Home / Romance / The Ties That Binds / Chapter 6: The Decision

Share

Chapter 6: The Decision

Author: Juliet Blair
last update Last Updated: 2026-01-20 01:33:10

“Savannah, are you even listening to me, or do you plan to sit there staring at the marble floor until it cracks beneath you?”

Her head snapped up at Jackson’s cool voice. His dark eyes were fixed on her, unreadable, patient but with that simmering edge that made her chest tighten. The silence of the room had grown heavy, broken only by the faint tick of a golden clock somewhere behind him.

“I heard you,” she said finally, her voice low. “I just don’t know what kind of man thinks it’s appropriate to propose marriage like it’s a business transaction.”

Jackson leaned back in his leather chair, the faintest trace of a smile touching his lips. “A man who sees the world for what it is. Survival. Strategy. Leverage. Call it what you like, Savannah, but don’t pretend you’re not considering it.”

Her fingers twisted together in her lap. She wanted to argue, to deny it outright, but the truth sat heavy in her chest. Of course she was considering it. She wouldn’t have driven across the city, into this fortress of steel and glass that was his estate, if some part of her hadn’t already known she’d listen.

“You’re arrogant,” she said, her tone sharper now. “You think you can just wave your money around and get whatever you want.”

Jackson’s gaze didn’t waver. “Money buys comfort. Power buys options. Both buy time. Which of those do you have right now?”

The question stung, mostly because it was true. Her home, the only thing her parents had left behind for her, was dangling on the edge of foreclosure. Each phone call from the bank felt like a death sentence. Pride was a thin shield against numbers printed in red.

She swallowed. “You’ve been keeping tabs on me. You knew everything before you even picked up the phone.”

He didn’t deny it. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the sleek desk between them. “I make it my business to know the people I deal with. Especially the ones I’m about to marry.”

Her heart gave a strange, uneven thump. “You don’t even know me.”

Jackson tilted his head slightly, as if she’d just said something naive. “I know enough. You fight too hard for things most people would have already walked away from. You let pride drive you, even when it’s killing you. And you’re stubborn, which will make this… arrangement manageable. I don’t need you to be in love with me, Savannah. I just need you to agree.”

The air between them thickened. She could hear her own breathing, shallow and quick. The absurdity of it all pressed down on her, this wasn’t how proposals were supposed to happen. No flowers, no ring, no trembling declarations of love. Just an offer laid bare like a contract, and a man who seemed carved out of steel waiting for her to sign with her life.

“What if I say no?” she asked, the words tumbling out before she could stop them.

He didn’t blink. “Then you lose everything. And I continue with my life unaffected. But let’s not waste each other’s time pretending you’re not desperate enough to consider it.”

Her nails dug into her palms. Anger, humiliation, and fear clashed inside her until she felt dizzy. She wanted to scream at him, to storm out and never look back. But she also wanted to throw herself into his challenge, into the safety his wealth promised, no matter how cold the offer sounded.

“Why me?” she whispered. “You could have any woman you wanted. Someone polished. Someone who would fit perfectly into your world. Why me?”

Jackson’s expression flickered, the faintest crack in his guarded mask. “Because you’re not perfect. And I need imperfection. It’s believable. The world won’t question it. They’ll see a woman clinging to stability, not someone scheming for my fortune.”

Her stomach twisted. He was using her flaws as strategy. He had already thought this through, mapped it out like a chessboard where she was just another piece.

“I don’t trust you,” she said finally, her voice shaking.

“You don’t have to trust me,” he replied smoothly. “You only have to agree.”

For a long moment, neither moved. His calm was infuriating, like a man who had already won before the game even began. She felt small in the vastness of the room, in the presence of his unshakable control.

Her throat tightened as she forced the words out. “I need time.”

Jackson stood abruptly, his chair gliding back without a sound. He crossed the room with a grace that seemed almost predatory, then stopped only a breath away from her. She could smell his cologne, something rich, restrained, expensive. His voice dropped lower, softer, but no less commanding.

“You don’t have time. That’s the thing about desperation, Savannah. It doesn’t wait politely. It eats away at you until you can’t think straight. I’m offering you a way out, but the door doesn’t stay open forever.”

Her heart pounded in her ears. The warmth of his nearness unsettled her, clashing violently with the ice in his tone. She opened her mouth, searching for words, but nothing came.

His gaze locked onto hers, steady, unrelenting. “I need your answer. Now.”

The room felt as though it were closing in, the weight of his demand pressing down on her chest until she couldn’t breathe. Every thought of her crumbling home, every notice from the bank, every desperate night staring at unpaid bills crashed over her at once. And still, Jackson stood there, waiting, his composure unshaken, as if he already knew what she would say.

Her lips parted, her voice trembling on the edge of surrender.

And just then, her phone buzzed sharply in her bag.

Both of them froze.

Savannah’s hand shot to the strap of her purse, her fingers fumbling for the phone, the sound shattering the silence like glass. Jackson’s eyes narrowed, his jaw tightening, but he didn’t move, didn’t speak. He simply waited as if the interruption was an annoyance, not a salvation.

Her gaze flicked down at the glowing screen. The bank.

Her chest seized.

The world tilted, her pulse racing so fast she could barely hear over it. She gripped the phone like it was burning her skin.

And she realized, in that suspended, breathless moment, that whatever came next would decide everything.

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

Latest chapter

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 163: THE PROMISE

    The quiet outside Sterling Tower felt unreal. For months, Savannah had lived in a world of alarms, fire, betrayal, and near-death escapes so the silence settling over the marble courtyard felt almost frightening. The sun was beginning to set, staining the sky with streaks of rose gold, and the soft wind lifted her hair as she stood beside Jackson, their fingers intertwined.She still couldn’t believe they were both standing here, whole, breathing, alive.Jackson’s thumb brushed over her knuckles. “You’re quiet,” he murmured, eyes fixed on her more than the horizon. “That usually means you’re thinking too much.”She huffed a soft laugh. “And you don’t think enough.”He raised a brow. “Savannah.”“Jackson.”Their exchanged tone made Cole standing a respectful distance away smile faintly before turning to give them privacy. Medical staff moved around checking damage, security teams cleared rubble, and various board members stood together whispering about the scandal Harrison tried and fa

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 162: THE LAST STAND OF THE STERLINGS

    The wind screamed against the shattered windows of Sterling Tower as Savannah pushed through the smoke-stained hallway, her chest heaving, her pulse hammering like war drums inside her skull. Every light flickered. Every alarm wailed. Every step drew her closer to the man whose world whose life had been nearly torn from him again.“Jackson!” she shouted, her voice echoing through the fractured corridor.Her boots crunched over broken glass, twisted steel, and fallen ceiling tiles. The entire building felt like it was holding its breath, as if waiting to see whether the empire would fall or rise depending on the two people fighting for its heart.Cole limped behind her, gripping the railing for balance. “Savannah slow down. You don’t know what’s waiting on that floor.”“I don’t care,” she said without looking back. “He’s up there. And if Harrison thinks he can take him from me now, he doesn’t understand what I’m capable of.”A burst of sparks rained from a torn electrical panel. Shadow

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 161: THE LAST DOOR BETWEEN THEM

    Savannah moved down the ruined hallway with every nerve stretched thin, her heartbeat loud enough to drown out the crackling wires above her. Smoke curled from the shattered ceiling lights, pieces of glass scattered across the floor like frozen stars. The final blast had blown out half the corridor, leaving jagged openings that dropped several floors beneath them. But she didn’t stop. She didn’t breathe. She didn’t blink.All she could see the only thing that mattered was the last steel door standing at the end of the corridor. The door that separated her from Jackson.Her steps were uneven, but her determination wasn’t. Every memory of him his voice, his steady hands, the fierce way he had always pulled her back from danger shoved her forward. She didn’t care that her legs trembled. She didn’t care that the entire tower groaned under the weight of destruction. Nothing mattered except getting that door open.“Jackson…” she whispered, barely audible over the alarm blaring above her. “P

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 160: THE FINAL MOVE

    Savannah had never known silence could feel so loud. It pressed against her ribs as though the entire world had stopped breathing with her. The hallway outside the Sterling private chamber trembled with the aftermath of the explosions, with the metallic groan of a building forced to withstand everything Harrison had thrown at it. Smoke clung to the air like a shadow refusing to leave, but Savannah walked through it with her chin lifted, her heart beating in slow, heavy strikes that tasted like destiny.Jackson walked beside her.Alive. Standing. Breathing.His injuries had not fully healed she could see the tightness in his jaw whenever a sharp movement sent pain through his ribs but he refused help, refused rest, refused anything that suggested he would step back while this final piece of the war was put into place. He walked as a man who had already died once tonight and clawed his way back because he refused to leave her alone in the fire."Security sweep confirms the west wing is

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 159: THE FINAL BREATH BEFORE THE FALL

    Savannah didn’t wait for permission she pushed through the ruined doorway as if the collapsing hallway itself couldn’t stop her. Smoke curled through the scorched corridor, the remnants of Harrison’s last trap still simmering in the air. Sirens wailed in the distance, a haunting reminder that the tower wasn’t stable, that time was bleeding away far faster than any of them could afford. But she didn’t slow down. Not when Jackson was somewhere ahead of her. Not when everything they had clawed through every fire, every betrayal, every breath of hope led them to this final stretch.Her shoes scraped asphalt as she stepped into the open emergency deck, the night wind slicing across her face. The city lights sprawled below like stars fallen to earth, a glittering horizon that mocked how close everything had come to being destroyed. She saw him then standing at the edge of the platform, shoulders tight, chest rising and falling like he was holding up the entire world alone.“Jackson,” she ca

  • The Ties That Binds    CHAPTER 158: THE WEIGHT OF WHAT COMES NEXT

    Savannah didn’t realize she was holding her breath until Jackson’s fingers slid between hers, grounding her back into the moment with a quiet urgency she felt all the way through her bones. The war around them every fire, every betrayal, every scheme Harrison had unleashed felt as though it had finally begun to fade into silence, but the aftermath still hovered sharp and heavy in the air. They stood at the top floor of Sterling Tower, alarms finally quieted, smoke settling, the chaos below slowly shrinking into nothing more than distant memory. Yet the tension between them pulsed like a living thing.Jackson turned toward her fully, jaw tight, eyes darker than she’d ever seen. “Savannah… everything is going to change after tonight.” His voice was steady, but beneath it she heard something else fear, not of danger, but of the truth he hadn’t spoken yet.Savannah stepped closer, refusing to let the uncertainty root itself between them. "Everything has already changed," she murmured. "We

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