LOGINShe was a deal. Until she became his obsession. Until he became her ruin. Until the lines blur. Alina Carter has three things left: a mother in a hospital bed, an eviction notice, and twenty-four hours to find a miracle. The miracle arrives in a black car, with an envelope, and a name she already knows to fear. Adrian Voss. Billionaire. Ruthless. The kind of man people warn you about in the same breath they describe a natural disaster. His offer is simple. Move into his penthouse. Attend his events. Play the role his world requires. In return, every debt is cleared, her mother is taken care of, and she walks away in six months with her life restored. What he doesn't tell her is the truth behind the offer. That she is not a solution to his problem. She is the problem. Three years ago, Alina unknowingly destroyed one of his most important business deals — and Adrian Voss has never forgotten a debt. She was chosen. She was arranged. She was bought. But somewhere between the cold terms of the contract and the man who keeps protecting her when he doesn't have to, the lines begin to blur. Adrian begins to feel things he didn't plan for. Alina begins to see a person underneath the control she didn't expect to find. And then the truth comes out — all of it. The revenge. The manipulation. The years of planning. when they are both in danger. The only person Adrian trusts with her safety is himself. And the only question that matters is the one neither of them has an answer to yet: Can something real grow from a foundation built entirely on revenge? Or will the truth destroy them both before they get the chance to find out?
View MoreThe eviction notice was still warm in Alina's hand when the black car pulled up outside her door.
She was sitting on the front door step when it happened. Not because she'd chosen to sit outside but because her legs had simply stopped cooperating somewhere between the mailbox and the door, she found herself in the cold step, with a piece of paper that had just rearranged the rest of her life. The paper said thirty days. Thirty days. She kept reading those two words like they would eventually make a different kind of sense. They didn't. She heard the car before she saw it. The quiet engine, the way it stopped too smoothly, too deliberately, directly across the street. She looked up. Black. Expensive. Parked with the particular precision of someone who had been here before, or had at least studied where to park. The windows were dark. She couldn't see inside. She waited. The door opened. A man got out — suit, middle-aged, with the kind of face that gave nothing away on purpose. He walked toward her with an envelope in his hand and stopped three feet away like he'd measured the distance. "Miss Carter." "Who are you?" "I represent Mr. Adrian Voss." He held out the envelope. White. Thick. Her full name written across the front in handwriting was too precise to be hurried. "He'd like to meet with you." She didn't take it. " How do you know my name?" "Mr. Voss knows quite a bit about you." "That's not reassuring." "No," he said. "I know this might be weird for you." He didn't lower the envelope. "However, he'd like to offer you a solution to your current situation, Miss Carter. The meeting would be at your convenience. Two days from now, nine in the morning, his offices on Harlow Street." A pause. "He's prepared to be generous." "I don't understand, what does my current situation have to do with Adrian Voss?" The man looked at her for a moment. Not unkindly. The way someone looks at you when they know something you don't but they try not to give it away. "All will be revealed when you meet with him" he said simply, and held the envelope out again. She took it. She didn't mean to. Her hand just moved. "I will wait in the car if you have questions," the man said. "I have about forty questions." "Then I'd suggest saving them for Mr. Voss." He turned and walked back across the street. The car door opened for him. Then closed. The engine started, and the car sat there, engine running, waiting. Alina looked at the envelope in her hand. She turned it over. Her name on the front, nothing else. She slid her finger under the flap and opened it standing right there on the step, in the cold, because waiting felt impossible. Inside was a letter — formal, clean, the meeting details typed with the kind of precision that said someone had proofread it three times. She read it quickly, then again slowly. A meeting. An offer. A solution, the letter said, without specifying a solution to what. Then her fingers found something else at the bottom of the envelope. A photograph. Face-down, like whoever had put it there, wanted to give her the choice of whether to look or not. She looked. Her. Three years ago, standing outside the city records building with a cardboard folder in her arms. She remembered the folder. She remembered the weight of it, the slightly damp edge that got wet from the rain that morning, the documents inside that she'd processed without fully understanding what she was processing. She remembered thinking, as she filed the inconsistency report, that she was doing exactly what she'd been trained to do. She had not thought about it since. She looked up at the car. Still there. The engine still running. "Hey." Her voice came out steadier than she expected. "Hey — who took this?" The window came down two inches. The man's voice came through the gap: "Mr. Voss will answer your questions at the meeting, Miss Carter." "This is a photograph of me. Taken without my knowledge. Three years ago." She held it up, as if he could see it through the dark window. "I'd like an answer now." A pause. Then: "Mr. Voss has been aware of you for some time." "Aware of me." She heard how those words sounded. "Why?" "Nine o'clock, Thursday. He'll explain everything." The window went back up. Alina stood on the step and stared at the car until it finally pulled away from the parking and disappeared around the corner. She looked down at the photograph. At herself, three years younger, carrying documents she'd filed and forgotten. But somebody hadn't forgotten. She went inside. She sat down at the kitchen table. The eviction notice was still in her coat pocket and the photograph was in her hand and the letter was on the table in front of her, she sat there for a long time in her quiet apartment before she finally said, out loud, to herself: "What did I do?" It wasn't a question. She already knew the answer was in that folder from three years ago. What she didn't know — what the photograph made terrifyingly clear — was that Adrian Voss had known too. For three years. And he had waited, patiently, until the moment she had no choice but to walk through his door.Serena Voss looked smaller than usual when she walked into the coffee shop — not physically, but in the way that people shrink when they're carrying something they shouldn't have to carry alone.She had texted at seven in the morning: I need to talk to you. Not about the board session. Something else. Come alone.Alina had left the penthouse at eight-fifteen with the board session at eleven, which gave her an hour. She found Serena at the back of the café near the window, already there, both hands around a coffee she wasn't drinking."How did last night go?" Serena said."Fine. Wren filed the complaint. Adrian is ready." She sat down. "What did you find?"Serena looked at her coffee. She had the expression of someone who had been awake for some time practising how to say something. "I found something in my brother's personal files," she said. "Not his business files. Personal. He has a — there's an account he's maintained separately for years. Personal expenditures, private correspond
Freedom, it turned out, had a weight to it that Alina hadn't expected — and it pressed down on her chest every time she walked past her phone. She arrived at the penthouse at ten forty-five. The elevator opened and Adrian was already there — not standing waiting, that would have been too much, but in the living room with his laptop and three phones and James Wren on the screen, which meant he had been in the middle of this for some time. He looked up when she came in. The look lasted two seconds. She read everything in it that he did not say: that she was there, that she had come back, that this was the fact his evening had been organised around whether he admitted it or not. Then the two seconds passed and he was back to Wren on the screen and the phones and the work of what needed to happen before eleven tomorrow morning. "Sit down," James Wren said, from the screen. "There's a lot to cover." She sat. She set her bag by the sofa. She was still in the jacket she had grabbed at E
The thing about having the truth confirmed is that it doesn't bring the relief you bargained for — it just makes the wound exact. He left after an hour. She sat on Ethan's sofa and listened to the door close and the footsteps go down the corridor and the building go quiet, and she sat there with the full weight of everything he had said and let it be exactly as heavy as it was. She did not cry. She had made a habit, over the years, of not crying in the middle of things — she cried at the end of them, when it was safe, when there was nobody to see her do it and nobody she needed to be competent for. But the middle of things required all of her, and this was still the middle. Ethan came out of the kitchen at some point. He sat beside her. He didn't speak. After a while she said: "He was honest." "I know. I could hear it." "He didn't minimise it." "No." "He said the pasta Thursday was when the plan started to fail." She heard how that sounded. "I know how that sounds." "It sound
Adrian Voss had built his entire life on knowing what to say and when — and standing in Ethan's doorway facing Alina Carter, he had nothing. She had not expected him to come in person. Wren's two o'clock call had covered the operational details — timeline, documentation, what each of them needed to do in the next forty-eight hours — and she had been sitting with Ethan afterward, processing it, when the knock came at the door. Ethan opened it. They looked at each other — Adrian Voss and Ethan Cole, the two people most invested in Alina's outcome standing on opposite sides of a doorframe for the first time since a midnight check and a mutual unspoken understanding that they were now, whether they liked it or not, on the same side. Ethan stepped back. "I'll make tea," he said. And disappeared with the particular tact of someone who understood exactly when a room needed to be emptied. Adrian came in. He looked at the flat — the sofa, the film poster, the plant. The gap between this an
Alina had spent six months learning how to stay — and now she had exactly forty minutes to learn how to leave. Not from fear. Not because Marcus had frightened her into it — she had sat with that possibility on the drive back and examined it cleanly and decided it was not what was happening. She w
Marcus Hale had always been the most composed person in every room — and standing across from Alina Carter, watching her connect the final dots, he finally wasn't. She had not planned the confrontation. It happened the way the worst things happen — not dramatically, not at a moment of readiness, b
Trust, Alina had learned, was not simply given or withheld — it was constructed, piece by piece, and the person who built it for you had decided exactly how fragile to make it. She had been in the study with Adrian for two hours. Not for any arranged reason — she had come in with a question about
Ethan had always known something was wrong. What he hadn't known — what he had been carefully not knowing, in the way of someone who loves a person enough to let them have their secrets until they're ready — was that he was part of why. He came to the penthouse the morning after. He came because A






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews