Anais Vale vanished three years ago, breaking the terms of a legally binding marriage contract with billionaire CEO Cassian Vale. To the world, their short-lived marriage was a mystery. To Anais, it was survival. But when a mysterious legal summons pulls her out of hiding, she’s forced to return—not as a woman in love, but as a wife under obligation. Cassian, ruthless and unreadable, never divorced her. Their original contract still holds, and now he wants her back—if only to fulfill the remaining years and protect his corporate empire from a hostile takeover. Emotion is not part of the deal. But the contract hides more than just legal conditions. It conceals a past filled with betrayal, a family legacy steeped in secrets, and a shared history neither of them fully understands. Anais returns as a woman determined to endure it quietly. But things change quickly: she discovers Cassian’s health is failing, that someone wants her dead, and that her own tragic past may be connected to his family’s crimes. As the truth unravels, Anais is forced to confront who Cassian really is—and who she must become if she wants to survive in his world. Along the way, both begin to transform. Anais, once passive and self-effacing, begins to find her voice and strength. Cassian, seemingly heartless and stoic, is forced to feel and face the consequences of his past. Their story is a collision of control and vulnerability, love and guilt, power and protection. What begins as a contract slowly becomes a reckoning—and a second chance neither of them expected. But second chances come at a cost. And not every ending is fair.
Lihat lebih banyakThe rain hadn’t let up in days.
It wasn’t the kind that passed quickly;washing dust from rooftops and leaving behind blue skies. No, this was the quiet, stubborn sort. The kind that sat heavy on the ground and turned air into mist. The kind that soaked through shoes, clothes, even skin. The kind Anais Vale had learned to live with.
She stood in the kitchen of the cottage she’d rented two years ago-barefoot, arms crossed, sweater draped like a second skin. Outside, the storm whispered against the windows. Inside, the silence pressed close, like a secret waiting to be told.
The kettle hissed softly. She poured the water into a chipped mug and dropped in a teabag. Her hand lingered on the string, fingers trembling just enough to make the paper tag dance.
She wasn’t looking at the tea.
She was looking at the envelope.
It lay untouched on the table. Thick, cream-colored parchment. Sealed with red wax, like something out of another century. No name. No return address. Just two words, centered perfectly in the middle.
Anais Vale.
Nothing else.
She hadn’t seen his handwriting in three years. Didn’t need to.
Cassian Vale didn’t sign his name. He never had to.
The first time she saw it, it had been on a legal contract slid across a marble table. Back then, she’d still thought the worst thing in the world was loneliness. She hadn’t understood what it meant to belong to someone in ink.
She sat down slowly.
Her tea cooled untouched.
She stared at the envelope until the edges blurred, until her pulse grew louder than the rain. Then she opened it.
Inside was a single letter, printed on heavy paper. No emotion. No introduction. Just precision.
You left early.
The contract was for five years.
You’ve completed three.
You are still legally my wife.
Return by the 20th or I will proceed as agreed.
This is not an invitation.
This is a requirement.
—C. Vale
No greeting. No signature. Just the letter and the weight it carried. Anais read it once. Then again.
The 20th was four days away.
She leaned back in the chair, closed her eyes, and let her head fall back until it met the wood. She didn’t cry. She’d already cried everything out of her. There was nothing left but stillness.
Cassian had found her.
And he was calling her back.
Not for love. Not even for revenge.
Just for control.
That night, she barely slept.
She lay curled in bed, listening to the old radiator knock softly through the walls. Her fingers traced the edges of the letter in the dark. She’d left without permission. But could you really ask permission to run?
Three years ago, she’d slipped away while he was overseas. No goodbye. No confrontation. Just a note and silence. She knew it wouldn’t be enough. But she also knew if she tried to explain it to him face-to-face, she wouldn’t survive it.
Not emotionally. Maybe not physically.
Because Cassian Vale didn’t argue.
He dismantled.
The next morning, Anais packed a bag.
She moved like someone preparing for a funeral. She folded the black dress she never wore. The grey coat she’d saved for job interviews. Everything about her life here had been small, temporary. A life built on borrowed time.
She wrote a letter to her landlord, left rent for the next two months. No forwarding address. No number.
No need.
By noon, she was at the train station.
By nightfall, she was in a car—one she hadn’t called—driving through the glowing streets of the city she swore she’d never see again.
The driver didn’t speak. Just tapped his fingers once against the steering wheel when she slid into the back seat. She recognized the rhythm. Cassian’s security always did that.
A code. A signal.
She looked out the window. The buildings rushed past in a blur of glass and steel. It felt like being pulled underwater—no sound, no breath, just pressure.
She hadn’t realized how much quieter her life had become until the noise came back.
The car pulled up in front of the penthouse building.
She didn’t move.
The driver opened the door.
Anais stepped out.
The doorman didn’t ask for her name. He just nodded once, held the glass door open, and pressed the button for the top floor.
The elevator ride was silent.
Her heart wasn’t.
She hated how familiar it all was. The soft gold lights. The scent of citrus and leather. The gentle chime of the 25th floor. Her hand shook as she stepped into the hallway, but her steps didn’t.
Not anymore.
She paused in front of the door.
Then knocked once.
There was a long pause.
Then the door opened.
And there he was.
Cassian Vale.
Unchanged.
And yet, entirely different.
He didn’t say a word.
He just stood there in his usual black, tailored to a kind of quiet cruelty. His tie was undone, collar loosened like he’d just come from war—or was going to one. His eyes were the same gray-blue she remembered, sharp enough to wound and cold enough not to care.
But there were new things, too.
Lines around his eyes that hadn’t been there before. A stiffness in his left shoulder. A small tremor in his fingers—so faint she almost missed it.
Almost.
“Anais,” he said finally.
Her name, in that voice, struck something she thought she’d buried.
She swallowed. “You found me.”
“I never lost you.”
Of course not.
Cassian didn’t lose people.
He just waited for them to realize they had nowhere else to go.
She stepped inside.
The apartment was identical. Pristine. Museum-like. The only signs of life were a half-drunk glass of whiskey on the table and a photo of his late mother on the bookshelf. Nothing of her. Nothing of them.
“How long do I have to stay?” she asked, setting her bag down by the door.
He turned to face her fully. “Two years. No more, no less.”
Anais blinked. “You’re serious.”
Cassian arched a brow. “You broke a legal contract. One you signed in exchange for immunity.”
Immunity.
The word dropped like a stone.
She remembered it too well. The fire. The chaos. The headlines. Her name buried under aliases. Her face scrubbed from the internet. The night Cassian offered her a way out—but at a cost she couldn’t measure until it was too late.
“Why now?” she asked quietly.
He didn’t answer right away.
Instead, he poured himself another drink, hand steady this time.
“Because things are moving fast,” he said finally. “And I need a wife again.”
Her stomach turned.
He wasn’t pretending. Not even a little.
“I see,” she said.
“You’ll attend events. Wear the ring. Smile for the cameras. Say nothing to the press. You’ll stay in this apartment and behave as a partner would. In return, I’ll keep my end of the original agreement. Protection. Privacy. Money. And once the term ends—freedom.”
She stared at him.
“You think that’s what I want? Freedom?”
Cassian sipped his drink. “No. I think that’s what you always ran from.”
He said it so casually. Like a man who hadn’t been abandoned, just briefly inconvenienced.
Anais didn’t answer. She walked to the window, arms crossed against the cold.
Below, the city sparkled.
Above, the sky was black.
Behind her, Cassian Vale—her husband—stood like a question she never finished answering.
And for the first time in three years, she didn’t know whether she was safer running…
…or staying.
Anais didn’t cry.She didn’t scream, or tear up the papers, or demand that Cassian leave the apartment.She just… walked.Out of the vault, past the main hallway, through the quiet marble silence of a penthouse that had always felt too clean. Like a museum built to preserve something dead.She left the door open behind her.Cassian didn’t follow.Maybe he understood that for the first time, she wasn’t trying to hurt him.She just needed distance to survive him.She took the elevator to the street and started walking. No driver. No guard. No plan.Just her.The city had never looked so bright and aimless.At first, she didn’t know where she was going. But her feet remembered something her mind hadn’t caught up to yet.When she finally stopped, she was standing outside a bookstore tucked between two worn cafés on the Lower East Side. The glass was fogged, the sign crooked. She hadn’t been here since college.Inside, it smelled like old paper and nostalgia.She walked the aisles, running
It was after midnight when Anais called Irene.She hadn’t moved from the sofa in hours, the image of Julien and Dahlia stepping into that building with Harlan Quinn frozen on her phone screen. The soft blue glow of it had become the only light in the room.“I need to know where they went,” she said without preamble.Irene didn’t ask what had changed. “Already tracing.”Anais stared ahead, throat tight. “Do it quietly.”She hung up before Irene could respond.Cassian entered the room a minute later, his sleeves pushed up, hair slightly mussed. He looked at her the way people look at old war zones—half memory, half dread.“What happened?” he asked.She didn’t hand him the phone.Just said, “Julien and Dahlia are back. And they’re working with Harlan Quinn.”Cassian’s expression didn’t change. But she saw his hands stiffen by his sides.He walked to the fireplace and stood there silently for a long moment.“I should’ve buried them deeper,” he murmured.Anais stood slowly. “This isn’t jus
Cassian watched Anais from the doorway.She was standing in front of the window in the study again, exactly where she’d stood the night Julien and Dahlia were thrown out. But today, her stance was different. Not just still—grounded. Like she had finally stepped fully into her skin.She wasn’t afraid of him anymore.And that realization sat heavier than any boardroom betrayal ever had.He leaned against the doorframe, silent.She didn’t turn to acknowledge him. She knew he was there.Finally, he spoke.“You haven’t asked me what’s going to happen next.”Anais lifted her chin, eyes still on the street below. “Because I’m not waiting on your answer anymore.”There was no bitterness in her voice. Just calm certainty.Cassian stepped in slowly, closing the door behind him.“You’ve changed.”She didn’t move. “No. I’m just not performing anymore.”He sat in the leather chair by the fireplace. A long pause settled between them.“I miss the way you used to look at me,” he said.She blinked onc
Anais didn’t leave her room that night.She sat at her desk long after the city had gone still, the black folder from Cassian still open beside her laptop. She hadn’t touched it again. Just stared at the contract until the words blurred.Her tea had gone cold.Her phone buzzed twice with messages she didn’t open.A part of her thought: This should be the moment I walk away.But she didn’t. Not yet.There was still something she needed.Not closure. Not clarity.Power.And that had never come easy for her. It wasn’t in how she was raised, or how she learned to survive. For too long, silence had been her only defense. But silence wasn’t armor—it was a slow death.She picked up the folder and slipped it back into the drawer.Tonight wasn’t about endings.It was about strategy.By morning, Anais looked… settled.Not calm, not numb. Just anchored.She passed Cassian in the hallway without stopping. He called her name once, but she didn’t turn. He didn’t follow.She had things to do.People
Anais stood in front of her mirror longer than usual the next morning.She wasn’t studying her reflection the way she used to—searching for flaws or trying to make herself softer, prettier, more tolerable.No, today she was looking for something else.Proof that she was still here. That the woman staring back at her wasn’t the girl who used to flinch at silence or explain herself to cold eyes and clipped words.Her robe hung open at the front as she stood in just her underthings—lace and bone-white satin, elegant but quiet. The air in the room was cool, goosebumps rising across her skin, but she didn’t reach for the robe yet.She noticed the way her collarbone looked sharper, her eyes darker. Not from makeup—she hadn’t touched her face yet.It was just something that had shifted.Subtle. Internal. But it showed.Her hair was loosely pinned up, with soft strands slipping around her face, and she let them fall. There was something about letting it all down now that felt intentional. She
Anais sat in bed, knees drawn up, the letter in her hand wrinkled from being read again and again. “If you’re reading this, I’ve already lost you.”What kind of man writes something like that, hides it in a wall, and never says a word?The kind who expects to be forgiven without asking.The kind who weaponizes silence and calls it strength.She slipped the letter back into its envelope and stood. Her bare feet sank into the soft rug as she crossed the room and grabbed a cardigan. The hall outside was dark, but she didn’t bother turning on the lights. Let the shadows follow her. They already had.Cassian was in the sitting room when she found him. Alone. Lights low. A half-empty tumbler of whiskey in one hand, the bottle still on the table beside him. His shirt sleeves were rolled halfway up his forearms, and a single button near the collar was undone—messy, for him.He didn’t look up when she stepped in.Just said, “Couldn’t sleep?”His voice was low. Flat. But not empty. Like there w
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