I Married My Enemy to Destroy Him

I Married My Enemy to Destroy Him

last updateTerakhir Diperbarui : 2026-07-14
Oleh:  Richard JamesBaru saja diperbarui
Bahasa: English
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You want revenge?” he asked. I looked into the eyes of the man who ruined my family. My answer was simple. “Yes.” So I married him. Everyone thought I was the luckiest woman alive. Marrying the most powerful man in the city. They didn’t know the truth. I was there to break him. Piece by piece. But I didn’t plan for this— The way he looks at me when he thinks I’m not watching. The way he protects me like I’m the only thing that matters. The way he whispers my name like it means something. Now I don’t know what’s more dangerous. My plan to destroy him… Or the possibility that I’m falling for the man I swore to ruin.

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Bab 1

CHAPTER 1: THE INVITATION THAT BURNED EVERYTHING

The envelope was heavier than it should have been.

Seraphina Vale held it between two fingers, staring at the embossed black seal like it might bite her if she opened it wrong.

VIRELLI GROUP.

No return address. No explanation.

Just a single line written in silver ink:

Lucien Virelli requests your presence tonight.

She exhaled slowly through her nose and leaned back in the leather chair of her lawyer’s office. The smell of old paper, ink, and expensive furniture filled the air—comforting for people who still had something to protect.

Seraphina did not.

Across from her, Mr. Caldwell adjusted his glasses nervously.

“I strongly advise against this,” he said again, as if repeating it would change her mind. “People don’t get invited to see Lucien Virelli. They get… summoned. And even that is rare.”

Seraphina’s eyes stayed on the envelope.

“I didn’t ask for advice,” she said calmly.

Caldwell hesitated. “Miss Vale—”

“My family lost everything,” she cut in, finally looking up. Her voice was steady, almost too steady. “I don’t need protection. I need answers.”

The room went quiet.

Even the ticking clock on the wall seemed to slow.

Caldwell sighed. “You think he was responsible.”

“I don’t think,” she said. “I know.”

She stood, sliding the envelope into her bag like it belonged there. Her movements were controlled, precise. Nothing about her trembled on the outside.

Inside… was another matter.

For years, she had learned how to survive grief without collapsing under it. How to bury rage so deep it became part of her breathing. How to smile when people whispered her father’s name like it was a joke.

The Vale empire hadn’t just fallen.

It had been erased.

And the man at the center of that erasure had a name everyone in the city feared saying too loudly.

Lucien Virelli.

Caldwell stood as she walked toward the door. “If you walk into his world, Miss Vale… you may not walk back out the same.”

Seraphina paused with her hand on the handle.

Without turning, she said quietly:

“I already didn’t.”

And she left.

The Virelli building was not just tall.

It was intentional.

Glass, steel, silence. A structure designed not to impress—but to intimidate.

Everything about it felt like control.

Even the air outside seemed thinner.

Seraphina stepped out of the car anyway.

The driver opened her door without speaking. He didn’t look at her directly, which she found more unsettling than if he had stared.

Above her, the building swallowed the sky.

She adjusted her coat and walked forward.

Each step felt like crossing into something that had already decided she didn’t belong.

At the entrance, two guards stood perfectly still.

One of them spoke into his earpiece.

Then nodded.

The doors opened.

Inside, everything was quiet.

Too quiet.

No reception noise. No background chatter. No life.

Just polished marble floors and a single corridor stretching forward like a decision she couldn’t undo.

A woman at the front desk didn’t ask for her name.

She simply said, “This way.”

Seraphina followed.

Her heels made soft, controlled sounds against the floor. Each step echoed more than it should have, like the building was listening.

They stopped in front of a pair of large black doors.

The woman opened them without knocking.

“Mr. Virelli,” she said politely, “she is here.”

Then she stepped aside.

Seraphina walked in.

And the doors closed behind her.

He didn’t look at her immediately.

Lucien Virelli stood by the floor-to-ceiling window, one hand in his pocket, the other resting loosely at his side. The city spread beneath him like something he already owned.

Black suit. No tie loosened. No sign of relaxation.

Just control.

Absolute control.

“You came faster than expected,” he said finally.

His voice wasn’t loud.

It didn’t need to be.

Seraphina stopped a few steps inside the room.

“I don’t like waiting,” she replied.

A pause.

Then he turned.

And for the first time, she saw him properly.

It was worse than she expected.

Not because he was attractive—though he was, in a way that felt engineered rather than natural.

But because of the stillness in him.

Like nothing in the world had ever surprised him enough to break it.

His eyes met hers.

Dark. Focused. Unreadable.

“You’re looking at me like I owe you something,” he said.

“I don’t look at people like that,” she replied.

A faint pause.

Then, almost like amusement:

“Liar.”

Something in her chest tightened, but she didn’t show it.

“I didn’t come here for small talk,” she said.

Lucien took a slow step forward.

Neither rushed nor casual.

Controlled distance closing.

“You came for answers,” he said.

“I came because your name is attached to the destruction of my family.”

That landed between them like a blade.

Silence.

For the first time, something flickered in his expression.

Not guilt.

Not shock.

Recognition.

“You believe that,” he said quietly.

“I know it,” she replied.

Lucien studied her for a long moment.

Then he walked past her—not away from her, but around her—circling like he was evaluating something fragile and dangerous at the same time.

“You’re not wrong,” he said finally.

Her breath stopped slightly.

But he continued.

“You’re just incomplete.”

Seraphina turned sharply.

“Incomplete?”

Lucien stopped near his desk.

“Information,” he clarified. “Your conclusion is based on a story someone allowed you to see.”

Her jaw tightened.

“Someone?”

He didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, he picked up a folder from his desk and slid it toward her.

Black. Unmarked.

Heavy.

“Sit,” he said.

“I didn’t come here to be commanded.”

His gaze lifted.

And for the first time, it sharpened.

Not angry.

Not loud.

Just absolute.

“Sit down, Seraphina.”

Something about the way he said her name made her still.

She hated that it worked.

Slowly, she sat.

Lucien opened the folder.

Inside were documents.

Not printed reports or summaries.

Original files. Sealed records. Names she recognized and didn’t want to.

Her father’s signature appeared on the first page.

Her pulse jumped.

“This,” Lucien said calmly, “is what you think you’re looking for.”

Seraphina leaned forward slightly.

“What is it?”

He watched her carefully.

Then answered:

“The beginning.”

Her fingers curled slightly against her knee.

“Don’t play games with me.”

“I’m not,” he said. “I’m offering you a choice.”

She frowned.

Lucien closed the folder and slid it back toward her—but not all the way.

Stopping just out of reach.

“Walk away,” he said. “And keep believing what you already believe.”

A pause.

“Or step into this properly.”

Her eyes narrowed.

“And what exactly is ‘this’?”

Lucien’s gaze held hers.

And then he said it.

Calmly.

Like it meant nothing.

“Marriage.”

For a second, Seraphina didn’t process the word.

Then—

She laughed.

Once.

Sharp.

Unbelieving.

“You’re insane.”

Lucien didn’t react.

“I’m offering you access,” he corrected.

“To what?”

“Everything.”

Her smile faded slowly.

“What makes you think I’d ever marry you?”

Lucien stepped closer again.

Not threatening.

Just certain.

“Because you didn’t come here for justice,” he said quietly.

“You came here for revenge.”

Silence.

Her breath tightened slightly.

He continued:

“And revenge requires proximity.”

Seraphina stood abruptly.

“No.”

One word.

Clean.

Final.

Lucien didn’t move.

Didn’t chase her.

Didn’t argue.

Instead, he reached into the drawer and placed something on the desk.

A small recording device.

Old.

Damaged.

Her father’s voice crackled through the silence before she even touched it.

“—if anything happens, don’t trust—”

The recording cut off.

Her entire body went still.

She stared at it.

Then at him.

“What is that?”

Lucien’s voice softened—barely.

“Your father’s last warning.”

Her throat tightened.

“That doesn’t prove anything.”

“It doesn’t have to,” he said.

A pause.

Then the final blow:

“It proves he was afraid.”

Silence swallowed the room.

Seraphina’s mind fought itself.

Everything she had built her rage on… didn’t shift.

But it cracked.

Just slightly.

Lucien watched her carefully.

And then added, almost quietly:

“Say no, and I disappear from your life.”

A pause.

“But so does the truth.”

Her hands curled at her sides.

“You’re blackmailing me.”

“No,” he said.

“I’m giving you access to the only person who can answer your questions.”

Her breath slowed.

She hated that it made sense.

She hated more that she was considering it.

Lucien turned slightly toward the window again.

“Decide,” he said.

“Revenge from the outside…”

A pause.

“…or truth from inside my world.”

Seraphina stared at the folder.

At the recording device.

At the man who spoke about her life like it was already written.

Her pulse was steady.

Too steady.

Because deep down—

She knew something had already changed the moment she stepped into this room.

And Lucien Virelli hadn’t asked her to marry him as a proposal.

He had offered her a war she couldn’t fight from the outside.

Her voice came out low.

Careful.

Controlled.

“If I say yes…”

Lucien turned back to her.

“…there’s no going back.”

A beat.

Then:

“There never was.”

Silence.

Then—

Seraphina Vale reached for the folder.

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