
Fifty Million Dollar Contract: My Enemy Husband
Eloise was the untouchable Brandt family heiress, just one audition away from landing a lead movie role and escaping her golden cage.
But overnight, her family's empire completely collapsed.
With her father dying of heart failure, her mother forced her to beg the only man who could save them: Christian Clarke.
Christian was the ruthless billionaire who had publicly humiliated Eloise in college, ripping up her love letter in front of a laughing crowd.
Now, he tossed a fifty-million-dollar acquisition contract on the table.
"What exactly is the Brandt heiress putting up for sale today?"
To secure her father's medical care, Eloise was forced to sign a suffocating marriage contract, selling herself as a corporate tax shield.
He moved her into his freezing penthouse and treated her like a purchased asset. He mocked her attempts to cook him dinner, yet pinned her against the wall with punishing, possessive kisses whenever she tried to pull away.
Eloise's pride was entirely shattered.
She didn't understand why he was doing this. If he hated her so much and only wanted revenge, why did his touch carry such an agonizing, desperate heat?
Determined to survive, she went to her final audition and miraculously won the lead role, crying tears of joy because she had finally earned something on her own.
She had no idea that the cold-blooded monster sleeping beside her had just secretly threatened to destroy all of Hollywood to give it to her.
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Chapter 8
The chaotic noise of the Whole Foods in Columbus Circle was a welcome distraction.
Eloise pushed a metal shopping cart down the aisle. It was late afternoon. After getting the text from her father yesterday, she had spent the entire morning staring at the ceiling of the guest room, trying to rebuild her mental walls.
The money was in the bank. Her father was going to get his surgery. She had signed the contract. She decided she couldn't live in a state of constant war, but this wasn't about pleasing him. The coldness of the penthouse was suffocating, stripping away her humanity piece by piece. She needed the familiar, grounding scent of real food cooking just to prove to herself that she was still alive, still breathing. She stopped in front of the meat counter. She stared at the cuts of beef. As for what to make, a dusty, ten-year-old memory simply forced its way into her mind, and she was too exhausted to fight it or think of anything else. Back at the boarding school in Connecticut, she had overheard Christian talking to Jett in the library. He had mentioned his favorite meal was a proper Beef Wellington. It was a silent, complex test-to see if the boy from her past still existed in the monster who bought her.
She bought the tenderloin, mushrooms, and puff pastry.
By the time she returned to the penthouse, it was six o'clock. The massive apartment was dead silent.
Eloise changed into a pair of soft grey sweatpants and an oversized white t-shirt. She twisted her blonde hair up into a messy clip. She walked into the pristine, untouched kitchen and tied a black apron around her waist.
She started chopping mushrooms. The rhythmic sound of the knife hitting the cutting board grounded her. Soon, the smell of melting butter, roasting meat, and fresh rosemary filled the cold air of the apartment, making it feel slightly less like a tomb.
At seven-thirty, she pulled the golden-brown pastry out of the oven. She sliced it and plated it carefully on the massive dining table, pairing it with a simple arugula salad.
She wiped her hands on a towel and picked up her phone. She opened the text thread with Christian. It was completely empty.
She typed quickly before she could lose her nerve. I made dinner. To say thank you for the transfer. If you have time, you can come back and eat.
She hit send and immediately flipped the phone face down on the marble counter. She let out a self-deprecating sigh. The CEO of Clarke Capital was probably at a Michelin-star restaurant right now. He wasn't going to come home for her cooking.
Three miles away, in the glass-walled boardroom of Clarke Capital, Christian sat at the head of a long table. Ten senior executives were arguing loudly about a hostile takeover bid.
Christian's private phone buzzed on the table. He glanced down.
When he read the text from Eloise, his grip on the phone tightened infinitesimally. His eyes locked onto the words I made dinner. The VP of Acquisitions was mid-sentence, shouting about profit margins. Christian didn't look up. He placed the phone face down on the polished mahogany table, his jaw tightening as an irritating, restless energy began to claw at his chest. He forced himself to listen for another five excruciating minutes, his fingers drumming a slow, lethal rhythm against the armrest. Finally, his patience snapped. Christian raised his right hand. The entire boardroom went dead silent instantly. "Enough," Christian said flatly, his voice cutting through the room like a scythe. "Give me these updated projections by tomorrow morning. Meeting adjourned." He stood up, grabbed his suit jacket from the back of his chair, and walked toward the door without waiting for a response.
At exactly eight o'clock, the electronic lock on the penthouse door beeped.
Eloise was sitting on the living room sofa, reading a script. Her head snapped up.
Christian walked in. He shrugged off his dark wool coat. The cold autumn air clung to his clothes. His eyes immediately swept across the room and landed on the dining table.
He saw the two plates of steaming food. He saw Eloise standing up, wearing sweatpants and an apron. A violent surge of warmth hit his chest. It was exactly what he had fantasized about for years-coming home to her.
But he quickly clamped down on the emotion, hardening his jaw. He walked slowly toward the dining area, unbuttoning his cuffs.
Eloise wiped her hands nervously on her apron. "I... I didn't think you would actually come back."
Christian pulled out a chair at the head of the table and sat down. He looked at the food, then up at her. "I paid fifty million dollars," he said, his voice laced with heavy sarcasm. "I figured I should inspect the secondary skills of my investment."
Eloise's stomach tightened. She bit her tongue to keep from snapping back. She turned around and walked to the kitchen counter to grab the bottle of red wine and two glasses.
When she turned her back, Christian's eyes immediately dropped to the curve of her waist and the soft skin of her neck exposed by her messy hair. His throat went dry. He swallowed hard.
Eloise walked back and poured the wine. She handed a glass to him.
Christian reached for it. As he took the stem, his fingers brushed against hers.
The physical contact sent a jolt of electricity up Eloise's arm. She yanked her hand back so fast she almost dropped the bottle. Christian's fingers tightened around the glass, his knuckles turning white. The air between them suddenly felt thick and suffocatingly hot.
Christian picked up his knife and fork. He cut a piece of the Wellington and put it in his mouth.
Eloise held her breath, waiting for him to insult it. Waiting for him to tell her it was garbage.
Christian chewed slowly. He didn't say a word. He just cut another piece, and then another. He ate in complete silence.
Eloise slowly sat down in her chair. She picked at her salad. The silence in the room wasn't hostile anymore. The warm yellow light from the chandelier softened the sharp angles of Christian's face. For twenty minutes, they just sat there, eating together like a normal couple.
Christian set his fork down. The plate was almost empty. He picked up his linen napkin and wiped his mouth.
He lowered the napkin. His blue eyes locked onto Eloise. The look in his eyes was so intense, so heavy with unspoken things, that Eloise felt her heart start to hammer wildly against her ribs.
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9.7
Clarissa rushed into a crowded nightclub for one simple reason: to save her wildly drunk best friend.
But her ruthless billionaire husband, Giovanny, was watching from the VIP room. After effortlessly ruining a man just for grabbing her wrist, Giovanny punished Clarissa for breaching their public image contract with an impossible curfew.
When she inevitably arrived back at his penthouse late, he didn't just yell. He forced her to her knees by his bathtub to wash his back, making her watch an explicit, humiliating video as punishment.
A sudden family medical emergency dragged them to his parents' estate. Still in her soaked, transparent dress and his misbuttoned shirt, Giovanny's mother caught them. She joyfully assumed they had been passionately intimate.
Instead of clearing her name, Giovanny pulled Clarissa close and lied to his mother's face.
"We are working very hard on the family's future, Mother."
He locked her in the guest suite, tossed a sheer silk nightgown on the bed, and literally shattered the tablet holding their "no-contact" prenuptial agreement. He then slapped a file against the window—he had secretly bought all her father's toxic debt.
Clarissa was terrified. They were supposed to be business allies bound by a strict contract. Why was he suddenly acting like a predator determined to own her body and soul?
"Give me an heir, or your father goes to federal prison," he whispered.
Stripped of all choices, Clarissa picked up the white silk. She would surrender tonight to save her family, but as his shadow swallowed her, she made a silent vow to survive this monster, and one day, tear his empire to the ground.

8.0
Abigayle was the proud heir to the Pena Group, living a perfect life and engaged to Jeffery Sullivan.
But the morning after a charity gala, she woke up drugged in a hotel room, blinded by paparazzi cameras. Her fiancé and her best friend stood at the foot of the bed, throwing a forged pregnancy report at her face to publicly frame her for cheating.
The betrayal was only the beginning of the slaughter. Before she could even clear her name, the Sullivan family ruthlessly bankrupted her family's company overnight. Her father was rushed to the ICU with a heart attack, her brother was run off the road into a coma, and violent repo men raided her penthouse. Just as she was thrown out into the freezing rain, Jeffery's terrifying uncle, Donovan Sullivan—the very mastermind who engineered her family's ruin—stepped in. He offered to cover the life-saving medical bills, but only if she agreed to become his personal plaything.
Abigayle's blood turned to ice. She couldn't understand how the people she trusted most could plot such a vicious, coordinated destruction just to break an engagement. How dared the man who destroyed her entire family stand there playing the savior, trying to buy her body with her own stolen wealth?
Facing a $100,000 hospital deadline and abandoned by everyone she knew, she didn't shed another tear.
"I will never beg him."
Clutching her last diamond bracelet, she hailed a cab straight to the biggest pawnshop in the Diamond District. The Sullivans thought they had buried her, but her counterattack was just beginning.

7.5
Five years of a fake marriage to a billionaire.
Christi thought she was a wealthy wife-until City Hall told her the truth.
No marriage license. No legal rights. Nothing but a lie.
Her husband cheated on her for four years.
His entire family mocked her, used her, and planned to trap her with a baby.
She was ready to ruin them all.
Then a secret changed everything:
Her late parents were DARPA elites. She is the sole heir to $50 billion.
There's only one catch-marry Cornelius Gregory, Wall Street's ruthless paralyzed tycoon.
She signs the contract in an instant.
Freeze their accounts. Destroy the Rivera family.
The game is over for them.
And the queen has just arrived.

8.7
I was trapped in a greasy diner by my own mother.
She was forcing me to marry my abusive cousin because he had paid her twenty thousand dollars.
To escape, I used a contract marriage app and begged a complete stranger to marry me at City Hall that very day.
Ethan drove a cheap Ford and wore a plain suit. I thought he was just an ordinary guy needing a fake wife.
When my mother found out, she brought thugs to destroy my flower shop—my only home and livelihood.
To protect Ethan from her endless extortion, I shielded him and screamed that he was bankrupt and drowning in credit card debt.
My mother fled in disgust, and Ethan took me into his apartment for the night.
But out of trauma and habit, I locked my bedroom door, muttering that he must be old and desperate.
He stormed out into the freezing night, leaving me terrified that I had ruined my only lifeline.
I didn't understand why he was so furiously offended, completely unaware that my "broke" husband was actually the most ruthless billionaire in New York, and I had just trampled his massive ego.
The next morning, his face was a mask of ice as he dragged me back to City Hall to annul the marriage and get rid of me.
"Annulment. Now," he demanded.
But the clerk just popped her gum and slid a pink paper across the counter.
"State law changed. Mandatory thirty-day cooling-off period."

9.5
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.

9.5
Janet woke up gasping, the phantom fire of a deadly explosion still scorching her lungs. She had been reborn three years in the past, on the exact day her mother forced her into a marriage contract with Gaylord Bradford, a paralyzed and severely disfigured billionaire.
Before she could even process her second chance, her cousin Kandy kicked the bedroom door open, flaunting a massive diamond ring. Kandy, who had also been reborn, smugly announced she had stolen Janet's Wall Street golden boy fiancé, Jax Adler.
"You're going to marry that paralyzed monster," Kandy spat, gloating that she would build a billionaire dynasty with Jax while Janet wiped drool off a rotting corpse. Kandy expected Janet to have a complete mental collapse, completely unaware that Gaylord's own medical team was secretly injecting him with lethal neurotoxins to finish him off.
But Janet only felt a cold, clinical pity. Kandy's "prophetic" memories were a polluted lie. Jax was actually sterile and dying of irreversible kidney failure, while Gaylord wasn't a dying freak—he was a dormant god whose body was merely in a high-dimensional hibernation. Why would Janet mourn losing a doomed fraud?
Leaving her delusional cousin behind, Janet packed her bags and headed straight to Gaylord's maximum-security military cell. She physically tackled his corrupt doctor, drove three bio-electric silver needles into the crippled king's spine to awaken his deadened nerves, and looked him dead in his glacial blue eye.
"Sign the marriage contract," Janet whispered. "I will make you walk again, and we will take back everything."