
Marrying the Enemy's Brother
Elara Voss never imagined that a single mistake could turn her life upside down. A brilliant marketing strategist with ambition as sharp as her wit, she thrives on control, until the day she crashes her rival's luxurious wedding, causing a scandal that will haunt her in high society.
Enter Dante Cross: the notorious billionaire, charmingly arrogant, and impossibly handsome, the bride's brother. In a moment of impulsive defiance, he proposes an outrageous solution to save face: a marriage neither of them wants... but both are forced to accept.
Thrown together in a world of glitz, power, and unspoken secrets, Elara and Dante clash at every turn. Sparks ignite as pride battles attraction, and the closer they get, the more dangerous their connection becomes. With hidden rivalries, family secrets, and unexpected betrayals swirling around them, Elara must navigate a game of social intrigue and decide if love is worth risking everything.
Will their forced union survive the chaos, or will the very secrets that brought them together tear them apart forever?
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Chapter 24
The ride back to the mansion carried a quiet weight that did not need words to be understood. Elara sat beside Dante, her posture steady, but her mind far from still as the night replayed itself in careful detail. Every glance she had held, every pause she had controlled, every moment she had chosen not to follow his lead formed a pattern she could now see clearly. She had stepped beyond reaction, and for the first time, she had felt the shift not only in the room, but in him.
Dante remained silent, but his presence was different now, less distant and more focused, as though he was recalculating something he had already set in motion. His gaze moved toward her once, slow and deliberate, before returning to the window, but she felt it. It was no longer the quiet certainty of control. It carried attention, sharper and more aware.
"You moved differently tonight," he said at last, his voice calm but carrying weight.
Elara turned her head slightly, meeting his gaze without hesitation. "I understood more tonight."
His eyes held hers for a moment, searching, measuring, but not interrupting. "Understanding changes outcomes," he said.
"It should," she replied, her tone steady. "Otherwise, there is no point in learning."
The car slowed as the gates opened, the mansion rising ahead in quiet authority. Elara stepped out the moment the door opened, her heels meeting the stone path with firm precision. The night air felt cooler now, sharper against her skin, but it did not slow her steps as she moved forward.
The moment they entered, the atmosphere shifted.
It was not loud, not obvious, but it was there in the way the staff moved with more awareness, in the way conversations seemed to lower the second they passed. The house felt the same, but the attention within it had changed. Elara did not need to ask why.
Dante walked beside her, his pace unbroken, his expression composed. "Do not go upstairs," he said.
Elara glanced at him, her brows drawing slightly. "That sounds less like a suggestion."
"It is not one," he replied.
They turned down a quieter corridor, one she had not been led through before. The lights were softer here, the space more private, the silence heavier as though fewer people were allowed to exist within it. Elara felt it immediately, the shift from public control to something deeper, more guarded.
"Where are we going?" she asked, her voice calm but edged with awareness.
Dante did not slow. "To the part of this house that matters."
They stopped in front of a large wooden door, darker than the others, its surface smooth but solid, the kind of presence that did not need decoration to command attention. Dante turned to her then, his gaze steady, holding hers for a brief moment.
"Listen carefully," he said.
Elara folded her arms slightly, her chin lifting just enough to show resistance. "You assume I do not."
His expression did not change, but something in his eyes sharpened. "Tonight is not about assumption."
A quiet pause settled between them before she gave a single nod. "Then open the door."
Dante did not look away as he reached for the handle and pushed it open.
The room inside was not grand in the way she expected, but it carried something heavier than display. Dark wood lined the walls, shelves filled with files and records stretching from one end to the other. A large table sat at the center, not for decoration, but for discussion, strategy, and decision.
And they were not alone.
Three men sat at the table, their presence calm but unmistakable. At the head sat an older man, his posture straight, his expression unreadable, but his eyes sharp enough to command the entire room without a word. The moment Elara stepped inside, his gaze lifted and settled on her.
It did not move.
Dante stepped forward first, his voice even. "Father."
The man did not respond immediately. His attention remained on Elara, studying her in a way that felt less like curiosity and more like evaluation. It was not the gaze of someone hearing about her.
It was the gaze of someone deciding her place.
Elara did not lower her eyes. She stepped forward, her movements controlled, her posture steady, and stopped just short of the table. The room was silent now, every presence focused on her, every second stretching just enough to test her composure.
"You are the one who caused the disruption," the man said finally.
His voice was calm, but it carried authority that did not need volume.
Elara met his gaze fully. "Yes."
There was no hesitation in her answer, no attempt to soften it.
A faint pause followed, not long, but enough to register the weight of her response. One of the men at the table shifted slightly, his attention sharpening, while the older man remained still.
"And now you are the one who must correct it," he continued.
Elara felt the words settle, but she did not look away. "That depends on what you consider correction."
The air in the room tightened.
Dante did not move, but his attention fixed on her, sharper now, more alert. This was not the moment he had warned her about.
This was something else.
The older man leaned back slightly, his gaze never leaving her. "You speak as though you have options."
Elara held his stare, her voice calm, but firm. "I speak as someone who is already here."
Silence followed.
Not empty, not uncertain, but heavy with meaning.
One of the men at the table let out a quiet breath, his expression shifting into something closer to interest. The older man, however, remained unchanged, his focus steady, his thoughts unreadable.
After a moment, he nodded once, slowly. "Good," he said. "Then you understand the position you are in."
Elara did not respond immediately, but something in her stance settled, not in submission, but in awareness. She could feel it now, clearer than before.
This was not about appearances.
This was structure.
Control.
And she was no longer standing outside of it.
The man's gaze shifted briefly to Dante, then back to her. "The marriage was necessary," he said. "But necessity alone does not secure anything."
Elara felt the meaning behind the words before he finished them.
"This family does not move without purpose," he continued. "And neither should you."
The room held still again, every word landing with quiet precision.
Elara drew a slow breath, her thoughts aligning, her understanding deepening in real time. The event, the file, the way she had been observed, the way Dante had guided her, all of it connected now.
This was not a single move.
It was a system.
And she had just stepped into its center.
"I see that," she said.
The older man studied her for a moment longer before giving a small nod. Not approval.
Not yet.
But not dismissal either.
"Then you will learn quickly," he said.
Dante stepped forward then, just slightly, enough to shift the balance of the room without interrupting it. "She already is."
Elara did not look at him, but she felt it, that small shift in his tone, the quiet acknowledgment that carried more than his words.
The older man noticed it too, and that changed something. Not in the room but In the stakes.
The meeting did not continue much longer, but nothing more needed to be said. The message had already been delivered, not through long explanations, but through presence, expectation, and the weight of what remained unspoken.
When they stepped out into the hallway again, the air felt different.
Not lighter, clearer.
Elara walked beside Dante in silence, her thoughts moving faster now, sharper, more aligned than before. She had walked into the room as someone being tested.
She walked out as someone being placed. And that... that was far more dangerous.
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8.3
He laid me on the sheets, climbed over me, caged me with his arms. "Last chance to run," he said, voice low."I need the money," I whispered, feeling so tiny in his arms."You're soaking," he muttered. "Virgin or not, your pussy wants this."I moaned, looking away, couldn't help it,"Eyes on me, sweetheart," he pushed his tip in slowly."Fuck," he groaned. "So tight."He fucked me like he was claiming something. "Come for me," he whispered in my ears, moving faster."Damien," I cried out his name as I came."That's it," he growled. After a long minute he pulled out slowly. "One night," he said again, almost like a reminder....weeks later, I walked through the quiet hall of my school. A massive portrait stared back at me.Damien BlackwoodPrincipal Benefactor and OwnerColumbia University.Same man who'd just taken my virginity for money. My stomach dropped. "Oh fuck... what have I done?"

9.5
My husband, Colton, the Wall Street mogul, slid annulment papers across the table, coldly discarding me and our unborn child. He thought he was getting rid of a useless wife, but he was actually throwing away the secret architect of his entire empire. Now, I'm ready to make him pay for every insult, every lie, and every single secret I've kept.
For three years, eight months pregnant, I secretly saved Colton's ten-billion-dollar company from collapse, enduring a cold, transactional marriage.
One night, he shattered that illusion, serving annulment papers and callously discarding me and our unborn child.
I signed, leaving luxury behind. Exposing his butler's fraud, I escaped. Colton later found his wedding ring gone and, on his desk, my SEC compliance fixes—proof I was his hidden genius.
Blindsided, he realized he’d destroyed his own empire. His mother then called, gloating. The injustice ignited a fierce resolve within me.
The next morning, I launched Kidd Legal Consulting. I'd use forty-seven folders of Farmer Capital's un-patched loopholes to force a fair settlement, securing my daughter's future.

8.6
For years, Elvera lived as the despised charity case in the cramped Wright household.
When she caught her foster sister Donita straddling her fiancé, they didn't even panic. Instead, they loudly framed Elvera for stealing a diamond necklace to justify kicking her out.
Her foster parents immediately sided with the cheaters, screaming at her to pack her trash and starve in the gutters. Only her dying foster brother tried to sneak her his medical savings, but the family violently shoved him away, mocking him as a walking corpse.
Standing in the freezing Brooklyn wind, Donita and Crockett followed her outside just to laugh. They waved a crisp twenty-dollar bill in her face, mocking her biological family as a bunch of unemployed street thugs.
They really thought she was going to freeze to death on the pavement with nothing but a faded backpack.
But then a roaring, matte-black supercar pulled up.
The man who stepped out wasn't a street thug; he was her real brother, an FBI task force commander.
He effortlessly snapped Crockett's shoulder out of its socket, put Elvera in the passenger seat, and drove her straight to a sprawling billionaire estate in the Hamptons.
Sitting by the fire in her biological parents' palace, watching them casually display an eight-million-dollar sculpture she had secretly designed, the head butler suddenly walked in.
"Sir, the fake heiress has returned from Europe."
Elvera took a slow sip of her coffee. The real game was finally about to begin.

8.5
I was supposed to marry Aaron, the future Alpha of the Blackwood Pack, and finally have my fairy tale.
But right before our Unity Celebration, I caught him buried between my stepsister's legs in our bridal suite.
When I refused to bind my soul to his at the altar and exposed his betrayal, my world completely shattered.
My own mother called me a crazy, wolfless bitch and disowned me on the spot for ruining a political alliance.
Aaron publicly humiliated me, screaming that as a wolfless Omega, I should have been on my knees thanking him for the chance to be his breeding mare.
Driven to absolute despair by the betrayal of everyone I trusted, I tried to jump off a freezing roof.
But a pair of strong arms pulled me back from the edge.
In the dark, a stranger consumed my grief, wrapping me in a terrifyingly dominant scent of cedar and leather, making me feel an intoxicating mate bond I thought I was incapable of having.
I thought it was just a desperate, one-night mistake to make me forget.
But the next morning, when I went to the Blackwood estate to return Aaron's gifts and leave as a Rogue, a suffocating aura filled the room.
The man who stepped between me and my furious ex-fiancé, the man whose marks were currently hidden beneath my clothes, stared at me with glowing golden eyes.
"Get your hands off her."
He was Kaelon Blackwood. The supreme Alpha King.
Aaron's father.
And he had just locked the door, declaring that I belonged to him.

8.2
Ashley was tied to a rusted iron pillar in an abandoned warehouse, the noxious fumes of gasoline soaking her clothes.
Her fiancé Devon and her stepsister Brittany stood before her, revealing a horrifying truth. Devon never saved her from that fatal car crash three years ago; he merely stole the credit.
Worse, Brittany smirked and confessed that Ashley's own father had orchestrated her mother's murder. Before Ashley could process the betrayal, Devon callously tossed a lighter. A wall of blistering heat instantly consumed her. Even when Bennett Hawkins, the cold and untouchable billionaire, rushed into the inferno to shield her with his body, they were both swallowed by the explosion.
As the fire melted her skin, Ashley died with agonizing hatred. Why did her own flesh and blood want her dead? What dark secret were they hiding about her mother's tragic death?
Opening her eyes again, freezing saltwater violently flooded her lungs.
She was back at her twentieth birthday yacht party, right after Brittany had secretly pushed her into the freezing Hudson River.
Staring at the hypocritical faces of her family pretending it was an accident, Ashley didn't cry or beg. She calmly snatched a phone and dialed 911.
"Yes. I need to report an attempted murder."

9.4
Vera thought her life was over the moment she caught her fiancee cheating with his ex.
Broken and filled with pain, she is approached by a billionaire who presents a simple contract to her. Let's get married.
Sylas Gold is the man admired by the entire world. He is untouchable, powerful and incredibly controlled. Their marriage was supposed to be a contract. A performance. It was a way for both of them to win.
When Vera is kidnapped by a man who looks at her like she's already his, she learns the truth Sylas never told her, about his mafia empire, the blood, and the brother who was supposed to be gone.
Cassian Gold is the man who wants everything his brother has, including Vera.
Now caught between two brothers bound by hatred, power, and obsession, Vera must decide who to trust in a world where love is dangerous, loyalty is fragile, and desire might just be her downfall.