Home / Romance / His Unchosen bride / Chapter Five: The Terms

Share

Chapter Five: The Terms

Author: Odella
last update publish date: 2026-07-08 03:19:01

By morning, the story was everywhere.

Arabella saw it first on her sister’s face at breakfast — not Vivian’s, but the housekeeper’s daughter, who worked part-time at the estate and slid a folded newspaper across the counter with an apologetic look before disappearing back into the kitchen. Arabella almost didn’t open it. She unfolded it anyway.

THE OTHER HART SISTER: Blackwood’s Surprise Bride Revealed

Beneath the headline, a photograph from the gala — unflattering, taken at an angle that made her look heavier than she was, captioned with a line about “an unconventional choice” that managed to say everything cruel without saying anything at all. She set the paper down carefully, the way she’d learned to set down things that wanted to be thrown.

She was still standing in the kitchen when her phone buzzed. A number she didn’t recognize.

"This is Adrian. I’ve sent a car. Ten minutes."

She almost asked why. She didn’t. Some instinct told her the answer would matter more if she saw it than if she asked for it.

The car took her not to the Blackwood estate but to the glass tower in the city center, thirty-eight floors of Blackwood Global rising over the financial district like something built to be looked up at rather than into. Adrian’s assistant met her in the lobby, visibly recalibrating her expectations of who she was about to escort upstairs, and said nothing about it, which Arabella appreciated more than she could say.

Adrian’s office took up the entire northeast corner of the top floor, glass on two sides, the city spread out beneath it like a held breath. He was on the phone when she entered, and he held up one finger — not dismissive, just brief — before ending the call without a goodbye.

“I want you to see something,” he said, and turned his laptop toward her.

It was the same photograph from the newspaper. Beside it, a second version — the same image, but retouched, slimmer, softened at the edges into something more palatable for a headline.

“They ran both versions this morning,” Adrian said. “One for the print edition. One for the digital front page, before legal made them take it down.”

“Why show me this?”

“Because I want you to know I saw it before you did, and I’ve already made three calls this morning that ensure it doesn’t happen again.” His voice stayed level, but something beneath it had gone very still, very precise — the sound of a man doing math on someone’s behalf without asking permission first. “The outlet that ran the retouched image no longer has access to Blackwood Global press events. Effective this morning.”

Arabella stared at him. “You can’t just—”

“I can,” he said. “And I have.” He closed the laptop. “You don’t have to thank me. I didn’t do it for gratitude. I did it because I told you I’d control what reaches you, and I intend to keep that particular promise before any others.”

She didn’t know what to do with the feeling rising in her chest — something between relief and a kind of ache she didn’t have a name for yet, the specific vertigo of being defended by someone who didn’t ask if she wanted defending, who simply decided she was worth the trouble.

“Not everyone will be so easy to control,” she said quietly. “My mother reads three papers a day.”

“I’m aware.” Something almost like humor moved behind his eyes, there and gone. “Which is why I’ve asked her to lunch this afternoon. Alone. Without your father, and without you.”

“That sounds like a terrible idea.”

“It’s a necessary one.” He came around the desk, closer than he’d stood to her before, and for a moment she was aware of how much taller he was, how the office seemed to organize itself around wherever he chose to stand. “Your mother needs to understand, clearly and without room for misinterpretation, that comments about your appearance will not be tolerated in my presence, in my home, or in any room I’m paying for. I’d rather deliver that message myself than watch you absorb it every Sunday for the next forty years.”

“You don’t know that she’ll listen.”

“She doesn’t have to listen,” Adrian said. “She only has to understand that I meant it.”

Arabella looked at him for a long moment — this man nearly forty, unbothered by scandal, unmoved by headlines, apparently willing to burn down a media relationship and confront her own mother in the same morning, all before she’d finished her coffee.

“Why are you doing all of this,” she said, “before the wedding has even happened? Before you even know if I’ll stay?”

Adrian’s expression didn’t change, but something in his voice, when he answered, dropped lower — quieter, more deliberate than anything he’d said yet.

“Because I already know what kind of husband I don’t want to be,” he said. “The rest I intend to learn from you. If you’ll let me.”

Before she could answer, his assistant knocked once and opened the door without waiting for a response, her face pale in a way that made Arabella’s stomach drop before a single word was spoken.

“Sir,” she said. “You need to see this. It’s Miss Vivian Hart. She’s just given an interview.”

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter Eight: The Man Behind The Name

    They stabilized him.The words came from the same doctor twenty minutes later, delivered in the hallway with the particular gentleness reserved for families who’d just watched something break open in front of them. Arthur’s heart had stopped for eleven seconds. Eleven seconds that had felt, to Arabella, like the entire architecture of the evening rearranging itself around a single terrible possibility.“He’s sedated,” the doctor said. “We need to run further tests once he’s stable enough, and there’s a strong chance surgery will be necessary in the coming days. But for tonight—he’s stable.”Adrian didn’t move. Arabella wasn’t certain he’d heard the rest of the sentence at all; his eyes were fixed somewhere past the doctor’s shoulder, on the closed door of his father’s room, as if he were still replaying the eleven seconds on some private loop only he had access to.“Mr. Blackwood,” the doctor said gently. “You should sit.”“I’m fine.”He wasn’t. Arabella had spent twenty-four years le

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter Seven: What Money Can't Fix

    “Talk to me,” she said finally, when the silence had stretched too taut to bear.“There’s nothing to say yet. We don’t know anything.”“That’s not what I meant.” She turned toward him, watching the muscle working faintly at his jaw, the only visible crack in a composure that otherwise hadn’t moved since he’d hung up the phone. “I meant you. You’ve barely blinked in ten minutes.”Something flickered across his face—surprise, maybe, that she’d noticed, or that she’d said so plainly. “My father built an empire out of never being afraid of anything in front of other people,” he said slowly. “I learned that lesson before I learned to read.”“This isn’t a boardroom, Adrian.”“No,” he agreed. “It’s worse. In a boardroom I know the rules.”It was the most honest thing he’d said to her since the gala, and she recognized, with a small ache, what it had cost him to say it. She reached over without deciding to and put her hand over his on the seat between them. He didn’t pull away. He looked down

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter 6: The Interview

    The clip was already at four hundred thousand views by the time Adrian’s assistant pulled it up on the office’s second screen. Vivian sat across from a daytime talk show host, dressed in soft blue instead of the armor-ivory she’d worn at the gala, her hands folded with the practiced stillness of someone who’d rehearsed looking like she hadn’t rehearsed anything.“I don’t blame my sister,” Vivian was saying, her voice trembling in a way that read as vulnerability rather than performance to anyone who hadn’t grown up across the dinner table from her. “Arabella has always struggled to find her place in our family. I think, in a strange way, this is good for her. She needs the structure. The guidance.”The host leaned forward. “Some people are saying Mr. Blackwood’s choice was… unconventional.”Vivian’s smile turned sad, indulgent, the smile of a woman being generous about a painful subject. “Adrian has always had a soft spot for people who need rescuing. I think he sees Arabella as someo

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter Five: The Terms

    By morning, the story was everywhere.Arabella saw it first on her sister’s face at breakfast — not Vivian’s, but the housekeeper’s daughter, who worked part-time at the estate and slid a folded newspaper across the counter with an apologetic look before disappearing back into the kitchen. Arabella almost didn’t open it. She unfolded it anyway.THE OTHER HART SISTER: Blackwood’s Surprise Bride RevealedBeneath the headline, a photograph from the gala — unflattering, taken at an angle that made her look heavier than she was, captioned with a line about “an unconventional choice” that managed to say everything cruel without saying anything at all. She set the paper down carefully, the way she’d learned to set down things that wanted to be thrown.She was still standing in the kitchen when her phone buzzed. A number she didn’t recognize."This is Adrian. I’ve sent a car. Ten minutes."She almost asked why. She didn’t. Some instinct told her the answer would matter more if she saw it than

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter Four: The Visit

    She met him in the garden rather than let him back into the house. It felt safer, somehow—open air instead of walls that had witnessed too much tonight already. The night had turned cool, mist curling low over the hedges, and the party’s noise had thinned to the sound of cars pulling away down the long drive. Adrian stood near the fountain with his jacket unbuttoned, hands in his pockets, looking less like a CEO and more like a man who had also had a very long night. “You didn’t have to come back,” Arabella said. “I wanted to make sure you weren’t left to manage the aftermath alone.” He studied her for a moment. “Your sister has a talent for making a room feel smaller than it is.” “You heard.” “Some of it. Enough.” He didn’t elaborate, and she was grateful for that—grateful he didn’t ask her to relitigate whatever cruelty had leaked through the door. “I should have asked you before the gala. Before I said anything. I didn’t, and that wasn’t fair to you.” It wasn’t an apology exac

  • His Unchosen bride    Chapter Three: The Sister

    “Get out,” Vivian said. Her voice shook, but not from sorrow—from something sharper, colder. “Everyone. Except her.” Arthur exchanged a glance with Edward. Adrian didn’t move. “Vivian—” her father started. “I said get out.” She hadn’t taken her eyes off Arabella. “This is between me and my sister.” Adrian’s gaze flicked to Arabella, a silent question. Do you want me to stay. It startled her, the fact that he’d asked it at all, even wordlessly—no one had checked whether she wanted to be alone with Vivian in eleven years of watching her sister’s moods rearrange every room they shared. “It’s fine,” Arabella said. “I’ll be fine.” He held her eyes a moment longer, then inclined his head, once, and walked out. Arthur followed, and after a long look that said this conversation wasn’t over either, so did her father. The door clicked shut. Vivian crossed the study in three furious strides. “How long.” “How long, what?” “How long have you been planning this. Whatever you did to make a

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status