me earlier?!"Mate, the last time you called something a 'business opportunity' with that look on your face, you bought a failing company just to prove everyone wr
E L A R AI somehow made it back to the main gallery without my legs giving up on me.My heart was pounding so hard I thought everyone could hear it.But wait, he said yes.Julian Hartmann said yes.I grabbed my champagne tray with shaking hands and tried to blend back in with the other servers, but my mind was spinning.Three days.I had just three days to prepare for this, to figure out what terms I wanted, to make sure I wasn't making the biggest mistake of my life."There you are!" The catering manager appeared at my elbow, looking annoyed."Where have you been? We're short on the east side." He asked."Sorry, someone asked for directions to the restroom," I lied."Well, get moving. And take these to the VIP section."I nodded and grabbed a fresh tray, moving through the crowd like I was on autopilot mode.My mind kept replaying the conversation with Julian.The way he had looked at me with those ice blue eyes of his. The way he had remembered our debate from seven years ago."You
J U L I A NI stared at the woman in the waiter's uniform, trying to place her face.There was something familiar about her, the sharp green eyes, the way she held herself with perfect posture despite clearly being nervous.Then it clicked.Elara Vance.Charles Vance's granddaughter. Richard Vance's daughter.The enemy's precious princess, standing in front of me in a waiter's uniform, a failed attempt at disguising herself, asking for a business meeting.This should be interesting."Dec, give us a moment," I said to my best friend without taking my eyes off her."Mate, are you sure—" Dec started, but I cut him off."I'm sure."Dec looked between us, shrugged, and walked away, but not before muttering something about me being an idiot."Follow me," I said to Elara, leading her toward the back of the gallery where there was a private viewing room, it was empty, quiet and away from prying eyes.I opened the door and gestured for her to enter first, she hesitated for just a second before
E L A R AJulian Hartmann.The name alone would make my father's jaw clench. Our families had been enemies for as long as I could remember, something about my grandfather and his, a business deal that collapsed and a friendship that never recovered.I don't know.The details are fuzzy, but the hatred was very clear.If I wanted someone Father couldn't control, someone powerful enough to protect me, someone Father would hate...I know it's insane.Completely insane.But as I stared at Julian Hartmann's photo in the article, his ice-blue eyes, sharp jawline, the hint of a sardonic smile, I remembered something.A debate, from years ago.Seven years ago, when I was finishing my MBA at Columbia, he had been a guest lecturer, though I had no idea of who he was at the time.We had debated on corporate ethics and responsibility, I challenged every point he made, and he challenged right back, and for the first time in my life, someone had treated my ideas like they mattered.At the end, he sa






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