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Contract Marriage To My Boss's Rival

Contract Marriage To My Boss's Rival

For seven years, I was Grant Charles’s shadow—his top executive assistant by day and the woman in his bed by night. I managed his billion-dollar empire and handled his every crisis, believing our bond was the one thing his money couldn't buy. Everything shattered when I walked into his penthouse and found Aimee Austin sitting on his lap, wearing nothing but his favorite white dress shirt. Grant didn't even look guilty; he just stared at me with cold, arrogant eyes and told me I was dripping rain on his expensive Persian rug. When I tried to resign, he showed me exactly how cruel he could be. He knew I had drained my life savings to pay for my mother’s specialized care for her dementia. "Without my salary and the foundation subsidy, she’ll be on the street in a month," he whispered, his voice dripping with malice. "Is your pride really worth her life?" He didn't stop there. He tried to break my spirit by publicly humiliating me at a high-end restaurant, orchestrating a "setup" to show me that without his protection, I was nothing more than a common servant. He wanted me to realize that without him, I was a nobody with no future. I couldn't believe the man I had protected for nearly a decade was weaponizing my dying mother to keep me as his subordinate. He thought he owned every inch of me, and he was waiting for me to come crawling back on my knees to beg for my old life. But Grant made one fatal mistake: he assumed I was a charity case. He had no idea I was the secret heir to the billion-dollar Klein Trust, currently frozen behind a single marriage clause. I didn't need his money; I just needed a husband. Instead of begging for my job, I walked straight into the office of the only man Grant feared—the ruthless litigator Julian Vance. I threw a marriage contract on his desk and gave him an offer he couldn't refuse. It was time to stop being a shadow and start a war.
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Chapter 1

The rain in Manhattan didn't wash things clean. It just made the grime slicker, harder to navigate without slipping. Darian Klein stood on the sidewalk outside the Charles residential tower, the water soaking through the shoulders of her trench coat. It was a freezing, relentless downpour that numbed her skin, but it couldn't touch the burning knot in her stomach. She stared up at the penthouse windows, seventy floors above. The lights were on. A warm, golden glow against the charcoal sky. She checked her watch. 11:42 PM. For seven years, this time of night usually meant a summons. A text message demanding her presence for a crisis, a lost file, or a body to warm his bed. Tonight, she was here uninvited. She walked into the lobby. The doorman, Ralph, straightened up, his smile automatic. "Good evening, Ms. Klein. Nasty weather out there." "It is, Ralph." Her voice was steady. Too steady. It sounded like it belonged to someone else, someone whose heart wasn't hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She bypassed the front desk and went straight to the private elevator. She pressed her thumb against the biometric scanner. The light turned green. Access Granted. He'd left it active. Of course, he had. The ultimate display of arrogant ownership. This wasn't an oversight; it was a leash left dangling, a silent dare for her to come crawling back. He wanted this confrontation on his home turf, where he was king. For the last time. The elevator ascended, the pressure building in her ears. She watched the floor numbers tick upward. 10... 30... 50... Each number was a layer of skin she was shedding. This steel box had been her confession booth, her dressing room, her place to cry before composing her face into the mask of the perfect Executive Assistant. The doors slid open with a soft chime. The penthouse smelled of expensive leather, sandalwood, and him. Soft jazz played from the hidden speakers-Miles Davis, Blue in Green. The melancholy trumpet notes floated through the air, clashing with the sound of feminine laughter. Darian didn't announce herself. She walked down the long, marble hallway, her wet heels making no sound on the runner. She stopped at the edge of the sunken living room. The fire was lit. The flames danced in the reflection of the floor-to-ceiling windows. Grant Charles sat in his favorite armchair, a glass of amber whiskey in his hand. He looked relaxed, his tie loosened, the top button of his shirt undone. And on his lap sat Aimee Austin. Aimee was wearing a white dress shirt. His white dress shirt. It swallowed her petite frame, the cuffs rolling past her fingers, the hem barely covering her thighs. She was tracing the line of Grant's jaw with her index finger, giggling at something he had just said. It was a cliché. A scene ripped from a bad movie. But the physical impact of it was like a punch to the solar plexus. Darian's breath hitched, a tiny, sharp intake of air. Grant's eyes shifted. He didn't jump. He didn't push Aimee away. He just looked at Darian, his gaze dark and unreadable, as if he had been expecting her. "You're dripping on the Persian rug, Darian," Grant said. His voice was a low rumble, devoid of surprise. Aimee squealed-a theatrical, high-pitched sound-and scrambled off Grant's lap. She pulled the collar of the shirt tighter around her neck, feigning modesty, but her eyes were bright with triumph. "Oh my god, Darian," Aimee said, breathless. "We didn't hear the elevator. You should have called." Darian ignored her. She kept her eyes locked on Grant. She walked past the wet bar, past the fireplace, until she stood directly in front of the black obsidian coffee table. She reached into her wet coat pocket. Her fingers brushed the cold plastic of the key card. "I'm not staying," Darian said. She pulled out the black card. It was the Level 1 Access Key. It opened everything: the office, the safe, the jet, this apartment. It was the symbol of her power, and her leash. She placed it on the table. Click. The sound was small, but in the sudden silence of the room, it sounded like a gunshot. Grant stared at the card. He swirled his whiskey, the ice clinking against the glass. "What is this? Another negotiation tactic? You want a raise? Or is this about me missing your birthday last week?" "The HR exit protocols require the return of all company property within twenty-four hours of termination," Darian recited. The words were automatic, a shield. "I wanted to ensure the handover was completed personally." Aimee stepped closer to Grant, resting a hand on his shoulder. "She's so professional, isn't she, Grant? Even when she's soaking wet and trespassing." Darian finally looked at Aimee. She looked at her with the same detached scrutiny she would give a balance sheet that didn't add up. "It's called integrity, Aimee. You wouldn't understand the concept." Grant stood up. He was tall, over six-foot-two, and he used his height as a weapon. He loomed over Darian, blocking the light from the fire. The air around him seemed to drop in temperature. "You think you can just walk in here, drop a piece of plastic, and walk out?" Grant stepped closer. Darian could smell the whiskey on his breath. "Where will you go, Darian? You have no savings. You sent every dime to that facility in Brooklyn for your mother." Darian's fingers curled into fists at her sides. He knew exactly where to strike. "Martha needs round-the-clock care," Grant continued, his voice dropping to a cruel whisper. "Without my salary, without the Charles Foundation subsidy... she'll be on the street in a month. Is your pride worth her life?" Darian felt the bile rise in her throat. Her stomach cramped, a physical reaction to his cruelty. He wasn't just her boss; he had been her lover, her world. And he was using her dying mother as leverage. But he didn't know. He didn't know about the Klein Trust. He didn't know she was the heir to a fortune that dwarfed his own liquid assets. He only saw the assistant. The charity case. "My finances are no longer your concern, Mr. Charles," Darian said. Her voice didn't shake. Grant laughed. It was a harsh, barking sound. "You'll be back. Three days. You'll be back begging for your job, and I might-might-let you start in the mailroom." Aimee giggled, nuzzling her face into Grant's arm. "Don't be too mean, baby. She looks like a drowned rat." Darian took a step back. She needed to leave. Now. Before the mask cracked. Before she screamed or threw up. "Goodbye, Grant," she said. She turned on her heel, her wet coat flaring slightly. She walked toward the elevator, her spine rigid. Every step away from him felt like walking through deep water. "Darian!" Grant's voice rang out, sharp and commanding. She stopped. She didn't turn around. "Since you're here," Grant said, his tone shifting to casual arrogance. "Pour Aimee a glass of water before you go. She's parched." It was a test. The ultimate power move. He wanted to see if the dog still obeyed the master. Darian stared at her reflection in the elevator doors. She saw a woman with wet hair, dark circles under her eyes, and a mouth set in a grim line. But she didn't see a servant. "Mr. Charles," she said, speaking to the steel doors. "That falls under the duties of domestic staff." She pressed the call button. "And I am off the clock," she added. "Forever." The elevator doors slid open. She stepped inside and hit the lobby button. As the doors began to close, she saw Grant's face. The arrogance was gone, replaced by a flash of genuine shock. He took a step forward, as if to stop the doors, but it was too late. The metal panels slid shut, sealing her in. Darian leaned her forehead against the cool mirror of the elevator wall. Her legs gave out, and she slid down to the floor, crouching in her wet coat. She didn't cry. She couldn't. Her chest heaved, gasping for air as if she had been holding her breath for seven years. Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She pulled it out. The screen lit up the dark elevator. Caller ID: Aunt Vivian. Darian stared at the name.

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