Mag-log in
The coffee in Vennessa Cole’s hand was lukewarm, matching the state of her current life.
She stood in the sleek, glass-paneled lobby of Hayes Enterprises, smoothing down the front of her tailored—but undeniably frayed—blazer. For the past three years, Cole Public Relations had been her lifeblood. She had poured every ounce of her savings, her sleepless nights, and her sanity into keeping the firm afloat after her father’s sudden passing left behind a mountain of hidden corporate debt.
Now, she was down to her final card.Hayes Enterprises was looking for a boutique firm to handle their European expansion. If Vennessa landed this account, her employees stayed paid, and her father’s legacy stayed intact. If she failed, the eviction notice sitting on her kitchen counter wouldn’t just be a threat anymore.
"Miss Cole? Mr. Hayes will see you now," the receptionist said, her tone perfectly polished, perfectly corporate.
Vennessa took a deep, centering breath. "Thank you."
She followed the assistant down a long hallway lined with minimalist art, her heels clicking against the marble floor like a countdown timer. She knew the reputation of the man she was about to meet.Ryan was a ghost in the financial columns—ruthless, brilliant, and entirely devoid of public sentiment. He had taken a failing tech-manufacturing conglomerate and turned it into an empire before his thirtieth birthday. Nobody knew where he came from, only that he didn’t lose.
The assistant opened the heavy oak doors to the corner office. "Mr. Hayes,Miss Cole is here."
Vennessa stepped inside, her professional smile already locked and loaded. "Mr. Hayes, thank you so much for taking the time to—"
The words died in her throat.
The man sitting behind the massive obsidian desk slowly looked up from his tablet. He wore a bespoke charcoal suit that screamed old money and absolute authority. His shoulders were broad, his jawline sharp enough to cut glass, and his dark hair was perfectly styled. But it was his eyes—a piercing, unforgettable shade of storm-grey—that made Vennessa’s heart stop dead in heIt couldn't be.
"Hello, Vennessa," Ryan said. His voice was a deep, smooth baritone, entirely different from the cracked, hesitant tone she remembered from eight years ago.
"Ryan?" The name slipped past her lips before her professional filter could stop it.
Memory hit her like a physical blow. A crowded university courtyard. A cruel fraternity prank she had inadvertently been the face of. A younger, skinnier Ryan standing before her, holding a handwritten letter, his eyes wide with a devastating mix of hope and impending humiliation as a crowd of wealthy, mocking students laughed at him. She had tried to explain, tried to tell him she didn't know the prank was happening, but the crowd had pushed her forward, and the damage was done. He had dropped out the next day. She had never seen him again.
Until now.
"Please, sit," Ryan said, gesturing to the leather chair opposite his desk. There was no warmth in his face. No recognition of their shared past beyond the cold utterance of her name. He was completely controlled.
Vennessa swallowed hard, her knees feeling weak as she crossed the room and sat. Her portfolio felt incredibly heavy in her hands. "I... I didn't realize Hayes Enterprises was yours. You changed your last name."
"I took my mother's maiden name," he replied smoothly, leaning back in his chair and lacing his fingers together. "The other one carried too much useless baggage. Now, let's look at your proposal."
He didn't mention college. He didn't mention the courtyard. He simply stared at her with a detached, clinical interest that made Vennessa feel entirely naked.
Desperate to salvage the meeting, she opened her binder. "Right. Of course. For the European expansion, Cole PR has designed a localized strategy that focuses on—""I didn't bring you here to talk about public relations, Vennessa."
She paused, a slide deck halfway out of her folder. "Ryan reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a thick, bound document, sliding it across the obsidian desk. It stopped perfectly in front of her. On the front cover, embossed in simple black letters, were the words: Pre-Nuptial and Marital Partnership Agreement.
Vennessa stared at it, her brain refusing to process the words. "What is this?"
"It’s a marriage contract," Ryan said, his tone as casual as if he were discussing the weather. "I require a wife for the next twelve months. The board of directors at Blackstone Holdings—the firm I am currently acquiring—is highly traditional. They believe a family man is a stable man. My bachelor lifestyle is a liability for this specific merger."
Vennessa let out a breathless, disbelieving laugh. "And you're asking me? Ryan, we haven't spoken in eight years. The last time we spoke, it was... it was a disaster. Why on earth would you want to marry me?"
"Because you need money," Ryan stated coldly. "I know about Cole PR's debt. I know about the foreclosure notice on your apartment. I know exactly how many days you have left before you have to declare bankruptcy."
A flush of hot shame crept up Vennessa’s neck. "You investigated me?"
"I do my due diligence on all potential business partners," he countered, his grey eyes locking onto hers, unblinking. "The terms are simple. You marry me. We live together in my penthouse. We attend public functions, galas, and family dinners. We present a united, deeply affectionate front to the media."
"And what do I get?" she whispered, her voice trembling.
"All of Cole PR's debts will be cleared by tomorrow afternoon. Furthermore, a monthly stipend of fifty thousand dollars will be deposited into your personal account for the duration of the year. Upon the legal dissolution of the marriage at month twelve, you will receive a lump-sum settlement of two million dollars."
Vennessa’s breath hitched. It was enough money to save her business, secure her future, and never have to worry about a roof over her head again. It was a lifeline.
But looking at the man across from her, she saw the trap. The quiet devotion he had once offered her in college was entirely gone, replaced by a calculating billionaire who looked at her and saw an asset to be purchased.
"You hate me," Vennessa said softly, the truth hanging heavy in the air between them. "This is revenge, isn't it? You want to own the girl who humiliated you."
For a fraction of a second, a shadow crossed Ryan’s face, a ghostly flicker of the boy from the courtyard. But just as quickly, the mask slipped back into place, cold and impenetrable.
"This is business, Vennessa," Ryan said, leaning forward, his voice dropping a whisper. "You broke something of mine a long time ago. Now, I'm offering to fix something of yours. Do we have a deal?"
Vennessa looked down at the contract, her heart hammering against her ribs. The terms were clear. But as she stared at Ryan's stoic face, she had a terrifying realization: signing this contract might save her company, but it just might cost her her heart.
The warmth of Ryan’s fingers was suddenly ripped away so fast it left a physical ache on Vennessa’s skin.He stumbled backward a step, his boots clicking sharply against the polished steel floor of the elevator. The raw, bleeding vulnerability that had fractured his eyes just a second ago was instantly violently suppressed. It was like watching a vault door slam shut in real-time. The heavy, unyielding steel of his corporate persona slid back into place, his expression turning so utterly vacant and cold it made Vennessa gasp."This meeting is concluded," he said. His voice wasn't furious anymore. It was worse. It was entirely flat, robotic, and devoid of a single ounce of human emotion.He didn't look at her again. He stepped out of the elevator and strode across the dark, cavernous living room of the penthouse. His long, predatory strides carried him quickly through the minimalist space, his undone tie trailing behind his shoulder like a broken tether. He entered the western wing,
The heavy glass doors of L’Aura closed behind them, cutting off the soft cello music and the suffocatingly polite atmosphere of high society. The valet brought Ryan’s sleek black sports car around, and the ride back to the Hayes Tower was conducted in an absolute, terrifying vacuum of sound.Ryan drove like a man possessed, his knuckles white against the leather steering wheel, the engine roaring through the rain-slicked city streets. Vennessa pressed her back against the passenger seat, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. She didn't say a word. She knew better than to poke a sleeping predator.The second they pulled into the private underground garage, Ryan killed the engine. The silence that followed was heavy, thick with the scent of leather and rain.He didn't wait for her. He stepped out of the car, slamming his door, and marched toward the private elevator that led directly to the penthouse. Vennessa scrambled out, her heels clicking rapidly against the con
The private dining room at L’Aura was an exercise in oppressive opulence. Gold leaf trim lined the mahogany-paneled walls, and the soft, mournful notes of a live cellist drifted from the shadows of the restaurant’s exclusive upper tier. It was the kind of room where multi-billion-dollar empires were quietly bartered over truffles and vintage Bordeaux, and tonight, Vennessa felt like she was the main course.Lucas Montgomery sat across the white linen tablecloth, looking every bit the old-money patriarch. His silver hair was perfectly coiffed, his tailored suit was immaculately conservative, and his eyes—shrewd, pale blue, and entirely unblinking—had been evaluating Vennessa since they sat down."The Blackstone board has always prioritized stability above all.Ryan," Lucas said, his voice a low, raspy drawl as he cut into his wagyu beef. "In our world, a man’s domestic life is a reflection of his corporate governance. A chaotic home breeds a chaotic boardroom. For a long time, your b
The worst part of the routine wasn't the silence; it was the accidental overlap.On their second Tuesday, Vennessa had stayed up until 2:00 AM drafting a crisis management proposal for a frantic client. Parched and exhausted, she had stumbled out into the dark, expansive living room in her bare feet and a pair of faded silk pajamas, heading toward the kitchen island.She thought he was asleep. But as she rounded the corner, she froze.Ryan was standing by the floor-to-ceiling glass window, staring out at the bleeding neon lights of the midnight city. He hadn’t turned on any lights. The only illumination came from the moon and the distant skyscrapers, casting his tall silhouette in sharp, dramatic relief. He was wearing nothing but a pair of dark grey lounge pants, his bare back displaying a broad, muscular definition she hadn't anticipated.But it was his posture that caught her off guard. His head was bowed slightly, his hand resting flat against the cold glass, looking so profou
The morning didn’t arrive with a gentle sunrise; it arrived with a sharp, synchronized assault on Vennessa’s front door at precisely 8:59 AM.She had barely slept. She spent the entire night pacing her small living room, staring at the worn-out velvet armchair her father used to sit in, trying to reconcile the cozy, messy reality of her life with the cold, calculated future she had just signed into existence. When the buzzer rang, it didn't just vibrate through the apartment—it vibrated through her teeth.Vennessa pulled open the door, a half-empty mug of stale coffee clutched in her hand like a weapon.Standing in the hallway was a woman who looked like she had been grown in a corporate laboratory. She wore a pristine black pantsuit, her hair slicked back into a bun so tight it pulled the corners of her eyes upward. Behind her stood four large men in matching grey jumpsuits, carrying flat-matted wardrobe boxes and industrial tape dispensers."Good morning, Miss Cole," the woman s
The flashes of the cameras were blinding, white-hot bursts that burned behind Vennessa’s eyelids.Before her brain could fully process Ryan’s warning about page fourteen, she was pulled tightly against his side. The warmth of his hand resting firmly on her waist felt less like an embrace and more like a claim. She stiffened instinctively, but Ryan’s grip tightened, his thumb rubbing a slow, calculated circle against her hip through the fabric of her blazer. To anyone watching, it looked like a reassuring, deeply intimate gesture. To Vennessa, it felt like an iron shackle."Mr. Hayes! Look this way, please!" the photographer called out, the shutter clicking rapidly."Ryan, what are you doing?" Vennessa hissed through a frozen, practiced smile, her eyes watering from the light. "You said the announcement was tonight. I look like I’ve been running a marathon in a storm.""You look beautiful," Ryan replied smoothly, his voice pitched perfectly for her ears alone while his face remaine







