Masuk
The pen shook in my hands like a gun.
"Sign it, Clara. I do not have time to waste." His voice was cold and smooth. No kindness at all. That was Adrian Blackwood. I looked up from the thick paper on the dark desk. His eyes were black and sharp. Adrian sat across from me in his office high above the city. Big glass walls showed the city lights behind him. Rain hit the windows hard. The lights outside turned into red and gold lines. Outside the tower, the storm was loud. Inside, everything was quiet and controlled. The elevator ride up was painful. We said nothing as the floors went up. The doors closed and the space felt small. His cologne filled the air. It smelled expensive, like wood and smoke. "You are shaking," he said, still looking straight ahead. "I am cold," I lied, my voice low. His eyes moved to me then. He looked at me like I was a problem. "The room has heating. You will get used to it." Get used to it. To him. To this cold room. To the idea of living here for one whole year. My mother used to say cold was just fear with no name. She was right. I was not cold. I was scared. My hands shook under the desk where he could not see. I pressed my fingers together to make them stop. It did not work. Now I sat in his office. His place. I was about to sign my name on the line. He wore a perfect black suit. It matched the dark power around him. He was too handsome. Sharp jaw. Light stubble. When he was near, the air felt thin. Like I could not breathe right. He was a man who ruled with control, power, and fear. A man who never bent. Never broke. Everyone in the city knew his name. Everyone feared it. Even the police. And right now, he was my only hope. The only man rich enough to save Ethan. The only man dangerous enough to scare those loan sharks away. "If I sign this..." My voice broke in the quiet room. "You will keep my family safe? The hospital bills, the debt... the men hunting me. All of it goes away?" Adrian leaned forward slow, like a cat ready to jump. He put his arms on the desk. "My lawyers paid the debt already. The second your ink hits the paper, my guards will make sure no one touches you. You will be safe." Safe. I had not felt that word in years. Not since Mom and Dad died in that car crash. Not since the hospital calls started coming. Safe felt like a lie people told kids. Ethan was safe when I held him during fever at 3am. That was real safe. Warm and true. This was a deal written on paper. But deals kept you alive when love could not. And I had no choice left. His promise pulled me back to three months ago. Hospital room 417. The smell of medicine and fear. My little brother Ethan looked so pale on the white bed. His skin was almost clear. I could see the blue veins under it. "The treatment costs two hundred thousand dollars, Ms. Vance," the doctor said, not looking at me. "Without it, he has maybe six months." Six months. For the only family I had left after Mom and Dad died. I sold everything. My car. My flat. My mother’s ring. The ring she wore every day. It was not enough. Not even close. Then the threats came. Men with broken hands who knew where Ethan slept. They knew what room was his. They said if I did not pay by Friday, Ethan would die. They would make sure of it. That is when Adrian Blackwood’s offer came. A contract. A marriage. A way to survive, but it would hurt. I knew it would hurt the moment I read his name at the bottom. "But in return," I whispered, looking at the big letters at the top: MARRIAGE CONTRACT. "In return, you play your part," Adrian said, his voice cold like ice. "One year. You go to events. You smile for cameras. You live in my house. No feelings. No love. You are just a name on paper to help my company board. After twelve months, we divorce quietly. You get money, and you leave." It sounded simple. A deal with a ring. Just to survive. Just one year of acting. One year of pretending I was his wife. Just one year. I said it in my head like a prayer. Just twelve months of acting. Ethan would get his treatment. He would turn 16. He would blow out candles on a real cake. He would laugh again. That was worth more than my pride. Was it not? The pen shook again, like it did not agree. Like it knew I was selling something I could never buy back. "No touching?" I asked, my heart pounding hard. My mouth was dry. I could not swallow. Adrian’s eyes dropped to my lips for one second. Then his face turned cold again. Hard like stone. "I do not mix work with sex, Clara. Do not fool yourself. You are just useful to me." His words hurt, but not as much as the fear in my chest. Not as much as the thought of Ethan’s empty bed. If I walked out tonight without his help, Ethan and I would not live past the week. The men would find us. They always found people who owed them. Just one year, I told myself. Keep your head down. Feel nothing. Survive. Do not look at him. Do not listen to his voice. Do not think about his hands. I closed my eyes for one second. Then I put the pen to paper. My hand shook as I signed. Each letter felt heavy. Like I was carving it into my skin. Clara Vance. The ink spread on the paper like blood in water. Clara Vance. The name my father gave me. The name Ethan called when he had bad dreams. The name Mom whispered when she tucked me in. Once I signed, that name was not mine anymore. It belonged to Adrian’s contract. To his board. To his world. I breathed out, and it sounded like goodbye. Goodbye to my old life. Goodbye to being free. The moment I finished, Adrian pulled the paper to his side. He did not smile. He did not look happy. He just closed his pen and stood up. He was tall over me. His shadow covered the desk. "Welcome to my world, Clara," he said, his voice making my skin cold. "Pack your bags. My driver will pick you up at dawn. From now on, you belong to the Blackwood house." I stood to leave. My legs felt weak. Our eyes met one last time. There was a dark hunger in his cold stare. A focus that scared me. Like he already owned me and he knew it. I suddenly knew the truth. This was never just a contract. Signing did not save my life. It gave it to him. I thought signing would save me. But as I walked out into the storm, I knew the truth. I did not just sign away my freedom. I gave myself to a man who never lets go. The rain hit my face like the city was crying for me.The man in the hallway stepped forward. The light from the landing caught his face, and for a moment my mind refused to accept what my eyes were seeing. It was Adrian. The same sharp jawline. The same calm posture he carried when he was trying to stay in control. Even the faint scar near his eyebrow that I had traced in moments I thought no one would ever interrupt. My chest tightened painfully. Clara, he said again. His voice did something to me immediately. It always had. Soft, steady, familiar in a way that made my body respond before my thoughts could catch up. It was the voice I had learned to trust in silence. The voice that had become too close to my heart without permission. Marcus shifted beside me, weapon raised but uncertain. Even he hesitated. Because there are moments when danger is clear, and moments when emotion makes everything unclear.
The house felt like it was holding its breath. Not the quiet kind of silence. Not peace. Something heavier. Something aware. Like the walls had started listening to us. I did not let go of Adrian. I could not. His hand was cold in mine, but it was still his. Still real. Still here. Every weak breath he took felt like a countdown I did not understand, but refused to accept. Even in his broken state, he was still here with me in a way that made everything else feel unreal. Marcus stood near the hallway, weapon lowered slightly now, but his body was still tight. Not relaxed. Never relaxed. His eyes kept moving, scanning corners like the house had started changing shape when no one was looking. Like danger was no longer something outside, but something embedded in the walls themselves. Victor stayed behind me. Quiet. Focused. But I could feel it even without turning. He was not watching the hallway
The paper slid from my fingers and landed on the wooden floor. I did not move. My eyes stayed locked on the ink like it could change if I stared long enough. If this letter reached you it means I couldn't come back. My breath turned uneven. Not because I was afraid. Because something in me already knew. This was real. The silence in the room felt wrong. Not empty. Pressurized. Like the air itself was waiting for something to break. Marcus bent and picked up the letter. He read it once. Then again. His jaw tightened like he was forcing himself not to react too fast, like reacting meant accepting something he was not ready to accept. Victor had already moved to the window, pulling the curtains closed with slow careful hands like the outside world had suddenly become an enemy that could see through glass and fire at will. Marcus finally spoke. This is not a message. It is a trigger. I looked up sl
The drive felt endless. No one spoke. The engine hummed beneath us as Victor pushed the car through rain soaked streets, the headlights cutting through the darkness before disappearing into another curtain of falling rain. The city slowly faded behind us until there was nothing left but empty roads and blurred lights. I couldn't stop looking through the rear window. Every few seconds, I expected to see another pair of headlights. Another black SUV. Another gunshot. Anything. Nothing came. My fingers were still wrapped around the cold metal case I had carried out of the vault. I hadn't realized how tightly I was gripping it until the sharp ache spread through my hands. Marcus noticed. "You can let go," he said quietly. "I can't." He looked at my white knuckles but didn't argue.
The alarm inside the vault was deafening, a high pitched scream that vibrated through the soles of my shoes. In the complete darkness, my heart hit my ribs so hard I thought it would break.“Adrian,” I choked out, reaching blindly into the black space in front of me.His hand caught mine immediately and pulled me close. His chest was solid against me, steady even with the siren tearing through the room. I could feel his warmth, like he was the only stable thing left in the chaos.For a second I just held on, because there was nothing else to hold.“Keep down,” Adrian said close to my ear.His voice was low, controlled, like he was forcing the situation into order just by speaking calmly.Next to us, something clattered in the dark as Marcus shifted his position. His boots scraped over the metal shavings on the floor, sharp and loud in the enclosed space.“Adrian, the main security grid just went dark,” Marcus said over the alarm. “They did not just trip it. They cut the hardlines from
The sound of the car horn filled the narrow alley.It did not stop.It kept pressing into the space like it belonged there now. Loud, sharp, and impossible to ignore.The driver had fallen forward against the steering wheel, his forehead pressed against it. Blood slowly ran down the windshield, leaving dark streaks that made everything outside look broken and uneven.For a second, I could not process what I was seeing. It felt too unreal.“Get her out of the car,” Adrian said.His voice was calm, but it cut through everything.Everyone moved immediately.Marcus pulled the rear door open and grabbed my arm.“Come on.”My boots hit the wet ground. My legs almost gave way. The alley felt smaller now, tighter, like the walls were closing in.Before I could even look at the front seat, Adrian stepped in front of me.He blocked my view completely.His hand closed around my upper arm.“Look at me,” he said.I looked at him.“Not the car.”I nodded without speaking.Behind us, Marcus and the







