LOGINArielle Laurent spent three years hiding at Moreau Holdings, working under a false name. No one knows she’s the daughter of the man the Moreaus destroyed. When CEO Lucien Moreau offers her a contract marriage to save his reputation, she accepts, not for the two million dollars, but for revenge. But as she infiltrates his world, Lucien begins uncovering his own family’s crimes. When a chauffeur’s vendetta forces buried secrets into the light, Arielle must choose: destroy the family that murdered her father, or trust the man she’s falling for. Some contracts are signed in ink. Others in blood.
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The coffee machine in the break room sputtered its last drops into a chipped ceramic mug. Arielle Laurent wrapped her fingers around the warmth and took a sip. Six forty-five in the morning. The eighteenth floor was still empty.
Exactly how she preferred it.
She carried her coffee back to her cubicle, heels clicking softly against polished marble. Her workspace sat in the corner. Deliberately chosen. Far from the main corridor. Far from questions.
A small potted succulent. A stack of press releases. Nothing personal.
Her computer screen flickered to life. The Moreau Holdings logo appeared. Sleek silver letters that probably cost more than her monthly rent.
She opened her email and started sorting through morning briefings. Financial reports. Partnership announcements. The usual corporate language that said everything and nothing.
Then she saw it.
Subject: URGENT: Crisis Management Protocol Activated
Her hand froze on the mouse. In three years at Moreau Holdings, urgent meetings meant someone had screwed up. Publicly. The kind of screw-up that ended up on the front page with unflattering photos and speculation that tanked stock prices.
She clicked. The email was from Gerald Kim, head of corporate communications. Her direct supervisor.
All senior staff report to executive conference room. 8:00 AM sharp. Confidential matter. No exceptions.
Arielle set down her mug. Her pulse ticked faster, but her face stayed calm. She’d learned that here. How to look unbothered when everything inside you was screaming.
She pulled up the news aggregator on her second monitor.
It took less than thirty seconds to find it.
Moreau CEO Spotted in Intimate Dinner with Actress Vivienne Cross
The photo was grainy but clear enough. Lucien Moreau, seated across from a woman with striking features and long dark hair. Candlelight. Wine glasses. The kind of setting that implied things.
Arielle clicked through to the full article. Vivienne Cross. Rising star in independent film. Bold. Outspoken. Recently very public about her journey as a transgender woman.
The comment section was already overflowing. Some supportive. Many not. Plenty of speculation about what this meant for Moreau Holdings. A company built on old money and older values.
Investors didn’t like uncertainty. Shareholders didn’t like scandals.
Arielle sat back in her chair. She’d seen Lucien Moreau exactly three times in person. Once during her initial interview, though he hadn’t been in the room. Once in the elevator when he stepped in on the thirty-second floor and rode down in silence. Once in the lobby when he walked past her without a glance.
He was the kind of man people noticed. Tall. Controlled. Every movement is deliberate. Expensive suits like armor.
She didn’t like him. Didn’t hate him either. He was just the man whose name was on the building.
The man whose family had everything while hers had nothing.
Her phone buzzed. A text from her mother.
Are you eating enough? Call me this weekend.
Arielle typed back quickly. I’m fine. I’ll call Sunday.
She didn’t mention the email. Didn’t mention the headlines. Her mother was worried enough already.
At seven fifty-five, Arielle stood and smoothed the front of her blouse. She grabbed a notepad and pen. Then she walked toward the executive wing.
The conference room was already half full when she arrived. Senior staff clustered in small groups, voices low. Gerald spotted her and gestured toward an empty seat near the middle of the long table.
She sat without making eye contact with anyone.
At exactly eight o’clock, the door opened.
Lucien Moreau walked in, followed by two men in sharp suits. Lawyers, probably. His expression was unreadable. No frustration. No embarrassment. Just that same controlled calm.
He moved to the head of the table and remained standing. Everyone went silent.
“Thank you for coming on short notice.” His voice was even. Professional. “I’m sure most of you have seen this morning’s headlines.”
A few uncomfortable shifts. No one spoke.
“The situation is being managed. However, our investors are concerned. The board has expressed the need for immediate action to stabilize public perception.”
He paused. His gaze swept the room.
“I’ll be making a formal announcement within the week. You’ll receive talking points by the end of the day. All media inquiries go to Gerald’s department. No personal statements. No speculation.”
Gerald nodded from across the table. “Understood.”
Lucien’s eyes shifted again. This time, they stopped.
On her.
Arielle felt the weight of his attention like a hand pressing against her chest. She kept her face neutral. Didn’t look away. Didn’t react.
“Miss Laurent.”
Her stomach dropped. She hadn’t expected him to know her name.
“I’ll need to speak with you privately after this meeting. Please wait in my office.”
Every head in the room turned toward her. She felt the stares like heat.
“Of course,” she said. Her voice came out steady. Exactly how she needed it to sound.
Lucien nodded once. Then he dismissed the room.
People filed out in clusters, whispering. Arielle stayed seated until the space emptied. Gerald gave her a questioning look as he passed, but she just shook her head slightly.
She had no answers to give him.
When the room was empty, she stood and walked toward the elevator that led to the executive suites. Her heart hammered against her ribs, but her hands stayed loose at her sides.
The thirty-second floor was quieter. Thick carpet. Soft lighting. Everything designed to whisper power.
Lucien’s assistant, a woman in her fifties with perfect posture, gestured toward the closed double doors. “He’s expecting you.”
Arielle knocked once, then entered.
The office was massive. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. Minimalist furniture. A desk that looked like it cost more than her car.
Lucien stood near the window, hands in his pockets. He turned when she entered.
“Close the door.”
She did.
For a long moment, neither of them spoke. Arielle kept her expression blank. Professional. Waiting.
Finally, Lucien moved away from the window and stopped a few feet in front of her.
“I have a proposal,” he said. “And I need your answer quickly.”
She waited.
“I’m going to announce my engagement.” He paused. “To you.”
Arielle blinked. Once. Her brain tried to catch up with the words.
“Excuse me?”
“A contract marriage. Temporary. Structured. It will stabilize the company, satisfy the board, and end the speculation.” His tone was matter-of-fact. Like he was discussing a merger. “In return, you’ll be compensated generously. Housing. Financial security. Whatever you need.”
Arielle stared at him. “You can’t be serious.”
“I’m completely serious.”
“You don’t even know me.”
“I know enough.” He tilted his head slightly. “You’re competent. Discreet. You don’t draw attention. You’re exactly what this situation requires.”
Heat crawled up her neck. Not from flattery. From anger.
“And what makes you think I’d agree to this?”
Lucien’s eyes didn’t waver. “Because you’re smart enough to recognize an opportunity when it’s offered.“
Chapter 50 — The House That WatchesBy the time the gates of the Moreau estate came into view, Arielle felt it.The shift.The night behind them had been chaos, dark roads, uncertainty, adrenaline.This?This was something else.Control.Power.Judgment.The gates opened smoothly, almost silently, and the car rolled in as though nothing unusual had happened that evening. The lights from the house glowed warm against the night, elegant and composed, completely at odds with the storm waiting inside.Arielle’s fingers curled slightly against her dress.“They’re waiting,” she said quietly.Lucien didn’t look at her, but she saw the faint tightening in his jaw.“I know.”The car came to a stop.Before the driver could step out, the front doors of the house opened.Mary stood there.Perfectly composed.Perfectly dressed.As though she had been expecting an audience.Arielle felt her stomach tighten.No sleep. No disarray. No panic.Just control.“Of course,” Arielle murmured under her breat
Chapter 49 — The Ride BackThe car door shut with a dull, final sound that seemed to seal everything that had just happened into the night behind them.Arielle sat still for a moment, her fingers resting loosely in her lap, though the faint sting around her wrists hadn’t faded. She could still feel the rope, even though it was gone like her body hadn’t caught up with the fact that she was free.Beside her, Lucien didn’t speak.The engine came alive, smooth and controlled, and the car pulled away from the isolated house as if nothing had happened there at all.But everything had.Arielle turned her head slightly, watching the darkness slip past the window. The trees blurred together, indistinct, distant… like the version of the night she wanted to forget.She became aware of him before he said anything.Lucien’s gaze.It wasn’t casual. It wasn’t soft either.It was searching.Careful.“Did he hurt you?” he asked at last, his voice low, steady, but carrying something tightly restrained
The cold night air hit Arielle’s skin as soon as they stepped out through the back door.Roman’s grip around her wrist was firm, his fingers wrapped just tight enough to keep her moving across the uneven path behind the house.But Arielle’s mind wasn’t on him.It was on the voice she had heard.The footsteps.The presence that had entered the house.Lucien.Her pulse slammed harder against her ribs.He was here.He came.That realization hit her with a force she hadn’t expected.For one suspended second, Roman kept pulling her forward through the darkness, his attention fixed on the narrow trail ahead.“Keep moving,” he muttered under his breath.Arielle’s eyes flicked toward the faint light spilling from the side of the house.This was her chance.Not later.Now.She twisted sharply.Roman’s fingers tightened instinctively.“Arielle….”But she was faster.With all the force in her body, she yanked her hand free and shoved against his chest.Roman staggered back a step, caught off gua
The words hit fast.“They found the location.”For a split second, the room felt smaller.Like the walls had shifted inward.Arielle’s pulse jumped, but her face didn’t show it. She held Roman’s gaze, watching the change in him carefully.No hesitation now.No confusion.Just sharp, controlled urgency.“How?” she asked, her voice steady despite the tension building in her chest.Roman was already moving and grabbing his keys, scanning the room like he was mentally retracing every step.“It doesn’t matter,” he said. “We don’t have time.”Arielle pushed off the couch slowly, her bare feet silent against the floor.“You said this place was safe.”“It was.”The emphasis made her pause.Was.Her eyes narrowed slightly.“You’ve been here before,” she said, more statement than question.Roman didn’t respond.Which was answer enough.He turned back toward her, his expression set.“We’re leaving. Now.”Arielle didn’t move.Roman frowned slightly. “What are you doing?”She tilted her head just
The silence inside the car didn’t last long.It just felt like it did.Arielle stared at the back of Roman through the windshield, her breathing slow but deliberate now. The initial panic had settled into something sharper.Focus.Her wrists burned where the rope pressed into her skin. She shifted
Arielle closed her bedroom door with her hip and leaned against it.Voices downstairs. Chairs moving. Someone arguing about flower arrangements near the staircase.The engagement party was tomorrow.Tomorrow.She dropped onto the edge of the bed and stared at her phone.The guest list had already b
Morning came slowly.Arielle woke before the alarm on her phone.For a moment she stayed still in bed, staring at the ceiling while soft sunlight slipped through the curtains.Her mind was already awake.Too awake.Dinner with Lucien.The conversation.The question he asked.The way he stood so clo
Lucien stared at the message for a long moment.We need to talk about your fiancée.The hallway was quiet around him. The lights from the staircase cast long shadows across the marble floor.His jaw tightened slightly.Henry rarely sent messages like that.And when he did, it usually meant one thin












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