Home / Romance / The IronClad Vow / The Gilded Cage

Share

The Gilded Cage

Author: BlackFire
last update Last Updated: 2025-11-05 14:44:56

The wedding was a transaction, meticulously executed.

There was no lace, no whispered vows, no happy tears. It took place in a stark, modern courthouse chamber that smelled of lemon polish and quiet desperation. Ivy wore a simple, off-white sheath dress she’d bought off the rack, a garment as temporary as the vows she was about to take. Lucian stood beside her in a charcoal Brioni suit that cost more than her entire year’s rent, his posture radiating impatience.

The judge’s words were a monotonous drone. “…for better or for worse…”

"For worse," Elara thought, her hands clasped so tightly her knuckles were white. "It is entirely for worse."

“…in sickness and in health…”

She thought of Calla, and a fresh wave of determination washed over the fear. "For her health. Always for her."

When the judge instructed Lucian to place the ring on her finger, he did so with the detached efficiency of a CEO sealing a merger. The platinum band was cool and heavy, a perfect circle that felt more like a shackle than a symbol of love. It was two sizes too big.

“You may now kiss the bride.”

The air crackled. Ivy’s breath caught in her throat. Lucian didn’t even glance at her. He simply leaned in, his movement swift and precise, and pressed his lips to her cheek. The contact lasted less than a second, but it burned, a brand of ownership, cold and impersonal. His skin was smooth, and he smelled of the same sandalwood and ice from his office.

“Let’s go,” he said, the moment the judge pronounced them man and wife. There were no photos. No well-wishers. Just the sterile click of his dress shoes on the marble floor as he led his new wife out of the building.

The drive to his "their"  penthouse was silent. He spent it on the phone with his CFO, discussing a hostile takeover in Tokyo. Ivy stared out the tinted window of the Rolls-Royce, watching the city blur into streaks of grey and gold. She was Mrs. Lucian Thorne. The name felt like a costume she’d been forced to wear.

The private elevator opened directly into the penthouse foyer. The storm had passed, and the afternoon sun slanted across the vast, empty space, making it seem even more imposing and lifeless.

“Your rooms are through there,” Kaelan said, nodding towards a hallway that branched off from the main living area. “You’ll find everything you need. My wing is on the opposite side. You are not to enter it unless summoned.”

"Summoned." The word made her feel like a servant. Or a pet.

“We will attend the Hamilton Charity Gala in three days. It will be our first public appearance. A stylist will be here tomorrow at nine. Do not be late.” He shrugged off his suit jacket, draping it over the back of a chair. “The staff will handle meals. Indicate your preferences to the chef. I am not often home for dinner.”

He was listing off clauses from their invisible contract, his focus already shifting away from her, towards the stack of documents on his desk.

Ivy stood in the center of the cavernous living room, the too-large wedding band spinning loosely on her finger. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. This wasn't a home. It was a museum of his success, and she was the newest, most unwanted exhibit.

“The settlement,” she said, her voice small but clear in the vast space. “The five million. I’ll need an advance. A hundred thousand. Now.”

That got his attention. He turned from his desk, his grey eyes sharpening. “The contract stipulates payment upon dissolution.”

“The contract also stipulated I’d be your silent, pretty accessory,” she countered, meeting his gaze. “I’m renegotiating in real time. I have… prior obligations. A hundred thousand. Consider it a show of good faith.”

She held her breath. This was the first test. Would he balk? Would he see it as weakness?

A long, assessing look. Then, a curt nod. “I’ll have my accountant wire it to you by the end of the day. Provide the details to Axel.”

He had agreed. Too easily. It was a reminder that to him, this was still pocket change. Her desperation was a line item in his budget. The relief that flooded her was immediately tinged with shame.

“Thank you,” she forced out, the words tasting like ash.

He didn’t acknowledge her gratitude. He simply picked up a file. “Your luggage has been taken to your room. I have work to do.”

It was a dismissal. Final and absolute.

Ivy turned and walked toward the hallway he had indicated, her footsteps echoing in the silence. She found a suite larger than her entire old apartment, decorated in shades of beige and cream. It was beautiful, impersonal, and as cold as the man who owned it. Her single, worn suitcase looked like a trespasser in the middle of the pristine room.

She walked to the floor-to-ceiling window, looking down at the city teeming with life far below. She was at the pinnacle of luxury, locked in a gilded cage of her own making.

Spinning the wedding band on her finger, she pulled out her phone. The wire transfer notification was already there. One hundred thousand dollars. She opened a different app, transferring the entire amount to the hospital’s private billing portal, paying off Calla’s upcoming procedure in full.

A single tear traced a path down her cheek, but it was not a tear of self-pity. It was a tear of savage, victorious relief.

He thought he owned her. He thought his money was a chain.

But as she watched the payment confirmation flash on the screen, she knew the truth. She had just turned his first weapon into her daughter’s salvation. The battle lines were drawn. And for the first time, she felt a flicker of hope. She was in the lion's den, but she was learning how to bite.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The IronClad Vow   Fragility of Glass

    The world snapped back into focus with a dizzying, painful clarity. The serene ballroom was a warzone of splintered crystal, overturned tables, and the panicked cries of the city’s elite. The air was thick with dust, choking and sweet.But for Lucian, the world had narrowed to the crimson line marring the pale skin of Ivy’s arm.“Medic!” His roar cut through the chaos, a sound of pure, undiluted authority that brooked no argument. He was still crouched over her, his body a cage shielding her from the ongoing confusion, his hand a viselike band around her uninjured wrist as if she might vanish.“Lucian, I’m fine,” Ivy insisted, her voice shaky. She tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness and the firm pressure of his hand on her shoulder held her down.“You are not fine,” he bit out, his eyes blazing. The blood from the cut on his temple was now a dark, drying trail. He ripped the pristine white pocket square from his tuxedo jacket with a violent jerk and pressed it against the gash on

  • The IronClad Vow   A Shattered Masquerade

    The Hamilton Charity Gala was a sea of glittering jewels and murmured lies, and Ivy was drowning in it. The emerald gown, a masterpiece of silk and structure, felt less like armor and more like a cage of someone else’s making. At her side, Lucian was a king holding court, his hand a firm, impersonal pressure on the small of her back, guiding her, possessing her for the watching world.“You’re staring at the champagne flute as if it’s a venomous snake,” his voice, low and meant only for her, cut through the symphony of string quartets and polite conversation. “Relax. Smile. You’re supposed to be enchanting the masses, not conducting a chemical analysis.”Ivy forced her lips to curve, a brittle, practiced gesture. “I’m simply calculating how many of these flutes it would take to pay for a new pediatric wing. The number is… enlightening.”A flicker of something, amusement? crossed his features before being schooled back into impassivity. “A pragmatist. How refreshing.” He nodded toward a

  • The IronClad Vow   A Clash of Coffee and Wills

    The first morning in the Thorne penthouse dawned with a silence that was anything but peaceful. Ivy woke in the vast, unfamiliar bed, the sterile luxury of the room feeling more like a hotel suite than a home. For a disorienting second, she didn’t know where she was. Then the memory of the cold wedding, the loosening wedding band on her finger, and Lucian’s impassive face crashed down on her.She dressed in her own simple clothes, a soft, grey sweater and dark slacks, a small act of defiance. When she ventured out into the main living area, she found him already there, a fortress of concentration behind his tablet, a half-empty cup of black coffee at his elbow. The morning sun carved his profile in light and shadow, making him look both formidable and, annoyingly, perfectly composed.He didn’t look up as she entered. “The chef is in the kitchen. Tell him what you want.”Ivy hesitated, then moved toward the sleek, state-of-the-art kitchen. A man in a crisp white uniform gave her a poli

  • The IronClad Vow   The Gilded Cage

    The wedding was a transaction, meticulously executed.There was no lace, no whispered vows, no happy tears. It took place in a stark, modern courthouse chamber that smelled of lemon polish and quiet desperation. Ivy wore a simple, off-white sheath dress she’d bought off the rack, a garment as temporary as the vows she was about to take. Lucian stood beside her in a charcoal Brioni suit that cost more than her entire year’s rent, his posture radiating impatience.The judge’s words were a monotonous drone. “…for better or for worse…”"For worse," Elara thought, her hands clasped so tightly her knuckles were white. "It is entirely for worse."“…in sickness and in health…”She thought of Calla, and a fresh wave of determination washed over the fear. "For her health. Always for her."When the judge instructed Lucian to place the ring on her finger, he did so with the detached efficiency of a CEO sealing a merger. The platinum band was cool and heavy, a perfect circle that felt more like a

  • The IronClad Vow   A Proposal Forged in Ice

    The rain didn't fall on New York; it assaulted it. Each drop was a bullet against the panoramic glass of Lucian Thorne’s penthouse, a sixty-fifth-floor fortress where the sounds of the city were nothing more than a muted, distant hum. He preferred it that way. Distance was power. Control was everything.Ivy Quinn felt like a ghost in the cavernous space, her reflection a pale, shimmering smudge in the dark glass. She clutched the worn fabric of her coat, a threadbare shield against the glacial air conditioning. The room was a testament to its owner: sleek, expensive, and utterly devoid of warmth. A single monolithic desk of obsidian, a few angular leather chairs, and a breathtaking, terrifying view of the storm-lashed skyline. No personal photos. No art. Just power, stated plainly.“Let’s dispense with the pretense, Miss Quinn.”His voice was not loud. It was a low, resonant vibration that cut through the room, bypassing her ears and settling like a weight in her chest. He stood with

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status