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Married to the Coldest Media King

Married to the Coldest Media King

My father was the King of Wall Street until he was branded a fraud, turning the Maxwell name into a lead weight dragging me to the bottom of the Hudson. I walked into the Brennan Media Tower with blood-red lipstick and a desperate proposal, offering myself as a "paper wife" to Garland Brennan, the coldest billionaire in Manhattan. Garland didn’t even look at me as a human being; he tore my term sheet in half and called me "radioactive" before having security toss me out like trash. I returned to my rotting apartment in Bushwick only to find my roommate’s cousin, a debt collector named Jax, waiting to break my bones. He pinned me against the wall, his hand heavy on my throat as he sneered about selling me to a club to pay off my father's debts. With my ribs aching and my back against the radiator, I had to leak corporate secrets on Twitter just to summon Garland’s private mercenaries to stop a predator. The humiliation didn't stop there. At the Met Gala, the elite mocked my dress made of construction tarp, and my father’s creditors began harassing my senile grandmother in her nursing home. I was a cornered animal, and Garland Brennan was the only hunter offering a cage instead of a grave. I realized then that in this zip code, you are either the predator or the prey, and I was tired of being hunted. Garland offered me a marriage contract that demanded total submission—no equity, no voting rights, just an employee with a wedding ring. I signed the four-hundred-page document with a steady hand, but not before hiding a legal poison pill in the fine print. He thinks he bought a silent asset, but I just secured a front-row seat to his downfall.
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Chapter 1

Rain lashed against the revolving glass doors of the Brennan Media Tower, blurring the neon chaos of Midtown Manhattan into streaks of gray and angry red. Dylan Maxwell stood under the overhang, her fingers trembling as she smoothed the damp hem of her trench coat. The cold wasn't just in the air. It was seeping through the soles of her shoes, climbing up her legs, settling deep in her bones where the adrenaline couldn't reach it. She caught her reflection in the dark glass. Her blonde hair was frizzy from the humidity, but her lips were painted a defiant, blood-red crimson. It was the only armor she had left. You can do this, she told herself, though her stomach twisted in a knot so tight it made her nauseous. You are a Maxwell. That name used to open doors. Now, it just slammed them shut. She pushed through the doors. The lobby was a cathedral of marble and intimidation, smelling of expensive coffee and floor wax. Dylan walked straight to the reception desk, her heels clicking a rhythm that sounded far more confident than she felt. "I have a legal summons for Mr. Brennan," she said, her voice steady, sliding a crisp manila envelope onto the counter. "It pertains to the board's morality clause and a potential challenge to his voting rights." The security guard behind the desk didn't even blink. He typed something into his terminal, his eyes scanning the screen with bored efficiency. He looked up, his gaze dropping to her handbag. It was a Birkin, three years old, the leather scuffed at the corners. He knew. In this zip code, everyone knew exactly how much money you didn't have. "Mr. Brennan doesn't accept unsolicited legal documents here," the guard said flatly. Dylan leaned in, resting her hand on the cool marble counter. She glanced at his ID badge. Frank. She remembered him. Three years ago, her father had tipped him five hundred dollars for getting a taxi in a blizzard. Frank, she said, lowering her voice. Your daughter started at NYU this fall, didn't she? Pre-med? The guard's eyes widened slightly. He looked at her, really looked at her, and the recognition dawned. It wasn't respect anymore. It was pity. Miss Maxwell, he whispered. You shouldn't be here. "I need five minutes, Frank. If I don't get them, the information in this envelope goes to the Wall Street Journal. It concerns a competitor of Brennan Media and their attempts to leverage the morality clause against him. It will make the board very nervous. It will make your boss's life very difficult. And the leak will be traced back to this lobby." He hesitated, his hand hovering over the phone. Then, he sighed and tapped a button under the desk. The turnstile light turned green. Go. Before I lose my job. Thank you. Dylan didn't run, but she walked fast. The elevator ride was a vertical rocket launch. Her ears popped as the numbers climbed-40, 50, 60. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. This was it. The Hail Mary. The doors slid open onto the penthouse floor. It was silent up here, the kind of silence that cost billions of dollars to maintain. She stepped out, expecting to see a receptionist, but instead, she found a wall of a man blocking her path. Javion Briggs. Garland Brennan's personal attorney and the man who knew where all the bodies were buried. Well, well, Javion said, his smile not reaching his eyes. If it isn't the Ponzi Princess. Dylan straightened her spine. Get out of my way, Javion. You are trespassing, Dylan. I can have you arrested before you take another breath. "Then arrest me," she said loudly, her voice echoing off the minimalist walls. "And we can have my deposition on the morality clause, and the information I have about your competitor's zoning commission bribes, entered into public record. I know he needs a wife before he turns thirty, Javion. Or he loses the voting rights. The clock is ticking." The heavy mahogany double doors at the end of the hall remained shut, but a voice cut through the air, low and cold as liquid nitrogen. Let her in. Javion's jaw tightened. He stepped aside, gesturing mockingly toward the door. Dylan pushed the doors open. The office was freezing. The air conditioning was set to a temperature that felt less like a workspace and more like a morgue. Garland Brennan stood with his back to her, staring out the floor-to-ceiling windows at Central Park. He was tall, his shoulders broad under a suit that cost more than her father's bail. He turned around. His eyes were dark, devoid of warmth. He didn't look at her like a woman. He looked at her like a balance sheet that didn't add up. You have three minutes, Garland said. Dylan didn't waste time with pleasantries. She didn't kneel. She didn't beg. She walked to his desk and placed the summons envelope down gently. "That is a courtesy copy of a legal challenge I am prepared to file on behalf of a shell corporation," she said. "It alleges that your current single status poses a material risk to shareholder value, citing the morality clause in your grandfather's trust. It's flimsy. It will be dismissed. But it will tie you up in discovery for months. The press will have a field day. Or..." She opened her scuffed Birkin and pulled out a single, pristine sheet of paper. It wasn't a proposal. It was a term sheet. "You acquire me," Dylan continued, her words rushing out. "A merger of convenience. My bloodline is impeccable, despite my father's situation. I have a dual degree in law and finance from Columbia. I know the social codes. I know how to host, how to smile for cameras, and how to keep my mouth shut. And I come with zero expectations of love. I am the perfect paper wife." Garland reached out and picked up the term sheet. His long fingers scanned the single page. He stopped at the section titled Strategic Value-Add. A short, dry laugh escaped his lips. It was a terrifying sound. He tore the term sheet in half, then in quarters, and dropped the pieces into the wastebasket beside his desk. The soft flutter of the paper falling was more violent than the sound of any shredder. Garland looked at her. You are not an asset, Dylan, he said, his voice flat. You are a liability. I can be an asset, she argued, stepping forward. I know this world. You are radioactive, he cut her off. Your father stole from half the people in my contact list. Marrying you wouldn't secure my voting rights. It would trigger a shareholder revolt. It's the single dumbest merger proposal I've ever seen. My father was framed, she said, her voice cracking for the first time. The truth doesn't matter, Garland said, walking toward her. He stopped inches away, his height forcing her to crane her neck. Capital matters. Perception matters. You have neither. He reached past her and pressed a button on his desk. Security. Escort Miss Maxwell out. Dylan felt the blood drain from her face. She tasted copper in her mouth. She had one card left. A dirty one. "The information about your competitor... it's not just about bribes," she whispered. "I know the number of the offshore account in the Caymans they're using. And I know it's the same bank your family uses for its private trust. An investigation would be... messy. For everyone." Garland's eyes narrowed. For a second, just a second, the mask slipped. He looked intrigued. He glanced at Javion, who had appeared in the doorway. Note that, he said to the lawyer. Two security guards stepped into the room, grabbing Dylan by the arms. Wait! Dylan shouted, struggling. We can make a deal! Garland turned his back on her, returning to the window. Get her out of here. They dragged her backward. Dylan shook them off at the door, straightening her coat with a sharp jerk. She wouldn't let them carry her out like trash. She turned and walked to the elevator, her head high, even as her vision blurred with unshed tears. The elevator doors closed, sealing her in. As the car descended, Dylan leaned her forehead against the cool metal wall and let out a shaky breath. Her hands were trembling so hard she couldn't make a fist. Back in the office, the torn pieces of the term sheet sat in the bin. Garland bent down and picked up a single strip of paper that had fallen to the floor. It was a photo of Dylan from her college debate team, her eyes bright and fierce. Should I blacklist her from the building? Javion asked. Garland looked at the photo, then crumpled it in his hand. He chose Dylan not despite her being radioactive, but because of it. A desperate woman was a controllable woman. A brilliant, desperate woman could be a weapon. No, he said quietly. Put a surveillance team on her. Let her run. I want to see how long she can tread water before she drowns. He walked back to his desk and picked up his encrypted phone. Get me the case files on the Maxwell Ponzi scheme, he said into the receiver. I want every detail.

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