
Contract Marriage Turns to Passion
Chapter 1
The golden hour light bathed the city in amber as I hurried home, my camera bag bouncing against my hip with each quickened step. My fingers still tingled with the electricity of creativity, of capturing something real and raw during today's shoot. The gallery curator's words echoed in my mind: "These have potential, Isabella. Real potential."
I couldn't wait to tell Alexander. He'd been my champion from the beginning, plucking me from obscurity and nurturing my passion for photography when I was nothing but a lost girl with a secondhand camera and too many foster homes behind me.
Our penthouse elevator hummed softly as it carried me upward. Home. The word still felt like a miracle sometimes. Alexander had given me that—a place to belong after a lifetime of temporary addresses and careful packing.
"Alexander?" I called out as I stepped into our marble foyer, the space echoing with my voice and nothing else. "I'm home!"
The silence that greeted me was unusual. Normally, he'd call back, appear with a glass of wine, ask about my day with that focused intensity that made me feel like the most important person in his world.
I found him at our dining table, the Manhattan skyline a glittering backdrop behind him. His eyes remained fixed on his phone, thumb scrolling methodically as if I hadn't entered.
"Hey," I said, setting my camera bag down carefully. "You won't believe what happened today. The curator from the Whitman Gallery loved my urban series. She's talking about a potential exhibition next spring."
Alexander's eyes flicked up briefly, then returned to his screen. "That's nice."
Two words. Flat. Dismissive. The chill in them froze the excitement in my chest.
"Is everything okay?" I asked, sliding into the chair across from him.
He set his phone down with deliberate slowness, but it immediately buzzed again. I caught a glimpse of the name on the screen—Victoria—before he turned it face down.
"Dinner's getting cold," he said, gesturing to the covered plates our housekeeper must have prepared before leaving.
I removed the silver dome from my plate, revealing a perfectly arranged salmon dish I suddenly had no appetite for. The silence between us stretched, thick and unfamiliar.
"So," I ventured, "the gallery thing—it could be big. My first real exhibition."
Alexander cut into his steak with precise movements. "Isabella, let's be realistic. Photography is a lovely hobby, but let's not get carried away."
A hobby? For eight years he'd called it my gift, my calling. He'd built me a darkroom, sent me to workshops in Paris, introduced me to renowned photographers as "my wife, the artist."
His phone buzzed again. His jaw tightened as he glanced at it, then adjusted his platinum cufflinks—a nervous habit I'd rarely seen.
"Is it work?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
"Always is," he replied, not meeting my eyes.
I pushed food around my plate, stomach knotting as I watched this stranger wearing my husband's face. Something was terribly wrong. The Alexander who'd rescued me, who'd held me through nightmares of my lonely past, who'd promised I'd never be alone again—that man wasn't here tonight.
He abruptly stood, his chair scraping harshly against the floor. "Come with me."
"What? Why? I haven't finished—"
His hand closed around my upper arm, not painfully but with unmistakable command. "Now, Isabella."
He led me toward the elevator, punching the button for the basement. My confusion turned to disbelief as the doors opened to reveal our wine cellar—a cathedral-like space of temperature-controlled rarities Alexander had collected for years.
"Alexander, what are we doing down here?"
He pulled me inside, flicked on the dim lighting, and then did something that made my blood run cold—he closed the heavy door and turned the lock.
"Where is she?" His voice had dropped to a harsh whisper.
"Who?" I backed away until cool stone pressed against my spine.
"Victoria." He stepped closer, his face transformed by an emotion I'd never seen there before—desperation. "My executive assistant. I know you've been in contact with her. Where is she hiding?"
I slid down the wall until I was sitting on the cold floor, my world tilting on its axis. The way he said her name—Victoria—contained a universe of meaning that shattered everything I thought I knew about us.
"I don't—" My voice cracked. "I don't know what you're talking about."
In the cellar's dim light, surrounded by bottles worth more than my entire life before him, I watched the first crack form in the perfect world Alexander Blackwood had built for me.
And somewhere in my heart, I knew this was just the beginning.
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