LOGINCold Hearts & Contracts "I signed the paper to save my father. I didn't know I was signing away my soul." Benita Hayes is a master at noticing small details, but she missed the biggest one: her own family was willing to sell her. To stop a scandal that would ruin them, she’s forced into a three-year marriage contract with Adrian Knight—a man whose shadow is as intimidating as his reputation. Adrian is brilliant, cold, and calculated. He doesn't want a partner; he wants a tactical advantage. But as they navigate a world of venomous family secrets and high-stakes betrayal, the distance between them begins to collapse. When their empires turn against them and leave them with nothing, the "awkward" girl and the "heartless" heir must do the unthinkable: trust each other. In a game where every kiss is a contract and every look is a lie, can two cold hearts find a way to burn it all down together?
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KESTER BENITA Benita Hayes There was dust and dying dreams in the air of my father’s study. I stood at the floor to ceiling windows watching the grey rain smear against the glass blurring the manicured gardens of the Hayes estate. This house had been my refuge for twenty-one years, a place of mahogany and plush carpets. It felt like a waiting room for a funeral now. My own. "Sign it, Benita. For God’s sake, stop looking at the rain and look at the reality." My father’s voice was a ghost of its former self. Richard Hayes, the man who had once commanded boardrooms with a single glance, was now slumped in his leather chair, his face the color of parchment. On the desk between us lay a thick leather folder. The Knight-Hayes Restructuring Agreement. "I’ve seen the audits, Dad," I said, turning slowly. I gripped my tablet so hard my knuckles were white. "The Singapore discrepancies they weren't an accident. Someone moved that money. If we go to the authorities now, if we explain that the internal servers were breached—" "The authorities are already here!" he snapped, his hand slamming onto the desk. He pointed toward the driveway. "There is a black SUV parked at our gates, Benita. Federal agents are waiting for a phone call from Alexander Knight. If that man doesn't get what he wants by sunset, I will be in a holding cell by dinner. The company will be dismantled. Your stepmother and sister will be on the street." He paused, his eyes pleading. "And you... you’ll be the daughter of a felon. You’ll never work in finance again. Everything I built for you will be ash." "So you’re selling me to save the ash?" The words felt like glass in my throat. Before he could answer, the heavy oak doors swung open. The room didn't just get colder; it felt as if the oxygen had been sucked out of it. Adrian Knight walked in. I had seen him on the covers of business magazines, usually accompanied by headlines like The Ice King of Wall Street or The Ruthless Heir. But the two-dimensional images didn't do him justice. He was twenty-five, but he moved with a terrifying, predator-like grace. His suit was midnight black, tailored so perfectly it looked like a second skin. His hair was dark, his jawline sharp enough to be a weapon, and his eyes... they were the color of a winter sea. Cold, deep, and utterly indifferent. He didn't look at my father. He looked at me. His gaze was a slow, deliberate crawl from my face down to my shoes and back again. It wasn't a look of desire. It was the look of a man inspecting a piece of real estate he was about to acquire at a foreclosure auction. "The clock is ticking, Richard," Adrian said. His voice was a rich, dark baritone that sent a shiver of pure apprehension down my spine. "My father is losing patience. Does she sign, or do I call the SEC?" "She’s signing," my father whispered. Adrian stepped toward the desk, pulling a silver fountain pen from his breast pocket. He held it out to me. Up close, he smelled of expensive sandalwood and something metallic, like the air before a lightning strike. "Three years, Benita," Adrian said, his eyes locking onto mine. "A legal marriage. A shared residence at the Knight estate. You will accompany me to every gala, every board meeting, and every family dinner. You will be the picture of a devoted wife." "And what do I get in return?" I asked, my voice surprisingly steady despite the roaring in my ears. "Besides my father’s freedom from a cage you probably helped build?" A flicker of something—was it amusement?—passed through his grey eyes. "You get the Knight name. You get protection from the people in this very house who are already planning to sell your jewelry. And," he leaned in closer, his voice dropping to a whisper that only I could hear, "you get to stay in the game. Because once you sign this, you aren't a victim anymore. You’re a Knight. And we don't lose." I looked at the pen. I looked at the man who was offering me a golden cage to replace a leaden one. I was smart, I was observant, and I knew a trap when I saw one. But I also knew that if I didn't sign, I would lose the only thing I had left: the chance to find out who had really framed my father. I took the pen. Our fingers brushed—a brief, electric spark of heat that made me flinch. I pressed the nib to the paper. Benita Hayes. "Good," Adrian said, snapping the folder shut. He didn't offer a smile. He didn't offer a hand in comfort. He simply checked his watch. "You have twenty minutes to pack a single suitcase. My driver will handle the rest of your things tomorrow. We have a dinner engagement with my parents at seven. Don't be late. I despise tardiness. As I walked out of the room to go upstairs, I passed my stepsister, Vanessa, in the hallway. She was leaning against the wall, her eyes narrowed in a mix of jealousy and spite. "Nice work, Benny," she sneered, tossing her blonde hair. "Sold to the highest bidder. I wonder how long a 'cold heart' like Adrian will take to realize he bought a defective product." I didn't answer. I didn't have the energy. I went to my room and began to pack, realizing that the "Contract" wasn't the end of my life—it was the start of a war. Pre-Market Panic **Benita Hayes** The sharp, mechanical buzzing of our cheap prepaid smartphone woke me at exactly 6:15 AM, the harsh sound vibrating violently against the bare wooden floorboards of Room 3B. The small apartment was already blazing hot from the massive commercial bread ovens operating directly below us, the thick, heavy scent of baking rye, sweet yeast, and toasted flour hanging like an immovable curtain in the dim morning light. I rolled over slowly on the bare mattress, my shoulder muscles aching fiercely from the cramped, unyielding space of the floor, and looked over at Adrian. He was already completely awake, sitting cross-legged near the foot of the bed with his rolled-up shirt sleeves heavily wrinkled and his dark hair messy. His sharp grey eyes were fixed with absolute, unblinking intensity on the small glowing screen in his palm. "It’s Luca," Adrian said, his deep baritone voice coming out as a gravelly rasp that vibrated right through the floorboards benea
The Sourdough MorningAdrian KnightThe air inside Room 3B smelled intensely of warm flour, yeast, and dark molasses when we finally unlocked the door at three o'clock in the morning. The industrial bakery directly beneath our floorboards had started its early morning production shift, and the heavy heat from their commercial ovens radiated up through the old pine floor, making the small apartment feel warm and strangely safe against the freezing rain outside.Benita dropped her leather bag onto the small wooden table, her shoulders slumping as the absolute exhaustion of the last forty-eight hours finally caught up with her. She didn't look like the pristine, untouchable heiress I had married in that formal church ceremony; her hair was damp from the storm, her black blazer was slightly wrinkled, and there was a faint smudge of graphite on her jaw from the printouts we had been analyzing. Yet, as she stood there in the dim light of our tiny kitchen, I realized I had never looked at a
The Ohio PlayBenita HayesThe hum of the warehouse didn't let up as the clock crawled past midnight. The air grew heavy with the sharp smell of old printer toner and the cheap, burnt chicory coffee Luca had picked up from an all-night bodega down the street. Outside, the rain had settled into a steady, rhythmic drumming against the corrugated metal roof of the warehouse, creating a strange, isolating barrier between our small room and the rest of the financial district. We were completely cut off from the high-rise offices and the polished mahogany tables, yet the entire future of Knight Power Holdings was being systematically dismantled on a dented metal desk right in front of me.My fingers felt stiff as I clicked through the secondary confirmation screens of the Ohio Energy Generation contract. The interface was outdated, built on a legacy framework that my father had designed back when the Hayes Group first laid down the cross-state power lines. It didn't look like a modern finan
The New BoardroomAdrian KnightThe air inside the warehouse office on 5th Street was thick with the scent of stale espresso grounds and cold rain when we climbed back through the rear entrance door at 9:00 PM. Luca was sitting cross-legged on top of his desk, three different cell phones laid out in front of him like a dealer's hand of cards, while Mia lay stretched out on the faded fabric sofa, her eyes completely bloodshot as she stared at the scrolling data feeds on her wall projector."You're alive," Luca said, tossing a plastic room key toward me the moment my wet shoes hit the linoleum floor. "The landlord at 4th Street called. He said the bakery downstairs just finished their evening shift, so your apartment is going to smell like sourdough bread until five tomorrow morning. Consider it a luxury upgrade.""Did my father try to contact the procurement sub-committee after the press conference?" I asked, laying the heavy green Hayes motherboards down onto my desk before hanging my
The Ghost in the Machine Benita Hayes The metallic smell of old copper and dust settled deep into my lungs as the heavy iron vault door groaned shut, locking us inside the server core. Outside, the steady rhythm of the heavy rain continued to batter the brick exterior of the building, but down h
The Iron CageAdrian KnightThe cold rain started falling hard and thick by the time our rental vehicle reached the desolate industrial sector on the edge of 8th Street. The sky had turned a bruising shade of slate grey, opening up to pour a relentless sheet of water over the cracked asphalt of the
The Aftermath Benita HayesThe stagnant, heavy air inside our makeshift warehouse office felt completely different when we returned from the city center. The room no longer carried the tense, frantic panic of a cornered team trying to survive an impossible corporate execution; it had the highly ch
The Public ArenaAdrian KnightThe grand marble lobby of the Knight Holdings headquarters was completely packed with television reporters, camera crews, and flashing bulbs by 3:00 PM. My father had always loved public theater when he was winning; he liked the bright lights, the microphones, and th






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