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Chapter 2

last update Fecha de publicación: 2026-06-10 05:08:48

​The fluorescent lights of the Cole PR office hummed with a low, agonizing vibration that danced right along Vennessa’s nerve endings. It was past eight in the evening. The staff had gone home hours ago, leaving behind a graveyard of half-empty coffee mugs, sticky notes, and the heavy, invisible scent of impending ruin.

​Vennessa sat at her father’s old mahogany desk, the heavy bound contract from Hayes Enterprises sitting squarely in the center of the blotter. It looked entirely out of place—too crisp, too expensive, too predatory for the faded room.

​"Fifty thousand a month," Lily whispered, pacing the length of the rug. Lily is Vennessa’s creative director, her childhood best friend, and the only person who knew exactly how close the firm’s bank accounts were to absolute zero. "And two million at the end of the year? Vee, that doesn't just save the company. That secures your entire life. It pays off the medical liens left over from your dad. It’s... it’s a miracle. A twisted, terrifying miracle."

​"It's not a miracle, Lily. It's a bill," Vennessa said, her voice barely audible. She stared at the black embossed lettering on the cover. The Terms of Us. "It’s Ryan collecting on an old debt."

​Lily stopped pacing, her expression softening into deep, painful empathy. She knew the story. Everyone who went to Greenfield University knew the story, though most remembered it as a funny campus legend rather than the night Ryan Hayes spirit was publicly dismantled.

​"He’s different now, Lily," Vennessa continued, rubbing her temples where a sharp headache was beginning to bloom. "He looks at me like I’m a line item on a spreadsheet. In college, he was so... gentle. He used to leave those little sketches on my desk. When he handed me that letter in the courtyard, his hands were shaking. And I let those awful fraternity guys turn it into a circus because I was too cowardly to scream louder than the crowd."

​"You didn't know they were recording it, Vee. You didn't know they had rigged the speakers."

​"But I didn't stop them from laughing," Vennessa said fiercely, a tear finally slipping hot and fast down her cheek. "I stood there. I looked shocked, which looked like disgust to him. By the time I broke away from the crowd to find him, his dorm room was empty. For eight years, I’ve carried that guilt. And now he’s back, and he wants to buy my freedom."

Lily walked over, leaning against the edge of the desk. She didn't push. She just looked down at the paper. "Can you do it? Can you live with a man who looks at you and only sees the worst day of his life?"

"If I don't," Vennessa said, looking around the dim office, "by Friday, the bank locks these doors. Ethan loses his health insurance.Ava won't be able to pay her tuition. My father’s name gets dragged through bankruptcy court, and everything he built becomes a cautionary tale."

​She reached out, her fingers trembling slightly as she turned to the final page of the contract. The signature line for Ryan Hayes was already signed in a sharp, decisive cursive that used dark, unyielding ink. Beneath it was a blank line, waiting for her.

"He wants a show," Vennessa whispered, blinking back the rest of her tears. "He wants a perfectly devoted, affectionate wife to convince his conservative board members. I can do that. I run public relations for a living. I fake images for clients every single day."

​"Faking a press release is one thing, Vee," Lily warned gently. "Faking a marriage to a man who holds a grudge the size of a skyscraper? That’s radioactive."

​"Then I'll wear a hazmat suit."

Vennessa picked up her favorite heavy pen—the one her father had given her when she graduated. She didn't let herself hesitate anymore. If she thought about Ryan's cold, storm-grey eyes for even another second, her pride would swallow her whole, and her company would die with it.

She pressed the pen to the paper and signed her name. Vennessa Cole.

​The ink dried quickly, but the weight of it felt permanent. She closed the folder, slid it into her bag, and stood up. Her hands were cold, her stomach twisted in a tight, protective knot. She had saved her father’s legacy, but as she looked at her reflection in the dark glass of the office window, she couldn't help but wonder if she had just signed away her own freedom. 

The silence from Ryan’s side over the next forty-eight hours was deafening.

​After leaving his office, Vennessa had expected—if not a polite follow-up—at least a cold, transactional email from his legal team checking on the status of the paperwork. Or perhaps a brief text from an assistant dictating a deadline.

Instead, nothing. Her phone remained aggressively quiet.

Somehow, that annoyed her more than a demanding phone call ever could have.

​It wasn't because she wanted him to contact her. She didn't crave his attention, nor did she miss the suffocating atmosphere of his presence. It was the absolute, unshakeable arrogance of his silence. He hadn't left a deadline because he didn't need to. He knew exactly how much pressure she was under. He had calculated her financial ruin down to the penny, and he was entirely too confident that she would say yes eventually. He was just sitting back, letting the clock tick, waiting for gravity to do his work for him.

Unfortunately, that confidence was beginning to feel justified.

​On Thursday morning, Vennessa sat at her desk, staring at a final notice from her office building’s management company. They were giving her until 5:00 PM the following afternoon to settle the three months of back rent, or eviction proceedings would officially begin. Her hands shook slightly as she crumpled the paper and tossed it into the recycling bin.

"He knew," she muttered to the empty room, looking back at the black folder containing the contract. "He knew exactly when the walls would close in."

​Ryan hadn't just offered her a choice; he had handed her a lifeline while she was already drowning, fully aware she had no option but to grab it.

​"Vee?" Lily stepped into the office, holding a stack of invoices. Her face was pale. "The printer just called. They’re refusing to run the banners for the upcoming tech expo unless we pay the outstanding balance upfront. I tried to talk them into net-30, but..." She trailed off, looking helplessly at the floor.

Vennessa closed her eyes for a brief second, pulling the heavy weight of reality into her lungs. Her pride was a luxury she could no longer afford.

"Don't worry about the printer, Lily," Vennessa said, her voice steadier than she felt. She picked up the thick leather portfolio containing the signed contract. "We’re going to have the funds. All of them."

​Lily looked at the folder, a mixture of relief and intense worry crossing her features. "You're going through with it?"

​"I don't have a choice," Vennessa said, smoothing down her blazer and standing up. "Ryan wants a business partner? He's got one. Let's see if he can handle the investment.”

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    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

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