LOGINCara Bennett has exactly three rules. Never ask for help. Never show weakness. And never, under any circumstances, trust a man with money. At twenty-four, she is surviving — barely. Waitressing double shifts in London to keep the lights on and her mother's medical bills from swallowing her whole. No savings. No backup plan. No room for mistakes. Then she spills coffee on Ethan Blackwood. He is cold, impossibly wealthy, and used to people falling over themselves to please him. So when Cara walks away without a single apology, he notices. And when his dying grandfather threatens to strip him of everything he has built unless he presents a fiancée within six weeks, Ethan does something he has never done before. He makes her an offer she cannot refuse. Six weeks. One performance. £500,000. Cara tells herself it is simple. Smile at his family. Wear the ring. Take the money. Walk away. But Ethan's family is nothing like she expected. Warm. Genuine. The kind of people who make her forget this was never real. And Ethan himself is nothing like the cold man he pretends to be. The problem isn't pretending to love him in front of his family. The problem is stopping when the six weeks are over.
View MoreThe morning shift at Greystone Café started at six, which meant Cara Bennett was awake by five, pulling on her black uniform in the dark so she wouldn't wake her mother.
It was the third double shift this week. Her feet already ached before she even left the flat.
Outside, London was grey and cold, the kind of damp October morning that soaked through your coat before you reached the corner. She walked fast, head down, earphones in, mentally calculating whether her tips from last night would cover the electricity bill.
They wouldn't.
She increased her pace.
By nine, the café was packed.
City workers. Laptop people. A woman with a pram who had been nursing the same oat latte for forty minutes. Cara moved between tables quickly, efficiently, the way she had learned to do everything — without wasted energy, without unnecessary conversation.
"Table four is waiting," her manager called from behind the counter.
"I see them."
She grabbed the order and moved.
That was when it happened.
A man stepped backward from the counter without looking. Broad shoulders. Dark suit. The kind of person who moved through spaces assuming everyone else would get out of the way.
Cara didn't get out of the way fast enough.
The coffee went first — straight into his chest, soaking through what she immediately registered as a very expensive shirt. The tray followed. The ceramic mug hit the floor and shattered cleanly across the tiles.
The entire café went quiet.
Cara looked up.
The man was tall, dark-haired, with the kind of jaw that looked like it had never relaxed in his life. He stared down at his ruined shirt, then slowly raised his eyes to hers.
Cold. Completely cold.
"I'm so sorry," her manager's voice appeared from nowhere, high-pitched and horrified. "Sir, we are so sorry, let me get you—"
"It's fine," the man said. His voice was low and even. He wasn't looking at her manager.
He was looking at Cara.
Waiting, she realized. For her apology.
She held his gaze for exactly two seconds.
"You stepped back without looking," she said.
The silence that followed was the loudest thing she had ever heard.
Her manager made a sound that wasn't quite a word.
The man's expression didn't change. If anything, something shifted behind his eyes — not anger. Something closer to surprise. Like the response was so unexpected it took him a moment to process it.
"Cara." Her manager's voice was a warning.
"I'll get you napkins," Cara said, already turning away. "And a replacement coffee. On the house."
She didn't wait for his response.
He was still there twenty minutes later.
Not at the counter. At the corner table by the window, jacket now folded over the chair beside him, shirt still damp, laptop open in front of him. Working. Completely unbothered by the stain spreading across his chest.
Cara refilled the table beside him and didn't look over.
She was aware of him looking at her though. Brief glances. Measured. The kind of attention that felt more like assessment than interest.
When she finally approached his table to clear it, he spoke without looking up from his screen.
"You're not going to apologize."
It wasn't a question.
"You already said it was fine," Cara replied, stacking his empty cup onto her tray.
"I said it was fine to your manager."
"Then take it up with her."
She turned to leave.
"What's your name?"
The question stopped her. Not because it was aggressive — because it wasn't. It was calm. Direct. The tone of someone who asked questions and expected answers as a matter of course.
She looked back at him.
"Why?"
For the first time, something moved at the corner of his mouth. Not quite a smile. More like the beginning of one that he caught before it fully formed.
He reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and placed a business card on the table. Slid it toward her with two fingers.
"I may have a proposition for you," he said.
Cara looked at the card. Then at him.
"I'm a waitress," she said flatly. "Not whatever you're thinking."
This time he did almost smile.
"It's a job offer," he said. "A temporary one. Significantly better paid than this." His eyes moved briefly around the café, then back to her. Not unkindly. Just honestly. "My card has a number. If you're interested, call before Friday."
He closed his laptop, picked up his jacket, and walked out.
Cara stood at the table for a moment.
Then she picked up the card.
Ethan Blackwood. CEO, Blackwood Industries.
She turned it over. Nothing on the back. Just the name and a number, printed in clean black type on thick cream card stock.
She should throw it away.
She slipped it into her apron pocket instead.
That evening, after her second shift ended and she counted her tips on the bus home — £34, nowhere near enough — she took the card out and looked at it again.
Significantly better paid than this.
She thought about the electricity bill. Her mother's next prescription. The landlord's message she still hadn't replied to.
She looked at the card one more time.
Then she pulled out her phone.
He was still there in the morning.Cara saw the car from the kitchen window at five forty-five while the kettle boiled. Same spot. Same black Mercedes. She stood very still for a moment with her hands wrapped around an empty mug.Then she pulled on her coat over her pyjamas, pushed her feet into her shoes without untying them, and went downstairs.The cold hit her at the door. Proper November cold now, the kind that meant business.She knocked on the passenger window.It came down.Ethan looked at her. Hair slightly dishevelled for the first time since she had known him. Collar open. The particular stillness of someone who had been awake a long time and had made peace with it."You slept in your car," she said."I didn't sleep.""Ethan.""James's man was parked two streets over until one in the morning," he said. "I wanted to make sure he didn't come back."Cara stared at him."You sat outside my building all night.""Yes.""Because of James's photographer.""Yes."She looked at him f
The message came on Tuesday morning.Cara was between shifts, sitting in the back room of the café with her coat still on and a sandwich she hadn't started eating, when her phone buzzed.Unknown number.She almost ignored it.I think we should talk. — James BlackwoodShe looked at it for a long moment.Then she put her phone face down on the table and picked up her sandwich.He messaged again at three.It's not a threat. I just have some information I think you should be aware of.And again at six.I'm trying to help you, Cara.She didn't respond to any of them.Instead she called Ethan.He picked up on the second ring which she was learning was characteristic. He was either completely unreachable or immediately available. No in between."James messaged me," she said.A pause."When?""Three times today. Unknown number but he signed them.""What did he say?"She read them out.Ethan was quiet for a moment that felt carefully controlled."Don't respond," he said."I wasn't going to.""
They left the Cotswolds on Sunday afternoon.Eleanor hugged Cara at the door for a long time. Long enough that Cara had to concentrate on her breathing to stay composed. Sophie waved from the window. The dog sat at Eleanor's feet and watched the car until it disappeared around the bend in the road.James stood on the front steps with his hands in his pockets.He didn't wave.The drive back to London was quiet for the first hour.Ethan worked on his phone. Cara watched the countryside flatten gradually back into motorway and then into suburbs and then into the familiar grey press of the city reassembling itself around them.She had been thinking about James since breakfast."Your brother knows something is off," she said.Ethan didn't look up from his phone."James always thinks something is off.""This is different." She turned from the window. "He wasn't just suspicious. He was calculating. Running through something specific in his head."Ethan set his phone down."What makes you say
Cara woke before six.Old habit. Her body didn't know how to sleep past it regardless of where she was or what the day required. She lay still for a moment, looking at the ceiling of the guest suite, listening to the particular silence of the countryside — thick and complete in a way London never was.The other bed was empty.She didn't know when Ethan had left it. He had been there when she finally closed her eyes, lying on his back in the dark, one arm behind his head, breathing evenly. She had been aware of him the way you were aware of something you were pretending not to be aware of.She sat up and pulled his jacket from the chair beside the bed.She had brought it inside without thinking. Without giving it back.She set it down and went to wash her face.The kitchen was at the back of the house, overlooking the garden they had walked through the night before. In daylight it was wilder than she had realized. An old apple tree in the corner. Stone walls covered in the skeletal rem






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