LOGINVENUS
My alarm blared, jolting me awake from the uncomfortable position I had fallen asleep in. My neck ached, my back protested, and my mind was already racing.
I lay still for a moment, staring at the cracked ceiling. Did I really agree to this?
The question looped in my head like a broken record. Did I really make the right choice?
I groaned and rubbed my eyes, forcing myself to sit up. I was doing this for Mom. I'd do anything for her. Anything.
Dragging myself out of bed, I went about my morning routine like a zombie. A quick shower, hair pulled into a messy bun, and makeup kept minimal—just enough to look alive. I slipped into a plain white shirt and an ash-grey skirt—one of the few decent outfits I'd managed to afford since I started working at Sinclair Tech. It wasn’t glamorous, but it was clean and presentable.
I checked the clock. Only five minutes left if I wanted to make it on time. Great.
Grabbing a granola bar from the nearly empty kitchen shelf, I rushed to the door. But when I opened it, I came to an abrupt stop. I was blocked by someone.
Billy.
"Bi—Billy?" I stammered, my heart skipping a beat.
He leaned against the doorframe, arms folded, eyes cold. He owned the casino where my father, Dain, loved to gamble, get drunk, and bury his problems in white powder. This wouldn’t be his first time showing up at our place to collect a debt. And he always made my skin crawl. The way he looked at me? It gave me the creeps.
"Where’s Dain?" he gruffed, rubbing his scruffy beard.
"I don’t know," I replied quickly, stepping slightly back.
"He owes me money."
That can’t be right. He took all my whole savings yesterday. What the hell did he use it for, then?
"Like I said, I don’t know where he is. I kicked his drunken ass out last night."
Billy’s eyes narrowed slightly. "That so?"
"Look, Billy, I have somewhere to be, and I’m already running late."
He gave me a slow once-over, raising a brow before licking his lips in that disgusting way that made me want to gag.
"One day, Venus," he muttered, like a warning—or a promise I wanted nothing to do with—before walking away.
I slammed the door shut and locked it, chest heaving. Disgusting creep.
When I stepped outside and began walking to the main road, a car sped by, splashing a puddle of dirty water all over me.
"Asshole!" I screamed, but the driver didn’t stop or even glance back.
I looked down at my soaked clothes and groaned. I couldn’t walk into Sinclair Tech looking like this. I didn’t even have anything clean to change into. I hadn’t gotten around to doing my laundry this week.
Frustrated and wet, I went back inside and tore through my closet. Finally, I found an old sweater tucked in the back. It was faded, a little baggy, but dry and warm. It would have to do.
With no time left to mope, I hurried back outside and managed to hail a cab. But of course, traffic was an absolute nightmare. Cars crawled at a snail’s pace, horns blaring like a symphony of doom.
It was almost like the universe was throwing every obstacle at me. One final warning. One last chance to back out of the deal I’d made with the devil.
But I wouldn’t. I couldn’t. This was for Mom. She needed me to do this.
I arrived twenty minutes late. Not the best impression to make on the first day of your fake engagement.
Sinclair Tech’s lobby was intimidating—marble floors, modern furniture, and pristine glass everywhere. The receptionist glanced at me and gave a polite smile. I forced one back and rushed to the elevator.
My heart pounded harder with every floor the elevator climbed. I adjusted my sweater, took a deep breath, and stepped out on the top floor.
The door to the executive conference room was already open.
Connor sat on the far side of the table, sipping coffee like he hadn’t a care in the world. Aaron stood by the window, suit perfectly tailored, arms crossed, exuding power and ice.
He turned when I entered. Our eyes met.
He looked at me, really looked, and something in his expression shifted for a fraction of a second before he masked it behind his usual cool detachment.
"You're late," he said, voice low and measured.
I swallowed the lump in my throat. "Traffic."
Connor raised a brow. "Or cold feet?"
"Neither," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. "I said I’d do this, and I meant it."
Aaron walked slowly toward me, closing the distance until he stood just inches away. I had to tilt my head to look up at him. The scent of his cologne made my stomach twist. It was unfair that a man so infuriating could smell so good.
He didn’t speak. Just stared.
"We'll draft the terms today," he said finally. "You’ll move in by the end of the week. Appearances matter, and if anyone suspects this is fake, we both lose."
Connor leaned back, amused. "So romantic already."
Aaron ignored him. "We'll set ground rules. You’ll attend dinners, events, whatever’s necessary. I’ll handle the media. You just smile and look like you’re hopelessly in love with me. Think you can manage that?"
I lifted my chin. "Do I get a say in the rules?"
His lips curved slightly, not quite a smile, more like a smirk. "We’ll see."
Connor stood and clapped his hands. "Well, this should be fun. Shall we get started, lovebirds?"
My heart thundered in my chest as I took a seat across from Aaron.
I was really doing this. Becoming his wife for three years.
All for my mother.
And maybe, just maybe, for something more I hadn’t fully admitted to myself yet.
AARONNine years.Nine years since we stood in Connor’s office and signed a contract that was supposed to last three.Three years of convenience.Of arrangement.Of mutually beneficial optics.That was the plan.No one planned for love.No one planned for twins with identical stubborn streaks and identical loyalty. No one planned for a third baby girl who believed cake was a human right. No one planned for betrayal, or fear, or a problem that would test the seams of everything we built.And yet here we were.Nine years later.Standing in the backyard of the house that once felt like a fortress.Now it just felt like home.There was no aisle.No elaborate décor.Just trimmed hedges, late-afternoon sunlight spilling gold across the grass, and the soft hum of life continuing beyond our walls.Venus stood across from me.Not dressed like a bride.Not dressed for spectacle.Just herself.Steady.That was the word that kept returning.Steady.My mother stood a few feet away, composed but em
AARONThe news broke on a Tuesday morning.Not as a whisper.Not as speculation.But as a headline.ANDREA MARLOWE ARRESTED ON CHARGES OF KIDNAPPING, CONSPIRACY, AND UNLAWFUL SURVEILLANCE.By noon, every major outlet had picked it up. By evening, analysts were dissecting it like it was a corporate scandal instead of the unraveling of something far uglier.I stood in my office, the television muted, watching her face flash across the screen.Polished mugshot.Hair pulled back.Chin lifted.Defiant.Even in custody, she looked like she believed this was temporary.Venus sat on the couch across the room, silent, Iris curled against her side. The kids didn’t understand the full weight of what was happening, and I intended to keep it that way for as long as possible.Connor stepped into the doorway quietly.“It’s everywhere,” he said. “The board’s already calling.”“They’ll manage,” I replied.He studied me for a moment. “You going?”“Yes.”Venus looked up at that.“To see her?” she asked.
AARON“About everything.”The words hung between us: fragile and unavoidable.Venus stood by the kitchen window, sunlight cutting across her face in soft afternoon lines. Outside, the kids were still playing—George pushing Sabine too high on the swing while pretending he wasn’t showing off, Iris watching with that careful half-smile she wore now.Two days.It had only been two days.And yet it felt like we had lived a lifetime in between.I leaned back against the counter, folding my arms loosely. Not defensive. Just steadying myself.She turned fully toward me.“Start talking,” she said quietly.There was no anger in her voice.Which somehow made it harder.I exhaled slowly.“Rick,” I began.Her expression shifted immediately—confusion first, then something sharper.“He was Andrea’s mole,” I said.She blinked. “Rick? That Rick? The one who—”“Yes.”The word tasted bitter.“He was feeding her information for months,” I continued. “Access codes. Schedules. Security rotations. She had l
VENUSTwo days later, the house was loud again. Not the sharp, fractured noise of crisis. Not the low murmur of fear that had lived inside these walls for weeks. Real noise. Children arguing over cereal. Sabine laughing too loudly at something George insisted wasn’t funny. The faint hum of the television no one was actually watching. It should have felt normal. Instead, it felt fragile. Like glass glued back together—beautiful, functional… but still aware of the cracks. I stood in the kitchen doorway and watched them. Iris sat at the table between George and Sabine, a bowl of fruit untouched in front of her. Her fingers moved slowly over the edge of the table, tracing invisible lines. Sabine leaned against her shoulder more clingy than usual, as if proximity itself was reassurance. George sat straighter than he ever had before. Older. His eyes flicked toward Iris every few seconds, checking without making it obvious. When Sabine bumped her too hard reaching for t
VENUSThe drive felt endless. Every red light stretched too long. Every turn felt wrong, as if the world had shifted slightly off its axis and nothing fit the way it used to. Aaron’s security didn’t speak much as they drove me to the house where Rosemary had taken George and Sabine after everything exploded. The silence wrapped around me like something heavy, pressing against my chest until breathing felt like work. I kept replaying Andrea’s last words in my head. This was never just about your daughter. The thought clung to me even as the gates opened and the car rolled into the driveway. Home. Or something that used to feel like it. The moment the door opened, small footsteps thundered across the living room. “Mommy!” Sabine reached me first. She launched herself into my arms so hard I nearly stumbled backward. I caught her instinctively, lifting her against my chest, breathing in the scent of her hair like oxygen. George followed right behind, trying to look c
AARONThe sun was already high when I stepped out of the car.Afternoon light flooded the ridge road, bright and unforgiving, turning every detail too sharp to ignore. Dust hung in the air where tires had churned through the dirt, and the scent of hot asphalt mixed with the faint bitterness of gunpowder.Connor stood near a black SUV, arms crossed, posture rigid. Two men sat slumped against the hood in handcuffs, their eyes heavy and unfocused. A third was being lifted into an ambulance, paramedics working quickly around the blood soaking through his sleeve.Alive.All of them alive.Which meant Iris had been here.My pulse hit harder.I closed the distance between us quickly.“Why are we still standing here?” I demanded. “Why aren’t you already out looking for Colton and Iris?”Connor didn’t react to my tone. He rarely did.“We are,” he said evenly. “Search teams are moving through the ridge. I stayed back to brief you.”“And Gabby?” I asked. “Who the hell is Gabby?”Connor’s jaw tig
VENUS The weight of Aaron’s words still hung in the air like smoke. You bleed for it. You prove it. And then, impossibly, Dorian Sinclair lowered himself into a chair at Rosemary’s table. Not at the head, not in any place of prominence—just the far edge, a shadow among the gold light. It was wro
VENUS The sound that shattered the room was soft. Just the hush of hinges, the swing of the dining room doors. But it cut sharper than any shout. A figure stepped inside, shadows spilling across the golden warmth Rosemary had so carefully built. Dorian Sinclair. The breath caught in my chest be
VENUS Morning found me soft. For once, the city outside didn’t wake me with horns and sirens, but with the slow rustle of sheets and the scent of coffee drifting through the penthouse. I blinked into the spill of golden light cutting through the curtains, half-expecting to see the storm in Aaro
VENUS Light. Too much of it. It stabbed through my eyelids, slicing into the dark I’d been clinging to. My body felt heavy, foreign, like it belonged to someone else, every nerve humming as though I’d been rewired in my sleep. For a long, terrifying second, I couldn’t move. Couldn’t breathe. The







