LOGINHe walked in and every head in the café turned.
I had already been seated for ten minutes, black coffee in front of me that I hadn't touched, the file on the table within reach. I had chosen the corner table deliberately. Away from the windows, away from anyone who might recognize either of us and make this morning more complicated than it already was. I had arrived early, which was something I rarely did, but I had needed the ten minutes to sit quietly and remind myself that this was a practical decision and nothing else. Zane Della-Ross found me without looking around. Like he had already known exactly where I would be sitting. He crossed the room with the unhurried ease of a man who had never once felt out of place anywhere and sat down across from me without a word. I slide the file over the table. He gazed at it for a second before he opened it. I watched him slowly and steadily move his eyes over the first page as he read it as if he wanted to remember every word. He didn't hurry, he didn't react and the coffee shop danced around us like no big deal was happening at this corner table. "A contract marriage." He said it without looking up. “If your offer is still on the table, let’s get married.” The words felt hard enough and I watched as Zane Della-Ross eased up a smirk. Of course he would smirk, I was asking him to marry me. He looked at the next page. I had been compiling it with Patrick for the hours since I'd left my dad's estate until I reached here. Each clause carefully thought out, each word carefully worded. I tried it three times until I felt I got it right. II was not walking into any arrangement with a Della-Ross without something signed and witnessed and completely airtight. From watching my father's work, I had picked up enough to realize that handshakes and well wishes would be worth nothing if there was no paper. Zane was twenty-eight. Cole's older brother by three years and the chairman of an empire that had been built over three generations. He had taken over from his father at twenty-one and had doubled the Della-Ross holdings within four years. People who had known him for decades still chose their words carefully around him and straightened slightly when he entered a room. I had spent most of my life successfully avoiding being alone with him, a fact I had achieved through genuine and consistent effort. That was not an option for me any longer. The situation I was in had a very short list of solutions and Zane Della-Ross was at the top of it. I had spent the drive here reminding myself of that. This was not about him or what I thought of him or what fourteen years of carefully maintained distance had been about. This was about Reed Industries and four days and a clause my father had written when he thought everything was already settled. He read the first clause softly and evenly. “At the end of one year, both parties can agree to dissolve the marriage quietly, if they wish to.” He nodded once. "Agreed." He went on to the next. “For public appearances, both parties shall live under the same roof and attend business and public functions together.” "Yes." I folded my hands on a table. "I'll add PDA." He lifted his gaze up to mine for the first time since he had taken a seat. Those eyes were steady and unreadable. "Public displays of affection. For appearances." "That's fine." I didn't struggle for a second to keep my eyes on him. "Public consumption only.” He looked back downward. “Both parties cannot interfere in each other's personal business." He paused. "I'll add a condition to that one." "What condition." As long as my contractual wife is not involved with another man during the term of the marriage." I considered it for a moment. It was a reasonable boundary within the framework of what we were building. "Agreed." He turned the page. "Both parties shall not be photographed or seen publicly with anyone that could compromise the integrity of the marriage." He laid the paper down, and he stared at me. I'd extend it beyond public.” “Meaning not only appearances. Being privately involved with someone else is equally unacceptable for the duration of the marriage.” “That applies to both of us equally. ” I kept my eyes on his. "It does." He didn't blink. "Fine." I pointed to the file. "Keep going." He located the next clause and his corner mouth shifted almost imperceptibly. “Thereafter, Zane Della-Ross shall not claim or interfere in Reed Industries, at any time during or after the marriage.” He looked up. The change turned into a smirk slow and deliberate. "Agreed." “Glad that one amuses you.” "It doesn't." He fixed me with a stare for a moment. “I just appreciate thoroughness." He scanned to the end page and read it silently. He then placed the file down on the table and leaned back in his chair, looking at me with a look I couldn't quite make out and had stopped trying to. “There is one more clause I want to add.” I waited. “The contract is not valid until consummated." The café noise continued around us like nothing had been said. Someone laughed two tables over. A cup clinked against a saucer. The world moved on completely unbothered. "Meaning." I kept my voice flat. "Until we sleep together the marriage carries no legal weight. Every other clause is conditional on it. The whole document means nothing until that condition is met." I looked at him for a long moment. He looked back without any of the awkwardness that a normal person might have brought to saying something like that over coffee on a Tuesday. “No.” I said without hesitation. "Okay." He shut the book and pushed his chair back and rose, calm, but entirely unbothered, reaching for his coat. I watched him. Four days. I had four days until I turned twenty five and everything my father had spent his life building passed quietly and permanently to Veronica. Patrick had gone through the will twice and found nothing and the meeting this morning had confirmed what I had already suspected. There was no other way. "Wait." He stopped. He didn't turn around immediately. Just stopped, like he had been expecting that word. I picked up the pen. I actually wrote it myself, carefully and deliberately, dated it and read it back before putting my pen down. Then he returned to the table and took his seat. I added my signature at the bottom of the paper and handed it to him. He picked up the pen. That small smirk was still there, quiet and faintly infuriating, and he signed his name beneath mine in one clean unhurried motion before closing the file and sliding it back across the table. He looked at me. The smirk was gone now. Just those steady grey eyes watching me across the table, waiting. Like he had all the time in the world and I was the one with the clock running out. Which was true. "When would you like to get married?" he asked.Everyone took their seats with careful precision like pieces arranging themselves on a chessboard, ready to play a deathly competitive game.I tried to figure out what would make me feel less like an outsider in a room full of strangers who all shared blood I didn't have. Then I looked around properly and understood something that helped, marginally. It was the fact that nobody else looked comfortable either.This lookedlike hell for everyone too.The worst part of being here was having to meet Cole again. There was still some anger in me left towards him. He just sat there and stared angrily at me but I couldn't care less. The last I checked I was the victim not him.I decided to focus on something, erasing his existence from my mind. I chose to focus on the other part of the family.Roman sat with his hands folded, composed, but his jaw worked slightly when he thought no one was watching. The cousins along the side of the table kept glancing at each other, then away,like they were
Roman looked exactly as I remembered him.Same silver at the temples, same suit cut with precision. The man had spent decades perfecting how to look like old money even when his portion of it had always been smaller than he believed he deserved.The man was someone who never moved before he understood exactly what moving would cost him.He watched us approach without changing his expression.My eyes moved past him before I could stop them, and there she was. Beth, standing slightly behind Roman's right shoulder, dressed in something pale and unremarkable with her hands folded in front of her composed like a woman who had spent thirty years learning to disappear into rooms while watching everything happening in them.My jaw tightened.I hadn't seen either of them since the reading of my father's will, five years ago, and the intervening time had done nothing to soften whatever I felt looking at them now. Roman's eyes were already calculating. It was so obvious I could see it, the way
Tomorrow won't be easy.Four words. Four words that communicated a very ominous warning Zane gave me that I spent half the night mulling over, trying to extract some additional meaning that wasn't there, and the other half failing to sleep because of it.I got up at six anyway.Because if I was walking into something, I was going to walk in looking super professional so people would think I belonged there.I acted like it was a business meeting because that's the only kind of situation I knew that involved a lot of people in a room who might not want me to do well.I put on a charcoal gray suit that made me look capable without seeming like I was trying too hard to impress. I made my hair like I did when I went for shareholder presentations and my makeup applied with the same exacting hand I used before facing a hostile board.It didn't help.What am I doing? This isn't a freaking board meeting!I exhaled, knowing that even as I told myself otherwise, even as I went through every mot
Oh Thank God, it’s just one man and I can pay him off.That was the first thing I noticed once my pulse settled enough to actually assess the situation instead of just reacting to it. I was so glad that it was not a coordinated ambush, like four photographers working a tip. But just one very lucky man with a camera and an opportunistic instinct that came from following society pages for a living.“Mr Della Ross, can you look here?” Her screamed as the flashes continued.He was so lucky to have been in this exact place to be standing too close to a parked car because he'd recognized a license plate or gotten lucky on a tip from a valet.“I just wanna get one picture to go!” He screamed again as he continued with the pictures.So fucking annoying.I swore in my mind but then again, one man was a problem with a simple solution. Pay him off, easy.I got out of the car before Sloane could say anything, my body between her and the camera, making sure he couldn’t get a decent picture of he
I knew the second I looked at her face.And I'd seen panic before in my line of work. It was common in boardrooms during hostile takeovers, hospital corridors. It was that look of someone whose body had started reacting before their mind caught up. Sloane's eyes had gone distant and it looked like it had everything to do with the room around her, her breathing was visible now in short, shallow pulls. I didn't ask what was wrong because asking would have wasted seconds I didn't have.I got her out.The valet had the car at the curb before I'd finished crossing the lobby, and I had her in the passenger seat with the door closed before she'd said a single word.She was shaking.Now, I wouldn't have been worried if it were just small tremors but it was not. Her whole body was shaking and she had her hands pressed flat against her thighs like she was trying to hold herself together through sheer physical pressure.Her breath was coming in sharp and uneven pulls that didn't seem to be bri
Wear something that would make the whole room keep their eyes on you. That was the entirety of Zane's instruction, delivered over coffee three days before the Whitfield Foundation gala.And even though I hated to admit it, I had spent considerably more time than I wanted to deciding what that meant. Because deep down his validation mattered to me and I found myself wanting to impress him now.It was crazy. “What do you think?” I asked him as I tried dress after dress before I finally settled on a deep navy blue dress that cinched my waist perfectly and showed off my shoulders.“Yes, This is the one” he said wide-mouthed as he stared at me a little too much.The dress was structured at the bodice, fluid below. It was just like he instructed - a dress that caught the room and worked it to my advantage. Before that, I'd tried on six others. I knew immediately when I put it on that the search was over and this was the dress I was going to wear.I couldn’t help but notice how he stared
Was his heart beating that hard for me?That was what my mind kept coming back to.I was in the shower the next morning and his heartbeat was there, the thought in my mind. The way his chest had felt under my palm, warm and solid, beating with urgency that told me everything I suspected but was not
She didn't come down for breakfast. At that point, I knew she must have misunderstood what happened in the garden but why did it matter? When I woke up, I had expected she would join me for breakfast as usual but she didn’t. At eight, when the coffee sat untouched across from mine, I confirmed
I couldn't believe she was doing this. My stepmother was on television. She must have been very desperate to discredit me with the fact that she was not making her usual statement or making a chide quote buried in a shareholder thread. She was putting her actual face out there, in a studio in
I can’t believe she came with an itinerary and a full work schedule!She went further to have it printed, color-coded, a proper time-blocked schedule for the honeymoon, which I discovered when I glanced at the carry-on bag she was loading into the car at five forty-seven in the morning. I caught t







