LOGINAfter Nora West discovers that her four-year relationship had been nothing more than a cruel joke, the last thing she expects is for her twin brother to collapse from exhaustion and land in the hospital. That incident brings her face to face with Alan Reed, Noah’s billionaire boss, a cold and emotionally distant man whose family has been pressuring him to move on from the woman he lost years ago. When Alan asks Nora to marry him, Nora says yes knowing they both have something to gain from it. Nora walks into the arrangement with a broken heart and no expectations. After everything she went through with her ex, she no longer believes love is worth the risk. Alan, on the other hand, is convinced all he needs is a contract wife to satisfy his family and maintain appearances. But living together slowly changes everything. What starts as an arrangement turns into friendship, quiet comfort, late-night conversations, and stolen kisses neither of them planned for. The closer Alan gets to Nora, the more guilty he begins to feel, like caring about her somehow betrays the woman he once loved. While Nora once believed nothing could hurt more than heartbreak, nothing prepares her for falling in love with a man who swore never to love again.
View MoreThe moment I stepped out of my bedroom, counting started quietly inside my head.
One… two… three…
Right on cue, the television volume lowered.
Hesitating near the living room entrance, my hands smoothed nervously over the blue dress clinging to my body. Almost forty minutes had been wasted arguing with myself about whether to wear it before finally giving up.
Noah’s eyes lifted from the business channel playing on the television and landed directly on me. A deep frown formed on his face.
“Nora. Remind me again why you’re still dating this guy.”
A sigh escaped me as I walked further into the room. “Because he’s kind, supportive, and he loves me.”
Noah scoffed. “The lies you tell yourself.”
“Can we please not do this?”
But his attention had already dropped to the dress. “He picked that, didn’t he?”
“It was a gift.” My gaze moved over the material. “He said I’d look good in it.”
The truth was, the dress didn’t even feel like me. The fabric sat too tightly around my waist, and blue had never really been my color.
But Damien liked it.
“It’s not that bad,” I muttered. “Drop it, Noah.”
“No.” He stood abruptly and started pacing in front of the television. “Can’t you honestly see the problem here?”
“What problem?”
“The fact that everything is always about him.” He turned toward me sharply. “What he likes. What he wants. What makes him happy.”
“That’s not true.”
“Really?” His hand gestured toward my dress. “You hate that color, Nora.”
My eyes dropped to my knees, suddenly unable to hold Noah’s gaze anymore.
Dad had been wearing a blue shirt the night he died in the hospital. Since then, blue was a color I could never bring myself to wear.
“Love is about compromise,” I said quietly.
Noah looked at me with the same tired expression he had been wearing a lot lately before finally sitting back down and turning his attention to the television again.
Releasing a quiet breath, I dropped beside him on the couch. “Why do you hate him so much? Do you know how terrible it feels knowing my twin brother can’t stand my boyfriend?”
“You know why.” His attention remained on the news playing on the television. “You stop being yourself whenever he’s around.”
“Could you at least try to tolerate him?” I murmured. “For me.”
“Emotional blackmail won’t work this time, Nora.”
“Please?”
Noah shook his head again. “It’s pointless. Just go.”
My phone vibrated before another word could be said.
Damien: I’m outside.
The message had barely appeared before I stood.
As I reached the door, Noah spoke again. “My prayer for you,” he said quietly, “is that one day you realize you deserve better.”
My steps slowed.
“Nora.”
Turning back slowly, my eyes met his.
“Say amen.”
An unwilling smile pulled at my lips. “Amen.” Mostly so he would let me leave.
*******
Getting into Damien’s car, he leaned over and kissed me.
“You look beautiful.” His eyes moved slowly over the dress. “I knew that color would look perfect on you.”
“Thank you.”
He drove us to his favorite restaurant, the same place he always claimed had the best food in the city. Personally, the portions felt too small, and the food somehow always tasted strange to me, but Damien loved the place, so pretending to enjoy it became part of the routine.
We had barely started eating when he reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a small velvet box.
A small gasp escaped me, my hand flying to my mouth.
“Nora.” He opened the box carefully between us. “Will you marry me?”
The ring sparkled beneath the restaurant lights while my heart nearly burst inside my chest.
“Yes!” A smile broke across my face as I nodded quickly. “Of course.”
Damien smiled softly before reaching across the table for my hand, gently sliding the ring onto my finger. “I’m going to be an amazing husband.”
A laugh slipped out of me as I admired the ring on my finger. “It’s so pretty,” I murmured. “Thank you.”
“Shit,” he suddenly muttered under his breath.
“Excuse me for a second,” he said quickly, already pushing back his chair. “I need to speak to someone.”
Looking up in confusion, I followed his line of sight toward the restaurant entrance. He rushed off before I could ask anything, disappearing deeper into the restaurant.
Damien was barely gone when his phone started vibrating nonstop against the table.
My eyes moved toward the screen just as another notification appeared, asking if I had said yes, followed by a laughing emoji.
Normally, touching Damien’s phone wasn’t something I ever did. He had always been strangely protective of it. But we were engaged now. Soon, we would be husband and wife. There shouldn’t be secrets between us anymore.
My fingers hovered over the phone before finally picking it up. The screen unlocked with a swipe.
At first, the messages didn’t make sense. Then slowly, painfully, everything started connecting together.
The woman texting Damien was his real fiancée.
The proposal had been her idea because she was tired of waiting for Damien to sleep with me so their little game could finally end.
My vision blurred with tears as I kept scrolling, hands trembling so badly the phone nearly slipped from my grip. Every message hurt worse than the last.
They had been laughing at me the entire time.
“What the fuck do you think you’re doing?”
My head jerked up at the sound of his voice.
Damien was standing beside the table again, breathing hard like he had rushed back the second he saw me with the phone.
His eyes locked onto it in my trembling hands before he snatched it away immediately.
“This is exactly the problem with you, Nora.” Anger rose sharply in his voice. “You never listen. Why would you go through my phone? Why is it so difficult for you to respect simple boundaries?”
The conversation split naturally after lunch. Alan, his brothers, and his father disappeared into business talk while his mother and grandmother started arguing over the wedding guest list.Alan had been clear that, excluding his immediate family, only twenty relatives were allowed. His grandmother and mother were having a hard time deciding which twenty made the cut and which branch of the family tree was getting pruned.My eyes wandered across the room and landed on Lory. She immediately mouthed, "Come with me."She tilted her head toward the hallway. I glanced at Alan. Lory responded by making a face that very clearly translated to ignore him.Then she picked up her phone and started typing. She set it face down on the table. About a minute passed before it started ringing. She cut the call without looking at it. It rang again. She cut it again.The third time, her mother looked up. "Lory, either answer that phone or turn it off. It's distracting.""Sorry, Mum." She pushed her chai
Alan's text came in at half past ten.*I'll be there at 1. Be ready.*Noah had already warned me about his punctuality, so getting ready early wasn't even a question. By twelve fifty, the teal dress was on, my purse on the bed, and I was standing in front of the mirror for what had to be the fourth time.Alan texted at exactly one p.m., not a second late, asking me to open the door. Grabbing my purse, I headed out immediately.Noah was sprawled across the couch watching something on his phone when I passed through the living room."Have fun," he said without looking up.Opening the front door, I found Alan standing outside, dressed in a white fitted shirt. His gaze flicked over me before he gave a small nod that felt like approval."Is Noah home?""Yes," I replied, turning back toward the house and calling his name through the doorway.A loud groan came from the living room. "What is it?"Noah appeared at the door a few seconds later. One look at Alan and suddenly he remembered how to
The floor felt like the right place to be, my back against the wall and my knees pulled up as I stared at nothing in particular.Noah's reaction wasn't a surprise. Not really. But knowing something was coming didn't always soften the landing.The worst part wasn't even the argument. It was how badly I wanted his support. He was the only family left. The other half of everything. Going into something this big without him standing beside it felt like walking into a room with no floor.I sat there for hours, thinking, sulking, replaying the conversation on a loop until my bedroom door finally opened.Noah came in without knocking, which was just his way. He crossed the room and lowered himself onto the floor beside me, close enough that his shoulder touched mine. For a moment, neither of us said anything."I'm sorry for walking out." His voice was quiet."I understand why you did.”A long breath left him. "I still hate this. I still wish you'd told me before agreeing so I could've talked
Since I was meeting Alan's family tomorrow, I decided to buy myself something decent to wear.Running through my wardrobe mentally, there wasn't anything suitable enough. Most of the outfits that could have passed were gifts from Damien, and there was no way I was wearing any of those. I made a mental note to deal with them later.Three hours later, after walking through what felt like every store in the mall and changing my mind at least twenty times, I finally found a teal dress.Before that, every dress seemed to come with a problem attached to it. One looked too formal. Another looked like I was attending a funeral. One was so tight I nearly got stuck trying to take it off.By the end, my feet hurt and my patience was hanging by a thread.The dress solved a problem I had been struggling with all afternoon. It wasn't too flashy, but it wasn't plain either. The one thing I had quickly learned about wealthy people was how much appearances mattered in their world. I didn't want to sho
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