ANMELDEN
ALYANA POV
The black sedan drove over the gravel driveway toward the Vance estate. The large iron gates opened slowly, and the car continued down the long private road. "Stop shaking your hands, Alyana. It’s making me nervous," my father said. He didn't look at me. He was busy straightening his silk tie in the rearview mirror, obsessed with looking like a man who wasn't about to hand over his eldest daughter to a stranger. "I’m not shaking," I lied, tucking my hands under my thighs. The leather seat felt cold against my skin. "I’m just... cold." "The house is large and has heating," he said, turning off the engine at the front entrance. The building was constructed of dark stone and glass. The upper floors were dark. It appeared built for security rather than comfort. I didn't move. My seatbelt felt like a lifeline I wasn't ready to unclick. "Dad, we can still go back. We can find another way. The bank, maybe? Or Uncle Silas?" My father finally looked at me, and for a second, I saw a flash of guilt. But it was quickly buried under the weight of his own desperation. "Silas won't help. The bank is already seizing the warehouse, Alyana. Julian Vance is the only person in this city with enough liquid capital to wipe that debt in a single afternoon. He asked for a wife. I’m giving him one. You’re saving the family. Think of your sister. Think of her tuition." "I am thinking of her," I whispered. "That’s why I’m here." "Good." He reached over, unbuckled my seatbelt for me, and patted my shoulder—a gesture that felt hollow and transactional. "He’s waiting. Marcus, his assistant, will meet you at the door. I have a flight to catch for the Singapore merger." "You aren't even coming in?" "Mr. Vance is a private man. He doesn't like crowds." He nodded toward the door. "Go. Don't make him regret the investment." Investment, not a marriage—just an investment. I stepped out of the car. The night air was humid and still. I didn't look back as he drove away; instead, I stood on the pavement with my suitcase until a man in a charcoal suit opened the oak doors. "Miss Alyana?" he asked. His expression remained neutral and professional. "Yes," I said, my voice cracking. I cleared my throat. "Yes, I’m here. "I am Marcus. Please, follow me. Mr. Vance does not like to be kept waiting, and we are already three minutes behind schedule." The house was cold inside. The black floors were shiny, reflecting the lights from the ceiling. There were no pictures on the walls and the vases were empty. It just smelled like wood polish and air conditioning. "Is he always this... quiet?" I asked, my footsteps made a loud sound on the floor. "Mr. Vance likes his privacy," Marcus said, keeping his pace. He led me through several hallways to a set of double doors at the end of the west wing. "You’re staying in the east wing. Your bags are already in the room next to the main suite. But first, he wants to see you." Marcus opened the door slightly. "He is in his study. Go in and keep your voice low." I stayed at the door for a second, my chest feeling tight as I looked back at Marcus. "Are you coming in with me?" "No," Marcus said. He looked at me for a moment as if he felt sorry for me. "Good luck, Alyana." I pushed the door open. The room was large and filled with books from floor to ceiling. The only light came from a green lamp on the desk and the moon shining through the curtains. A man sat in a leather chair with his back to me, looking out the window. I could smell whiskey in the room. "Shut the door," he said. His voice wasn't loud or scary like people said it would be. It was just low, raspy, and very calm. I closed the door. "Mr. Vance?" "Come closer," he said. "I want to see what six million dollars looks like in the light." I walked toward the desk, my legs heavy as I moved. When I reached the rug, he turned his chair around. I stopped. He stayed in the dark, but I could see a mask. It was smooth and black, covering the top left side of his face with a thin strap. The other side was clear—he had a sharp jaw, and he wasn't smiling. "You're smaller than the photos your father sent," he said. He looked me up and down, as if he were checking to see if I was worth the price. "I'm 5'4," I said, trying to stay calm. "And I'm not a statue, Mr. Vance. I'm a person." He gave a small, cold laugh. "In this room, you are a contract. Nothing more. Did your father explain your duties? "He said I’m your wife." "Nominal wife," he corrected, leaning forward into the light. I saw his right eye then—a sharp, clear blue that looked straight at me. "You will live here. You will go to three charity events a year. You will let people take photos of you leaving my office once a month. You will look happy. You will look cared for." "And in private?" "In private, you will stay out of my way," he said, reaching for a glass of amber liquid on his desk. "I have no interest in your life, your hobbies, or your conversation. You are here to fix a PR problem. My board thinks I'm too 'unstable' since the accident. A wife suggests a man who has something to lose. It suggests a man who can be trusted." "So I'm just a prop for your shareholders." "You're a very expensive prop," Julian said. He took a slow sip of his drink. "Don't get any ideas about changing me, Alyana. Don't try to look under the mask, and don't pretend to be the sad, loyal wife. I paid for you to be here, not for your heart. Do you understand?" His words were colder than I expected. I felt a sudden heat in my chest—not because I was scared, but because I was starting to get angry. "Understood," I said. I walked right up to the desk, leaning down so he had to look me in the eye. "But if I’m an investment, you should know I’m not a cheap one. If you want me to look happy for your board, you’d better start acting like a human being, Mr. Vance. Because right now, you just look like a man who’s hiding from everyone." The room was completely quiet. I could hear the clock ticking on the wall behind him. I thought he’d get angry, or call Marcus to throw me out. Instead, Julian just tilted his head. He didn't move, but his gaze stayed fixed on me. His blue eye didn't look away; it stayed on me as if he were really seeing me for the first time. He watched me as if he were surprised I actually fought back. He didn't say anything. He just watched me, his thumb slowly moving along the edge of his glass. "Get out," he said quietly. I didn't wait. I turned and walked toward the door, my heart beating fast. As I reached for the handle, I could still feel him looking at me. "Alyana," he called out. I stopped, my hand on the handle. "Yes?" "Don't wear that perfume again," he said, his voice dropping. "It doesn't fit in this house." I didn't answer. I stepped out of the room and closed the door, leaning my back against it. My heart was beating so hard I could feel it in my chest. The stories about him were right—he was a difficult man. But as I walked toward the east wing, I couldn't stop thinking about the way he looked at me. He didn't just want someone to sit there and look pretty. He wanted someone who would fight back.ALYANA POV By the afternoon, the building felt different. Not quieter. Not louder. Just… aware. I noticed it the moment I stepped out of Julian’s office to handle the next set of documents. Conversations didn’t stop when I passed anymore. They shifted. Lowered just enough to sound controlled, but not enough to hide that they were happening. People weren’t pretending I didn’t exist. They were watching. And for the first time, I didn’t feel like avoiding it. I adjusted the folder in my hands and kept walking, my pace steady, my expression neutral. If they were going to look, then let them. I wasn’t here by accident anymore. “Alyana.” I slowed slightly at the sound of my name. Not Julian. I turned. One of the board members from earlier—Mr. Calder—was approaching, his steps measured, his expression polite but careful. “Do you have a minute?” he asked. I studied him for a second before nodding. “Depends.” A small smile. Controlled. “It won’t take long.” I shifted the folde
ALYANA POVThe room didn’t feel the same after Elena left.It wasn’t just the silence. That, I was used to.It was the way the air seemed tighter, like something had been set in motion and neither of us could pretend otherwise.I stayed where I was, my fingers still resting against the edge of the desk, even after the door clicked shut behind her. For a moment, I just stared at it, like I expected her to walk back in and say something else.She didn’t.Of course she didn’t.“She’s testing you,” Julian said.I looked at him. “That wasn’t subtle.”“It wasn’t meant to be.”I exhaled slowly, pushing myself to move, stepping away from the desk just to break the stillness. “She’s not worried.”“No.”“She’s confident.”“Yes.”That shouldn’t have bothered me.But it did.Because confidence like that didn’t come from guessing.It came from knowing.Or thinking you did.I crossed my arms lightly, my thoughts running faster than I could organize. “Then we’re missing something.”Julian didn’t ans
ALYANA POV Everything felt different the moment I stepped into his office like I belonged there. Not as a guest. Not as someone tolerated. But as someone expected. It wasn’t loud or obvious. No one announced it. No one needed to. It was in the way the assistant outside his office didn’t stop me this time. In the way the door opened without hesitation when I reached for it. In the way I didn’t pause before walking in. Julian was already inside, standing near his desk, reviewing something on his tablet. He didn’t look up immediately when I entered, but I knew he was aware of me. He always was. I closed the door behind me quietly. “You didn’t waste time.” “Neither did you,” he replied. His voice was calm, like always. Controlled. But there was something underneath it today—something more focused, sharper. I stepped closer to the desk, placing the files I’d brought down in front of him. “I updated your schedule. Two meetings moved, one canceled, and I added a review session this
ALYANA POVI didn’t move right away.Even after we saw it.Even after the system confirmed what we had been pushing for since this started.I just stood there, eyes fixed on the screen, watching the logs settle into place like something final.“They picked one,” I said quietly.Julian didn’t answer immediately. I could feel him beside me, close enough that the shift in his breathing was noticeable, but he stayed silent.Then—“They had to.”I nodded, more to myself than to him. “They chose the lower-profile location. Less visibility. Less risk.”“Which means they’re not just reacting,” he said. “They’re calculating.”I leaned back slightly, crossing my arms as I forced myself to look away from the screen. “We already knew that.”“Yes,” he said. “But now we’ve confirmed it.”That hit differently.Confirmed.Not assumed. Not guessed.Proven.I exhaled slowly, running a hand through my hair. “So what now?”Julian stepped forward, reaching past me to tap something on the keyboard. The logs
ALYANA POV By the second schedule change, I could already feel it. Not in the numbers. Not in the system. But in the way the building itself seemed to hold its breath. I stayed in my office, the door slightly ajar this time, letting in just enough noise from the hallway to remind me I wasn’t completely alone. My laptop screen glowed in front of me, logs updating in real time, every access point mapped out in clean, organized lines. Too clean. That was the problem. “Come on,” I muttered, eyes scanning the timestamps again. The first adjustment had been subtle. Expected. Controlled. The second— Not as smooth. There was a delay. Small. But it was there. I leaned forward, narrowing my eyes at the screen. “You hesitated.” Not long enough for anyone else to notice. But long enough for me. A soft knock broke my focus. I didn’t look away from the screen. “Come in.” The door opened slowly, and I heard the quiet click of it closing again. “You’ve been in here for over an ho
ALYANA POVBy the time I stepped back into the main floor, everything felt… sharper.Not louder. Not chaotic. Just more defined.Every movement around me seemed intentional—the way people walked, the way conversations dropped when someone passed, the way eyes lingered just a second longer than necessary. It wasn’t new. I’d noticed it before.But now, I was looking at it differently.Now, I was paying attention.I headed straight for my office, closing the door behind me without slowing down. The quiet settled quickly, but it didn’t feel suffocating this time. It felt… useful.I placed my phone on the desk and pulled up the logs again, syncing them with the internal system. The numbers lined up the same way they had earlier. Same time windows. Same access points.Consistent.Too consistent.“Let’s see how you adjust,” I murmured under my breath.I opened another file, this time pulling up the executive schedule for the next three days. Julian hadn’t made the changes yet, but I could al
ALYANA POV I watched Elena disappear into the crowd, the bright red of her dress fading among the darker suits and glittering gowns. The music in the ballroom continued, soft and polite, but the air around me felt heavier after that short conversation. I folded my arms loosely, leaning a little c
ALYANA POVI went straight to the kitchen.Not because I was hungry, but because I needed a moment away from the strange tension outside. The moment the door closed behind me, the quiet inside the mansion felt almost too peaceful compared to what had just happened in the garden.I leaned against th
ALYANA POV The next morning felt strangely normal. I woke up just after sunrise, the pale light already filtering through the tall windows of the east wing. For a few seconds I stayed still, listening to the quiet hum of the mansion waking up somewhere beyond my room. Yesterday kept replaying in
ALYANA POVI didn’t realize how much time had passed in the gallery until the light outside the tall windows started turning warmer.Afternoon.The quiet inside the room felt different now, softer somehow. I had spent hours walking from one painting to another, sometimes sitting on the bench in the







