تسجيل الدخولSienna's POV
The drive to the waterfront groundbreaking ceremony was quiet. Andrea sat beside me in the back of the car, one hand resting on my thigh, thumb absently stroking the skin just under the hem of my dress. Twenty-nine days left on our agreement, and the threats were already closing in. He hadn’t mentioned last night again. The whiskey confessions. The way he’d looked at me like I was more than a contract. Part of me wondered if he even remembered everything he’d said. “You’re tense,” I said softly, covering his hand with mine. His jaw flexed. “Elena knows how to make a scene. Blackwood will give her the stage. We stay united in public. No matter what she says.” I nodded. The platinum band on my finger felt heavier today. “We face it together.” The site was already crowded when we arrived—press, board members, city officials, and workers in hard hats. Cameras flashed the moment we stepped out of the car. Andrea kept his hand at the small of my back, guiding me through the crowd with that commanding presence. Marcus Hale approached first, looking uneasy. “The press is asking about the marriage. And there are rumors Elena Moretti will be here.” Andrea’s expression didn’t change. “Let them ask.” We took our places near the podium. I stood beside him, playing the supportive wife. But my stomach twisted when I spotted her. Elena walked in flanked by two men, looking polished and venomous in a tailored black dress. Julian Blackwood was nowhere in sight, but his presence lingered like smoke. Cameras swung toward her immediately. She smiled when she saw us. “Mr. Voss. Mrs. Voss. Congratulations on the whirlwind marriage. How convenient.” The crowd murmured. Microphones pushed closer. Andrea’s voice stayed calm and cold. “This is a celebration of the waterfront project, Elena. Not a place for old grudges.” “Oh, but it’s all connected,” she said sweetly, loud enough for the press to hear. “You acquired Vance Architecture the same way you tried to acquire me years ago. With pressure and promises. Tell them, Andrea. Tell your new wife why you really wanted her father’s company so badly.” Whispers spread. I felt the eyes on us. I stepped forward before Andrea could answer, lifting my chin. “My husband saved my family’s legacy when no one else would. Our marriage is our business. This project is about moving forward, not dragging up the past.” Elena’s eyes narrowed on me. “Careful, Sienna. He collects women the way he collects companies. When he’s done with you—” “Enough.” Andrea’s voice cut through like steel. He pulled me gently but firmly against his side. “Security, escort Miss Moretti off the premises. She’s trespassing.” Security moved in. Elena laughed as they guided her away, but the damage was done. Cameras kept flashing. Questions flew. We powered through the rest of the short ceremony. Andrea gave a strong speech about vision and rebuilding. I stood by him, smiling when required, but my mind kept replaying Elena’s words. --- Back in the car afterward, the tension followed us. Andrea loosened his tie, exhaling slowly. “She was fishing. Blackwood fed her enough to cause doubt.” I studied his profile. “Was there truth in what she said? About why you targeted my father’s company?” He looked at me then. For a second I saw the flicker of last night’s vulnerability. “There was history with Elena. She wanted more than I was willing to give. Your father’s firm was a legitimate acquisition. Nothing more.” I wanted to believe him. But the unknown texts kept nagging at me. We returned to the penthouse in silence. The moment the elevator doors closed, Andrea pulled me into his arms. Not demanding. Just holding. “Twenty-nine days,” he murmured against my hair. “I keep thinking about what happens after.” His phone buzzed. He ignored it at first, then glanced at the screen and stiffened. “Blackwood just sent a new offer to the board behind my back. He’s trying to buy them out one by one.” The threats were escalating. No time for softness now. I touched his face. “Then we fight smarter. Together.” He kissed me—harder this time, but still careful. His hands roamed my body with purpose, but he stopped before it went further, resting his forehead against mine. “Not tonight,” he said quietly. “Not when everything feels like it’s about to explode.” I nodded, even as my body ached for more of the man I’d glimpsed last night. Later, while Andrea took a call in his study, my phone vibrated with another message. ‘Unknown: The original offer to Elena wasn’t just money. It was marriage. He wanted her as the perfect wife to clean up his image. Ask him why he settled for a one-year contract with you instead. — Someone who knows the real Andrea Voss.’ My heart pounded. I deleted the text, but the words burned. Twenty-nine days left. And the secrets between us were growing heavier by the hour. As I watched Andrea through the glass doors of his study, jaw tight, shoulders rigid, I wondered how much longer our fake marriage could survive the truth. ---Sienna's POVThe penthouse felt smaller with every new threat.I hadn’t told him about the newest anonymous text. The one claiming he had offered Elena marriage five years ago. The one that made my stomach twist with doubt.We sat there and then the elevator dinged unexpectedly.The elevator doors had barely closed behind my father and Simon when the truth finally cracked open.Andrea stood in the middle of the living room, shoulders rigid, the mask he wore so well slipping completely for the first time since that drunken night. He looked at me like a man who knew he was about to lose something precious.“Sienna,” Dad said, voice cracking. “We need to talk. Alone.”Andrea stood slowly. “This is my home, Mr. Vance. Anything you want to say to my wife, you say in front of me.”Simon sneered. “Your wife? This sham marriage doesn’t fool anyone. We have proof, Voss. You didn’t buy Vance Architecture because it was failing. You bought it because Blackwood was about to.”I froze. “What?”“Sa
Sienna's POVThe drive to the waterfront groundbreaking ceremony was quiet. Andrea sat beside me in the back of the car, one hand resting on my thigh, thumb absently stroking the skin just under the hem of my dress. Twenty-nine days left on our agreement, and the threats were already closing in.He hadn’t mentioned last night again. The whiskey confessions. The way he’d looked at me like I was more than a contract. Part of me wondered if he even remembered everything he’d said.“You’re tense,” I said softly, covering his hand with mine.His jaw flexed. “Elena knows how to make a scene. Blackwood will give her the stage. We stay united in public. No matter what she says.”I nodded. The platinum band on my finger felt heavier today. “We face it together.”The site was already crowded when we arrived—press, board members, city officials, and workers in hard hats. Cameras flashed the moment we stepped out of the car. Andrea kept his hand at the small of my back, guiding me through the cro
Sienna's POVMorning light warmed the sheets. I woke first, still wrapped in Andrea’s arms, his body spooned tightly against mine. His morning wood pressed hot and heavy against my ass, and the memory of last night flooded back—his confessions, the way he’d touched me like I mattered beyond any contract.I shifted slightly, grinding back against him. Andrea stirred, his hand sliding possessively over my hip.“Morning,” he rasped, voice thick with sleep. He didn’t pull away. Instead, he kissed the back of my neck, slow and lingering.Andrea Voss POVI remembered fragments. Whiskey. Words spilling out that I never meant to say. *I don’t want you to leave.* Heat crept up my neck. Had I really admitted that? Sober now, the vulnerability felt dangerous. But her body against mine felt right. Too right.I tightened my arm around her waist. “Last night… I said things.”“You did,” she murmured, turning in my arms to face me. Her eyes were soft, searching.I avoided full eye contact, embarrasse
Sienna's POVWho was really behind the messages? And how long before our fake marriage became the only thing keeping everything from collapsing?I set my phone down on the coffee table, the warehouse threat still burning in my mind. Andrea stood by the windows, shoulders tense, staring out at the city like it owed him answers. The platinum band on his finger caught the light—our thirty-day shield.“Enough for one day,” I said softly, walking over. I took his hand and led him to the couch. “We need to unwind or we’ll burn out before Blackwood even makes his next move.”He didn’t argue. For once, he let me pull him down beside me. I poured two generous glasses of whiskey from the bar cart. He accepted his without comment, swirling the amber liquid before taking a long sip.We drank in silence at first. The burn settled warm in my chest. After the second glass, Andrea’s rigid posture loosened. His stormy eyes grew heavier, less guarded.“You know what scares me?” he murmured, voice lower
The penthouse felt charged after Andrea showed me the message from Julian Blackwood. I stood beside him, staring at the screen until he set the phone down. History repeating. Elena’s face swapped onto mine. The threat was clear.“He is not bluffing,” Andrea said, voice low. He walked to the bar and poured two glasses of whiskey, handing one to me. “Blackwood has been waiting for a weakness like this. The board vote tomorrow could swing if he leaks more about Elena or twists our contract into something illegal.”I took a sip, the burn steadying me. “Then we take the weapon out of his hand. Change the entire story before they cast their votes.”Andrea raised an eyebrow, leaning against the counter. “I am listening.”“Marriage.” The word left my mouth before I could overthink it. “Tomorrow morning. Civil ceremony. Quick and legal. It turns the personal contract into a relationship. Spousal privilege kills any coercion claims. The board cannot remove you over a marriage.”He studied me fo
The next morning I woke to an empty bed. My body still ached from the previous night, but the silence in the penthouse felt heavier than usual. I dressed quickly in a simple black pantsuit, no panties as per his rules, and found Andrea already in the kitchen, staring at his laptop with a cup of coffee untouched beside him.He looked up when I entered. For a second his stormy eyes softened, then the mask slid back into place. “Morning. We have a problem.”I poured myself coffee. “More than one, I assume.”He turned the laptop toward me. The headline screamed across the screen: ‘Vance Architecture Takeover: Personal Scandal or Corporate Coercion?’ The article quoted anonymous sources and mentioned Simon indirectly. My father’s name was there too.My stomach twisted. “Simon didn’t waste time.”“No. And the board called an emergency meeting for this afternoon.” Andrea rubbed his temple, a rare sign of strain. “Some members are questioning my leadership. They think this personal entangleme







