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I Walked Into the Wrong Room and Married the Right Man Novel Cover

I Walked Into the Wrong Room and Married the Right Man

She went to the wrong room to seduce a lawyer. She got something far more dangerous instead. Skylar Love was a fallen star — disgraced actress, broke, stripped of her daughter by an ex-husband who'd weaponized her postpartum depression into a courtroom masterpiece. Her plan was desperate and simple: seduce the attorney who could save Lily, trade her body for her future. Instead, she stumbled into the dark hotel room of a stranger with iron hands and a mouth that made her forget every word she'd rehearsed. By morning, her custody battle was over. Her daughter was being taken at two p.m. And the man from Room 1214 had just walked through a wall of shattered glass into her ex-husband's law firm — holding her lost earring like a key, tearing the court order to confetti, and sliding a ten-carat pink diamond onto her finger before she could breathe. Julian Thorne. Billionaire. CEO. A man with files, leverage, and a violence so controlled it barely raised his pulse. He needed a wife to claim a fifty-billion-dollar family trust. She needed protection, money, and her daughter back. Clean transaction. One year. No feelings. Except he already knew who she was before she knocked on that door. And her ex-husband's parting words have just detonated everything she thought she was fighting for. Whose daughter is Lily, really — and what does Julian Thorne actually want?
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Chapter 1

The hallway stretched before me like a judgment aisle, and I was walking down it.

Room 1214. The brass numbers gleamed under fluorescent lighting that did absolutely no favors for my complexion. Not that it mattered anymore. My complexion hadn't mattered since the tabloids decided I was yesterday's news, thrown out with the recycling like last week's grocery ads.

I adjusted my coat. My very expensive, very revealing trench coat that I'd bought during better days. Back when photographers waited outside restaurants for me. Back when my name meant something other than

"that actress who lost everything."

Now I was standing outside a hotel room at eleven p.m. on a Tuesday,ready to trade my body for my daughter's future.

God, I was pathetic.

The lawyer—the one with the reputation for winning unwinnable custody cases—was supposedly staying here. My informant, a desperate text from a desperate friend of a desperate friend, had been clear: He likes women. He likes them willing. He likes them quiet.

I could do willing. I could do quiet.

What I couldn't do was lose my daughter. Not to my ex-husband, who'd made sure the press saw me at my lowest, photographed me leaving rehab with mascara running down my face like some tragic before picture in a makeup commercial. Not to the media, who'd turned my postpartum depression into a spectator sport.

Not to a system that favored money and connections over actual maternal love.

I knocked. Once. Twice.

The door cracked open, and darkness stared back. No light from inside. No silhouette. Just a slice of black that swallowed the hallway's fluorescent glow like a hungry mouth.

"Mr. Wright?" I whispered, using the lawyer's name. "It's Skylar Love. We need to—"

A hand shot through the gap. Large. Strong. Fingers wrapping around my wrist like a vice. I barely had time to gasp before I was yanked forward, stumbling across the threshold into absolute darkness. The door clicked shut behind me, sealing us in.

I can't see anything.

My pulse spiked. Fear and something else—something electric—coursed through my veins as strong hands gripped my shoulders, spinning me, pressing my back against cool hotel wallpaper.

"Wait—" I started, but a mouth found mine.

Not gentle. Not asking permission. Taking. Demanding. The taste of expensive whiskey flooded my senses, mixed with something woodsy and masculine. Cedar. Sandalwood. The scent of a man who didn't need to try because everything came easy to him.

My carefully prepared speech—the one about my daughter, about custody, about how I'd do anything to secure his representation—dissolved like sugar in hot water.

His tongue swept past my lips. Demanding entry. I gave it. My hands found his chest—broad and solid beneath a dress shirt that probably cost more than my car payment used to be—and fisted the fabric.

This wasn't how it was supposed to go. I was supposed to be the one in control. The seducer. The one with the plan.

But his body pressed against mine, hard and unyielding, and my plan scattered like startled birds.

"I've been waiting," he growled against my mouth, voice low and rough. "You're late."

Late? I was precisely on time. But I couldn't form words to correct him because his hands were sliding down my sides, tracing the curve of my waist, finding the belt of my trench coat.

The coat I'd worn with nothing underneath.

A strategic choice. A desperate choice.

"Now," he murmured, fingers working the knot loose with practiced efficiency. "Let's see what you've offered me."

The belt came undone. The coat fell open.

Cool air rushed against my bare skin, and I was exposed. Completely. In the dark, thank God, because the shame burning through me would have been visible in daylight. A wash of cold sweat prickled along my spine, and I arched away from the wall instinctively—only to be pressed back harder.

"Don't run." His command was quiet, authoritative. "You came here to give me something. I'm taking it."

His mouth descended on my neck, teeth grazing sensitive skin, tongue following to soothe. I whimpered.

Actually whimered. The sound was foreign to my own ears—this needy, desperate thing I'd become.

My fingers found his tie, pulling it loose. Working open the top button of his shirt. I needed skin. I needed something to hold onto as this situation spiraled beyond my control.

My palm pressed flat against his chest. Slid lower.

Over ridges of muscle.

Defined. Hard. Prominent.

Abs. The kind that took dedication. The kind that suggested hours in a gym, not hours behind a desk reviewing legal briefs.

I froze. My brain, foggy with sensation, suddenly clicked into focus.

This body wasn't the body of a lawyer in his fifties with a wine gut and weekend golf habit.

This body was... young. Chiseled. Built.

This wasn't Mr. Wright.

Panic should have flooded me. The rational part of my brain—the part that had orchestrated this entire desperate scheme—should have screamed at me to run. To apologize. To flee this stranger's room and pretend this never happened.

But his hand cupped my jaw, tilting my head back, and his thumb traced my lower lip. So gentle. Such contrast to the rough possession of his mouth.

"You're thinking too much," he whispered.

And I was. I was thinking about how good this felt. How long it had been since someone touched me like I was something precious instead of something broken.

How my ex-husband's betrayal had left me hollow.

How my daughter's face in our last supervised visit had cracked something inside me that still hadn't healed.

I needed this. Just for tonight. Just one moment where I wasn't the fallen star, the failed mother, the cautionary tale.

One moment where I was just a woman being touched like she mattered.

"You're right," I breathed, and pulled his mouth back to mine.

His groan vibrated through his chest into mine. He lifted me—actually lifted me like I weighed nothing—and my legs wrapped around his waist instinctively. My back hit the wall again, harder this time.

"If you want to stop," he said against my throat, teeth scraping my pulse point, "tell me now."

"Don't stop."

The words were out before I could question them.

His responding growl made heat pool low in my belly. My fingers carded through his hair—thick and slightly too long for a businessman. Who are you? I wanted to ask. But asking would break the spell. Would require explanations.

Would remind me that I was Skylar Love, disgraced actress, and whoever this man was, he probably knew it.

So I kissed him harder instead.

Let his hands roam. Let my own explore the landscape of a stranger's body—all sharp angles and hard muscle, all restrained power that trembled beneath my touch.

Let myself forget.

Just for tonight.

The rest—the consequences, the revelations, the inevitable morning-after panic—could wait until sunrise.

For now, there was only darkness. And this man. And the desperate, clawing need to feel something other than failure.

Tomorrow I would figure out how I'd ended up in the wrong room.

Tomorrow I would face reality.

But tonight... tonight I was just a woman in the arms of a man who made her feel alive.

His mouth found mine again, and I surrendered completely.

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