MasukAn arranged bride. An accidental claim. A love worth defying everything for. — When nerdy, bookish Elizabeth “Lizzie” Foster sets her eyes on Reese Blackwood at a wedding, she makes a wildly uncharacteristic decision. He’s going to be her first. Reese is charming, sexy, reckless, and far too attractive for his own good—the notorious son of a billionaire who’s never had to chase anyone in his life. But after one unforgettable moment, Lizzie thanks him politely… and tells him she hopes they never see each other again. For the first time, Reese is the one left wanting more. Fate, however, has other plans. Desperate to escape her controlling mother and finally claim her independence, Lizzie attempts a daring escape—only to be cornered at the airport before she can board her flight. With security closing in and her future slipping away, she does the only thing that comes to mind. She grabs Reese Blackwood after seeing him in the crowd, kisses him senseless, and announces to her mother and the world: “Meet my boyfriend. We’re getting married… and I’m pregnant.” Stunned—but spotting the perfect opportunity to defy his ruthless father and an arranged marriage with an unbearable woman he never wanted—Reese plays along. Now bound by a scandalous lie, a fake relationship, and a very public fake “pregnancy,” Lizzie and Reese are forced into a dangerous game of pretence. He’s hiding secrets that could destroy them both. She’s fighting for freedom she’s never had. And neither of them expected the biggest complication of all— Falling for each other might be the one lie they can’t survive. What could possibly go right?
Lihat lebih banyakChapter 1: The Conditional Feminist
Lizzie “When I’m entertaining colleagues,” Kenneth Greene said, folding his napkin with ceremonial precision, “I expect my wife to stay out of sight unless she’s serving something.” I blinked. Not because I hadn’t heard him. Because I wanted to confirm that the sentence had indeed existed outside a Victorian etiquette manual and inside my present reality. “What?” Kenneth smiled across the table with the benevolent patience of a man who had never, in his entire life, been contradicted. “You strike me as someone who understands her place. I’m certain we won’t encounter any difficulties in that department.” “Oh… I see.” I nodded politely and returned my attention to the salmon on my plate, slicing it into exact, geometric pieces while calmly calculating the legal consequences of stabbing someone with a salad fork during a first date. Was it attempted murder if one aimed carefully? Or just aggravated frustration? Date number ten this month. Ten men. Ten restaurants. Ten carefully curated introductions arranged by my mother. Ten variations of the same conversation delivered with different accents, different watches, different bank accounts — but identical expectations. Ten reminders that my mother loved the idea of me married far more than she loved me happy. She loved the idea of a wealthy son-in-law and a powerful last name. Across from me, Kenneth was speaking again. He had been speaking continuously, in fact. I suspected he would continue speaking even if oxygen were removed from the room. “…of course my mother insists on proper standards,” he was saying, adjusting his cufflinks with a delicate flourish that suggested a lifelong appreciation for mirrors. “A wife should understand that a husband’s reputation reflects on her behavior. It’s simply… structure.” Structure. I lifted my wineglass, examining the deep red liquid. “Fascinating,” I said mildly. “And in this dystopian universe you exist in, do women also lose the right to oxygen?” He paused, visibly startled — less by my words, I suspected, than by the novelty of encountering resistance. His gaze flicked discreetly around the restaurant, perhaps checking whether witnesses had observed this unexpected rebellion from his potential bride. The restaurant itself was dimly lit in the particular way expensive places believed made people look better than they were. Personally, I suspected it primarily existed to help men like Kenneth Greene appear less like the human equivalent of expired mayonnaise. He leaned closer, lowering his voice. “I prefer a woman who doesn’t challenge her husband publicly,” he murmured. “It’s unattractive when women try to appear… argumentative.” From a distance, we probably looked like a couple sharing secrets over candlelight. Up close, however, it felt more like a business negotiation in which I was both product and purchase. I smiled pleasantly. “You don’t like intelligent women? Or do you simply dislike losing arguments to them, Kenneth?” He did not flinch. “I admire intelligent women, Lizzie. As long as they know when not to use it.” Ah. A rare specimen. The Conditional Feminist. “I don’t believe in restricting women,” he continued smoothly. “I simply prefer they don’t contradict me. Openly.” My mother had described him as traditional. Apparently, that meant he intended to marry me, silence me, and store me neatly beside the cookware. I took another sip of wine and mentally opened a filing cabinet labeled ‘Historical Artifacts’. Kenneth was carefully placed inside a folder marked Obsolete, Misogynistic, Potentially Flammable. “Your mother mentioned you enjoy writing,” he said, clearly encouraged by what he mistook for receptive silence. “A charming hobby. But naturally, after marriage, my wife wouldn’t need to concern herself with career ambitions. My income is more than sufficient. Domestic focus creates harmony.” Domestic focus. I pictured gently placing his head inside the bread basket and closing the lid. Harmony indeed. Smile. Sip. Breathe. Just a little longer, Lizzie. He straightened slightly, as though preparing to deliver a particularly impressive revelation. “Our mothers spoke again this morning.” I set my glass down carefully. “Yes?” “She mentioned something admirable about you.” My spine went rigid. I had learned through long experience that nothing my mother described as admirable benefited me. Kenneth’s expression softened into what he clearly considered reverence. “She said you’ve preserved yourself for me. That you’re a virgin.” The words settled on the table like something unpleasant and sticky. He watched me expectantly, eyes gleaming with satisfaction—the look of a collector who had just confirmed the authenticity of a prized acquisition. “I’ve always intended to marry a chaste woman,” he said proudly. “The idea of a wife who has been with other men is… revolting, frankly. One expects purity because experience in a wife suggests poor judgment. I find it difficult to respect women who arrive with history.” Something inside my chest went very still. Not explosive. Not dramatic. Simply cold and precise, like a door closing quietly. I lifted my glass again, studying the wine as though evaluating a scientific specimen. “How interesting,” I said calmly. “Are you a virgin, Kenneth?” He blinked. Then he laughed — not nervously, but confidently. The laugh of a man who had never once imagined his own standards might apply to him. “Of course not,” he scoffed. “I’m a man.” I nodded once as I took a sip from my glass, as though he had just confirmed a minor detail on a form. Then I spat the wine directly into his face. The reaction was immediate and spectacular. “What the hell, Lizzie!” he shouted, half rising from his chair. “Are you crazy?!” Before he could recover, I lifted the glass again and emptied the remaining wine over his head. Red droplets clung to his eyelashes. A thin line of Cabernet slid down the bridge of his nose with tragic dignity. The restaurant fell silent. Conversations dissolved mid-sentence. A fork clinked somewhere in the distance. Kenneth stared at me, stunned, blinking through the wine. I placed the empty glass gently on the table. “You,” I said evenly, “are a pig. A remarkably confident, spectacularly self-righteous pig.” His mouth opened and closed without sound. “For someone so concerned with purity,” I continued, rising from my chair and smoothing my dress, “it’s remarkable how comfortable you are with hypocrisy. You want ownership, not partnership. You want obedience, not respect. And you want standards that apply to women but evaporate the moment they inconvenience you.” My voice managed to remain calm throughout and it actually surprised me. “I would rather marry a houseplant,” I added thoughtfully. “At least a fern contributes oxygen.” I picked up my bag. “Oh, and for future reference,” I said, meeting his eyes, “my personal history is not a commodity for your approval. Nor is it my mother’s bargaining chip.” I leaned slightly closer, offering him the courtesy of clarity. “But if you must know,” I whispered, “I am not a virgin. So yes—by your standards, I’m revolting. And as such, this won’t work out.” Color flooded his face beneath the wine. His hands clenched on the table, knuckles whitening. “Your mother speaks about a traditional woman for her son,” I added softly, “but she’s also the woman who wears turtlenecks in summer to hide what your father does to her.” “Shut your mouth,” he hissed, voice low and trembling with fury. I smiled pleasantly. “Have a lovely evening, Mr. Greene.” Then I turned and walked toward the exit. Behind me, his voice rose in indignant outrage. A waiter hurried forward. Someone gasped. Glassware rattled. I laughed. Outside, the night air struck my face and I inhaled deeply, feeling tension unwind from my shoulders. Nine terrible dates had been endurance. Ten had been education. “I'm never doing this again.” I muttered to myself. I pulled out my phone and opened my messages to my mother. My thumbs hovered over the screen, ready to deliver a masterpiece of righteous fury. Then I paused. Deleted the draft. Switched off the phone. Why inform her when she would soon be informed by an outraged network of mothers who believed matrimony was a competitive sport? Somewhere in this city, I decided, there had to be at least one man who did not require basic humanity explained to him like a household appliance manual. I began walking home and I did not look back. Each step toward home felt like walking towards what was out to get me. The quiet stretched as the city seemed to hold its breath with me. When I reached my street, the house stood at the end like a verdict. Every light was on. Even from the gate, I could see her silhouette through the curtains—still, upright, clearly waiting for me. My pulse quickened. This wasn’t over. This was the beginning. I reached for the door handle. But something shifted inside… And then… the door opened before I could touch it.Chapter 183: Not My Type Lizzie The moment the heavy dining hall doors closed behind Reese and Alex, the girls swarmed toward me like sharks catching the scent of blood in the water. Even River, usually the quiet observer, drew closer with a shy, curious smile playing on her lips. A laugh tore from my lips as I glanced around at their expectant faces. “What?” I asked, raising an eyebrow. “Why are you all looking at me like that?”Riley shrugged with exaggerated innocence, but the mischievous glint in her eyes betrayed her. “I don’t know. Ask them.” She pointed toward River and Charlotte. Charlotte laughed, a rich, throaty sound that filled the suddenly lighter space. She leaned forward, elbows on the table, her wine glass still half-full and catching ruby reflections from the lights. “You’re something else, Lizzie. Every other person fears the General. They wouldn’t dare say such filthy things in his presence. Myself included.”A light-hearted laugh bubbled from me as I settled
Chapter 182: That's A TrapReese “What do you mean by that?” Roman asked, his temper clearly rising the moment Penelope’s name left my lips. His voice sharpened through the phone speaker, cutting through the quiet night sounds of the garden.“Someone saw her here—” I started, my own words measured. “Who?” He demanded, his tone dropping into a near-growl. “Who was the one that saw her? What if it’s a mix-up?”“Ramsey,” I said simply.There was silence over the line—thick, heavy, and telling. I knew he was thinking the same thing I had earlier. Even before he spoke, the weight of it settled between us. “So… it really is true then,” he said finally, voice low.“I’m afraid so,” I replied, glancing at Alex who stood nearby, arms crossed, listening intently. The cool night breeze rustled the rose bushes, releasing another wave of sweet, heady fragrance that clashed oddly with the dark conversation. “There’s even a photo. I’ll share it with you.” I quickly forwarded the image from my pho
Chapter 181: What's The Rush? Reese “Roman, you didn’t tell me you were sending in a friend,” I said the moment he picked up. The night air in the rose garden felt cooler now, carrying the sweet, almost cloying scent of blooming roses that mixed with the faint, acrid trace of Alex’s cigarette smoke.I heard him chuckle over the line, that familiar low rumble that always carried a hint of calculated amusement. “Just sent you a little something to help facilitate the process.” “What’s the plan? Zahir has an agenda, doesn’t he?” I pressed, pacing slowly along the gravel path. The small stones crunched under my shoes, a steady rhythm against the distant gurgle of the fountain. “Met him at dinner and instantly knew he was a wolf.” “Definitely,” Roman replied. “I’ve done business with him for over three years, and in those three years he’s always tried to play a fast one on me.” He sighed, the sound crackling slightly through the speaker. “The smartest thing to do when signing a cont
Chapter 180: Net Worth Reese I stopped dead on the marble steps leading out to the estate grounds, the cool night air brushing against my heated skin.He just laughed, stopping in his tracks. Then he leaned in close, voice dropping to a conspiratorial murmur. “Didn’t you give her a task? She’s preparing herself to seduce Hudson.” Alex pulled me by the arm, his grip firm but brotherly. “Come on. Let’s go where we can have a little privacy.”I was still swimming in confusion as he dragged me out into the grounds. The night air wrapped around us carrying the sweet, heady fragrance of night-blooming jasmine and freshly watered roses. The fountain gurgled softly in the distance, its water sparkling under strategically placed garden lights that cast long, dancing shadows across the manicured lawns. We stopped near the rose garden, far enough from the scattered guards that their low murmurs blended into the background hum of crickets.I tugged my arm free, frowning deeply. “I admit I sen












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