LOGINAfter a mysterious fire destroys her life, Elena Rawlings is forced into a 100-day contract marriage with the ruthless Alexander Vance. The rules are simple: don't enter the East Wing, provide bi-weekly blood draws, and never talk to the woman in the mirrors. But as the line between high-tech science and dark obsession blurs, Elena discovers she isn't a wife, she’s a biological vessel for Alexander’s digital sister. In a house made of glass and lies, Elena must decide if she will run for her life or stay to conquer the man who owns her soul.
View MoreThe smoke from the "JustDirect Food Hub" warehouse still clung to Elena’s hair, smelling of burnt grain and broken dreams. She didn't wait for the receptionist to stop her. She kicked open the mahogany doors of Vance Holdings, her boots leaving charcoal streaks on the white marble of the 50th-floor penthouse suite.
"You destroyed it," she hissed, slamming a singed business card onto the desk of the man sitting in the shadows.
Alexander Vance didn't look up. He was tracing the rim of a crystal glass with a finger that wore a ring worth more than her entire life. "I didn't destroy it, Elena. I liberated you. You were playing shopkeeper while the world was waiting for you to lead."
"I don't want to lead. I want my life back. I want my trucks, my inventory, and the five years of sweat I put into that dirt!"
He stood up then, and the air in the room seemed to vanish. He was a predator in a bespoke suit, moving with a silent, terrifying grace. He walked toward her, not stopping until she was backed against the cold glass of the floor-to-ceiling window, fifty stories above the city.
"Your life is gone," he whispered, his voice like velvet over gravel. He reached out, his thumb brushing a smudge of ash off her cheek. His touch was electric, terrifying, and far too familiar. "But I can give you a throne. There’s just one price."
Elena’s heart hammered against her ribs. "What price?"
He leaned in, his lips hovering an inch from her ear. "You have to belong to me. Not in public. Not for the cameras. But in the dark, where nobody can save you from what I am."
Elena felt the cold glass biting into her spine. "I don't even know you, Alexander. You’re a ghost who buys companies and guts them. Why me?"
Alexander’s hand moved from her cheek to the nape of her neck, his grip firm but not painful. It was a claim. "You think you don't know me? Think back to the rain in Malta, four years ago. The girl who shared her umbrella with a bleeding stranger in an alleyway."
Elena froze. The memory hit her like a physical blow. She had been a student then, traveling on a shoestring budget. She’d found a man slumped against a stone wall, his expensive shirt soaked in blood. She hadn't called the police, he’d begged her not to. She had simply sat with him, wrapping her scarf around his wound until the sun came up and his friends arrived in black SUVs.
"That was you?" she breathed, her eyes searching his cold, angular face.
"I told you then that I would pay you back," Alexander said, his voice dropping an octave. "But I’m a Vance. We don't just pay debts. We colonize the people we owe."
He stepped back, crossing his arms. The predatory heat vanished, replaced by the icy professionalism that had made him the most feared man in the equity markets. "The fire at your warehouse? That was a courtesy. A way to clear the schedule. You were too attached to that little food hub. It was a distraction."
"A courtesy?" Elena’s voice rose to a scream. "People could have died! My driver was in that building ten minutes before the explosion!"
"I timed the ignition myself, Elena. I am many things, but I am not sloppy." He walked back to his desk and picked up a heavy, fountain pen. "I have already moved the $2 million loss-coverage into an escrow account. It will be released to your name the moment you sign the marriage certificate lying on that table."
Elena looked at the gold-embossed folder. "Marriage? You want a PR stunt to satisfy your grandfather’s will? That’s the oldest trick in the book, Alexander. Get a different girl."
"This isn't for my grandfather. He’s been dead for three years. The press doesn't even know I'm getting married." He turned the folder toward her. "This is a private contract. For 100 days, you live in the Vance Estate. You undergo a series of... medical procedures. Nothing invasive, just blood draws and monitoring. In exchange, I rebuild your business ten times larger than it was. I give you the logistics network you’ve been dreaming of. I make you the queen of the regional food supply."
Elena’s mind was racing. 100 days. $2 million. The chance to actually achieve the dream she’d been killing herself for. But there was something in his eyes a hunger that wasn't about business.
"Why my blood?" she asked, her voice trembling.
Alexander’s expression didn't change, but his eyes darkened. "Because you are a ghost, Elena. You have a Rhesus-null phenotype. One in six million. My sister is dying, and you are the only 'well' that hasn't run dry."
"So I'm a human blood bag?"
"You are my wife," he corrected. "And in this house, that is the most dangerous title you can hold."
He held out the pen. The silence in the office was deafening, broken only by the hum of the city far below. Elena looked at the pen, then at the man who had burned her world down just to build her a new one. She thought of her empty bank account, her failed business, and the memory of that bleeding man in Malta who had looked at her like she was an angel.
She took the pen. Her hand shook as she scrawled Elena Rawlings across the bottom of the thick parchment.
The moment the ink dried, Alexander took the pen back. He didn't smile. He didn't congratulate her. He simply pressed a button on his desk.
"Marcus," he said into the intercom. "The Proxy has signed. Bring the car around. And call the surgeon. We begin tonight."
Elena felt a chill that had nothing to do with the air conditioning. "Tonight? I need to go home, I need to pack"
"You have no home," Alexander said, walking toward the door and gesturing for her to follow. "Your apartment lease was terminated an hour ago. Your belongings are already at the estate. From this second forward, Elena, you don't exist to the outside world."
He stopped at the door, looking back at her. "And one more thing. Rule Number One: Never, under any circumstances, speak to the woman you see in the mirrors. She isn't your reflection."
Elena stood frozen in the center of the room. "What did you just say?"
But Alexander was already walking down the hallway, his footsteps echoing like a countdown.
They're trying to freeze the valley out before we can even lay the tracks," Jax spat, slamming his fist against the metal casing of the receiver. "We can't lay an unshielded line if the very tools the farmers need are going to turn against them the moment they draw power from our grid.""We don't shield the line," Alexander said, his eyes fixed on the blueprints Vane had laid out. "We isolate the handshake. The offshore platforms are broadcasting a wide-spectrum signal, which means they rely on the old high-altitude relay towers to maintain its strength. There’s a relay station on the western ridge, right above the tunnel Vane is clearing.""The Ridge-Spire," Vane muttered, his cybernetic jaw clicking. "It’s a dead tower. It hasn't seen maintenance since the sky turned grey.""It’s not dead," Alexander said. "It’s passive. It’s acting as a lens for the sea signal. If we can take the tower, we can invert the lens. Instead of letting the offshore signal down into the valley, we use the t
The descent from the high-line node was a quiet affair, a stark contrast to the violent, rattling ascent that had brought them to the frozen peak. The Sky-Rail car glided through the breaking mountain mist, its cargo bay packed to the absolute limit with the master blueprints and the primary industrial dies for the next generation of Mag-Lev coils. Below them, the world opened up not as a chaotic sprawl of neon and iron, but as a vast, unmapped ledger waiting for its first entry.Alexander sat near the manual tiller, his gaze fixed on the shifting horizon where the white of the Salt Flats met the deep, shadow-choked green of the western valley settlements. For decades, those communities had existed as survivalist ghosts, completely cut off from the city’s central resource grid, trading scavenged electronics for whatever withered crops could grow in the acidic topsoil of the lowlands."The high-line components change everything, Alex," Jax said, his heavy boots propped against an iron
The High-Line Node was a sprawling complex of automated factories built into the caldera of an extinct volcano. At this altitude, the air was pristine, the sun reflecting off the vast fields of snow and the black glass of the factory walls. But the peace of the landscape was broken by the violent, industrial screeching coming from the central assembly bay.As Alexander and Jax stepped out of the transport car, they saw the automated armatures of the primary foundry in motion. Massive, robotic cranes were lifting crates of heavy-duty Mag-Lev coils the precise components needed to expand the city's rail infrastructure, and dumping them into a gaping, volcanic fissure at the edge of the platform."The purge protocol is at eighty percent," Jax said, sprinting toward the primary control platform that overlooked the assembly floor. "The automated cranes are clearing the remaining storage bays. If we don't stop the logic-cycle in the next five minutes, the entire inventory will be at the bot
The thawing of the city’s lower tiers had brought the Provisional Council more than just time; it had brought a surge of public trust. For the first time since the collapse of the central OS, the people in the Circuit Slums were not just surviving the winter, they were warm. But the geopolitical landscape beyond the Salt Flats remained a fractured, dangerous reality. While the southern coast was secure following the destruction of the Dredger, the eastern high-line the mountain passes that led to the forgotten manufacturing nodes of the upper plateau, were beginning to signal a new crisis.Alexander stood on the exposed observation deck of the southern terminus, a heavy canvas coat shielding him from the freezing mountain wind. The air was clear, but far to the east, along the jagged black spine of the ridge, a rhythmic, pulsing blue light was cutting through the mountain mist."It’s a long-range beacon," Jax said, stepping onto the deck and handing Alexander a thermal scope. "It’s be
The success of the first rail run had transformed the southern terminus into the beating heart of the city. For days, the Mag-Lev flatbeds had been screaming across the Salt Flats, bringing in the rusted grain that was slowly being milled into the first real flour the slums had seen in decades. But
The success of the harvest had brought a fragile sense of security to the Northern Basin, but it had also brought a new set of logistical nightmares. Alexander stood on the edge of the decommissioned rail yard, watching the sunrise glint off the rusted iron tracks that stretched like a skeletal han
The first harvest of the Northern Basin was not the bountiful, golden sea depicted in the ancient agricultural archives. It was a sparse, hard-won patchwork of toughened stalks that looked more like rusted iron than grain. But to the three hundred men and women living in the tent city on the edge o
The journey back from the Echo Station was a funeral procession in motion. Alexander drove with a rhythmic, mechanical focus, his eyes fixed on the cracked asphalt as it unfurled beneath the headlights. Beside him, Elena’s synthetic form sat perfectly still, her head resting against the window. The






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