
Marriage for Sweet Revenge
Chapter 2
The hospital sheets felt like sandpaper against my skin. Every breath hurt—a physical reminder of how close I'd come to dying. The doctors said I was lucky. Lucky. The word tasted like ash in my mouth.
I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting them methodically. Forty-two. Forty-two tiles between me and the fluorescent lights that buzzed with artificial brightness. My hand drifted to my abdomen, now empty. The cramping had finally subsided, but the hollowness remained.
Ian had visited twice. Both times, he'd worn his concerned-fiancé mask with Oscar-worthy commitment. He'd held my hand, stroked my hair, murmured reassurances about trying again after the wedding. I'd smiled weakly, playing my part in his grotesque theater.
But something had calcified inside me during those agonizing hours when the poison coursed through my body. The Josephine who accommodated, who yielded, who convinced herself that love meant endless compromise—she had died along with our child.
What remained was clearer. Colder. Dangerous.
I reached for my phone on the bedside table, my fingers surprisingly steady as I scrolled through my contacts. Remington Cole. We'd met at dozens of industry events over the years, circling each other with professional courtesy and mutual respect. He was everything Ian pretended to be—brilliant, self-made, ruthlessly honest. More importantly, he was Ian's most formidable business rival.
I didn't call. Not yet. First, I needed to be strong enough to walk into his office and look him in the eye when I made my proposition.
Two days later, I was discharged. Marcus picked me up, his usually cheerful face tight with concern.
"Home, Ms. Campbell?"
"Cole Enterprises," I said quietly. "The executive floor."
His eyes met mine in the rearview mirror. He'd been with me for three years, long enough to know when not to question my decisions. "Yes, ma'am."
The Cole building rose like a steel monument in the financial district, all glass and sharp angles. My reflection stared back at me as I crossed the lobby—pale skin, hollowed cheeks, but eyes that burned with purpose. I'd dressed carefully in a tailored navy suit, armor for the battle ahead.
Remington's assistant attempted to intercept me, but I walked past her with the kind of authority that brooks no argument.
"Ms. Campbell, you can't just—"
I pushed open the heavy oak door to his office.
Remington Cole sat behind an expansive desk, his dark eyes lifting from the document he'd been reviewing. For a moment, neither of us spoke. He took in my appearance with an assessing gaze that missed nothing—not the weight I'd lost, not the pallor of my skin, not the dangerous determination that radiated from every pore.
He stood slowly, his tall frame unfolding with predatory grace. "Josephine."
"I need you to marry me," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor threatening at its edges. "In three days. And in return, I will give you everything you need to destroy Ian Morrison."
The words hung in the air between us. Behind me, I heard his assistant's sharp intake of breath, but Remington raised a hand, dismissing her without breaking eye contact with me.
The door clicked shut.
Remington moved around his desk, leaning against it as he studied me. Most men would have laughed. Some would have been angry at the audacity. He did neither.
"What do you need from me?" he asked instead.
The question pierced through my carefully constructed composure. Not why. Not an explanation of my clearly desperate state. Just what I needed. The simplicity of it nearly undid me.
I lifted my chin. "Your name. Your protection. Your complete discretion." I paused, forcing myself to meet his gaze directly. "This is a business arrangement—nothing more."
Something flickered in his eyes—not pity, but understanding. Perhaps recognition of a fellow survivor of profound betrayal.
"Sit," he said, gesturing to the leather chair across from his desk.
For the next hour, we drafted an agreement that read more like a corporate merger than a marriage contract. I provided him with detailed intelligence on Ian's business vulnerabilities, the offshore accounts I'd discovered, the illegal patent acquisition that could trigger an SEC investigation, the shell companies hiding his father's money laundering operation.
My fingers flew across my tablet, pulling up documents I'd been quietly collecting for months—insurance policies I'd never imagined I'd need.
Remington listened, occasionally asking pointed questions, his expression growing darker as the full scope of Ian's corruption became clear.
"He drugged you," Remington said finally. It wasn't a question.
I met his eyes, refusing to look away from the sympathy I saw there. "He tried to kill my baby. He nearly killed me."
Remington's jaw tightened, a muscle jumping beneath the skin. He was quiet for a long moment, his gaze locked with mine.
"Three days," he said finally. "I'll have my lawyers draw up the papers tonight."
I nodded, standing on legs that threatened to buckle. As I turned toward the door, his voice stopped me.
"Josephine."
I looked back.
"When this is over," he said quietly, "when Ian is destroyed and you've had your revenge—what then?"
I touched the silver locket at my throat, feeling my grandmother's wisdom flow through me. "Then I'll finally learn what it means to live for myself."
Remington's expression shifted, something almost like admiration crossing his features. "I think," he said, "this arrangement might be more interesting than either of us anticipated."
I allowed myself the smallest of smiles—sharp and cold as winter—before walking out of his office and into my new future.
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