LOGIN“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.
“Savannah, stop walking away from me.”Jackson’s voice chased her down the long hallway, sharp, controlled, threaded with something dangerously close to desperation.Savannah didn’t stop. Didn’t slow. Didn’t look back.Her pulse hammered against her ribs as she pushed through the double doors leading into the east wing sitting room, the one room in this mansion that didn’t feel like it pressed the air out of her lungs.She needed space.She needed to breathe.She needed a world without Sterling eyes watching her every move , including Jackson’s.But Jackson wasn’t a man who let things go.He followed, steps long and unyielding, his presence filling the doorway before she could gather her thoughts.“Savannah,” he said again, quieter this time, “look at me.”She spun around so fast it startled him.“Look at you?” she choked out. “I’ve been looking at you for weeks, Jackson. And every time I think I understand you, something else detonates in my face.”His jaw flexed. “That’s not fair.”
The emergency meeting room at Sterling Tower was a fortress of glass and steel, perched high above the city like a war chamber built for battles no one ever admitted to fighting. Rain lashed the windows, streaking down in silver rivulets as thunder growled far in the distance. It was an appropriate backdrop for the storm unraveling inside.Savannah stood near the far wall, arms wrapped around herself, pulse fluttering like a trapped bird. She’d been pulled from Jackson’s office barely ten minutes ago, Grayson’s urgent whisper still echoing in her ears:“They leaked everything. Not just the trust documents , your marriage contract too.”Her hands still shook.Across the room, Jackson paced like a caged predator, his every step sharp, controlled, calculated. Beau sat at the table, tapping the end of a pen against a file filled with printed headlines. Headlines that sickened Savannah.“Fake Marriage Scandal Rocks Sterling Empire.”“CEO Accused of Contractual Deception.”“Anonymous Source
The Sterling penthouse felt wrong.Too quiet.Too still.Too full of a tension thick enough to be sliced.Savannah stood near the floor-to-ceiling windows, staring out at the St. Louis skyline. The city lights glittered like scattered diamonds, beautiful but far away, unreachable. Behind her, the soft hum of the penthouse’s air system was the only sound. Jackson had paced the length of the room for almost twenty minutes, each step measured, controlled, and sharp enough to echo.The press leak had detonated like a bomb.Every news outlet now carried the story:Sterling Enterprises Fraud. Tampered Trust Clauses. Possible Illegal Marriage Arrangement.Savannah still couldn’t breathe when she thought about it. Her name wasn’t mentioned directly yet, but she knew it was a matter of hours, maybe minutes, before reporters connected the dots.Jackson stopped pacing abruptly.“She’s playing a long game,” he muttered, jaw tight. “Delilah didn’t just leak the files. She timed it.”Savannah tore
Savannah did not sleep.Not that night. Not for a moment.Not with the weight of secrets pressing into her ribs like steel.Jackson had disappeared hours earlier, pulled into late-night crisis calls, meetings behind locked doors, strategy sessions with Grayson that stretched past midnight. And though Savannah had been dismissed from the study with a sharp, “Go rest, you’ve done enough,” her mind refused to be quiet.Done enough?She had barely begun.She lay awake in the guest suite, her new marital suite, as the house staff called it, staring at the silk canopy above her, replaying the same words over and over:“If the amended clause leaks to the press, the marriage becomes evidence of fraud.”“Harrison has been planning this for months.”“Delilah has copies.”“We either fight… or fall.”Fight.The word stuck.By dawn, Savannah had made a choice, quietly, privately, fully.She was done being the one pushed around the chessboard.Today, she would move.The sun had barely cracked the h
The mansion felt different after the leak , quieter, but not in a peaceful way. It was the quiet that follows destruction, the kind that sits in the air like dust after an explosion, the kind that tells you something massive is about to break.Savannah stood in the far corner of the sitting room, arms wrapped around herself, watching the storm build in Jackson Sterling’s eyes. He paced the room like a man fighting a war inside his own body. His movements were sharp, controlled, but there was something frayed around the edges , a pressure threatening to burst through the surface.Grayson was near the fireplace, hands shaking as he held out the tablet again. “It’s everywhere now. Every major outlet. They’re saying the clause was altered intentionally to protect your position.”Savannah felt the floor tilt under her. Fraud.The media was already using the word without hesitation.Jackson’s father’s face filled the television screen , a clip from a live interview. Harrison’s voice was icy
The world seemed to tilt, the study shrinking around them as the weight of Grayson’s words settled like a storm cloud. The press had the documents. All of Harrison’s forged clauses, the manipulated contracts, the timing discrepancies, the fraudulent signatures. Everything.And now the world , or at least every ruthless financial journalist in St. Louis , would feast on it.Savannah felt her breath falter. “How fast?” she whispered.Grayson exhaled shakily. “They’re publishing now.”The air snapped.Jackson moved first. Not with panic, but with the cold precision of a man whose entire world was built on staying ahead of disaster. He strode across the room and locked the office door.“No one comes in,” he said. “No calls. No interruptions unless it’s life or death.”Grayson nodded tightly. “Already instructed the staff.”Savannah remained near the desk, her fingers gripping the wooden edge. She felt like she was standing on an invisible fault line, bracing for a quake. Her heart thumped







