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Priceless: A love Money Couldn't Own Novel Cover

Priceless: A love Money Couldn't Own

At twenty-five, Collette Ashford is on the brink of forever wrapped in the arms of the only man who has ever truly known her. Ian Morris is not just her fiancé; he is her childhood confidant, her teenage best friend, her safest place in a restless world. Their love was built quietly, patiently, long before anyone thought it had value. But love is not the future her mother wants for her. When a powerful billionaire resurfaces to claim a favor Collette never realized had a price, her life becomes a battlefield of influence, obligation, and desire. Victor Hale is accustomed to buying what he wants and he wants Collette. With wealth, power, and her mother's approval on his side, he sets out to prove that devotion can be negotiated and hearts can be owned but Collette refuses. Caught between a man who offers everything money can buy and the one who holds her heart without conditions, Collette must decide how much she is willing to sacrifice to protect a love that refuses to be sold. As pressure mounts and loyalties fracture, she discovers that choosing love means standing alone and standing firm. Priceless: A Love Money Couldn't Own is a gripping romantic drama about defiance, devotion, and the quiet courage it takes to choose the one person who has always chosen you. Because some bonds are priceless and some wars are worth fighting.
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Chapter 4

Thirteen years before the "Heights Bridge" and the quiet wars of Victor Hale, there was only the smell of sawdust, old library books, and the humid summer air of a town that felt too small for the ghosts living in it. The Workshop of Shadows, 

Ian at seventeen was a boy made of angles and callouses. He didn't have a suit; he had a stained denim apron. He spent his summers in his father's failing carpentry shop, not just building furniture, but obsessing over the way things held together.

While other teenagers were at the lake, Ian was sketching the suspension cables of the Golden Gate Bridge onto the back of scrap plywood. He didn't just want to build; he wanted to defy gravity. He lived in a world of Static Equilibrium, where every force had an equal and opposite reaction. He believed that if you calculated correctly, nothing could ever fall apart.

"One day," he told a fifteen-year-old Collette, who was sitting on a stack of cedar planks, "I'm going to build something that people can't ignore. Something that connects two places that were never meant to meet."

       The Architect of Words, Collette at fifteen was the town's "Golden Girl" with a tarnished interior. Her mother, Evelyn, was already grooming her for the high-society circles of the city, but Collette spent her allowance on law journals and philosophy texts.

She wasn't interested in the beauty of the bridge; she was interested in the Right of Way.

"It's not enough to build it, Ian," she'd say, tapping her pen against her chin. "You have to own the land. You have to write the contract so they can't take it away from you. People don't break bridges with hammers; they break them with pens."

Her ambition was a protective shell. She saw her father's business being slowly dismantled by "consultants" like Victor Hale men who spoke in soft tones while they took everything. Her dream wasn't just to be a lawyer; it was to be the shield that men like Ian needed to survive the world of men like Victor. 

     The Promise at the Quarry,their sanctuary was the abandoned limestone quarry at the edge of town. From the highest ledge, they could see the distant glow of the city, a shimmering promised land of glass and steel.

One evening, as the sun dipped below the jagged rock line, Ian handed her a small piece of polished limestone he had carved into a perfect cube.

"The foundation," he said, half-joking but entirely serious. "For whatever we build."

"We're going to get out of here," Collette promised, her eyes fixed on the city lights. "I'll handle the paper, you handle the stone. We'll be untouchable." The First Shadow, It was that same summer that Victor Hale first appeared in their town. He wasn't a villain yet; he was a "Special Envoy" for a regional development board. He had come to oversee the foreclosure of the local mill and the carpentry shop Ian's father owned.

        Victor had stood on the main street,  immaculate even in the heat, watching the teenagers. He had noticed Collette not with affection, but with the cold eye of a scout recognizing a high-value asset. He saw her intelligence, her fire, and the way she looked at the boy with the sawdust in his hair.

He didn't speak to them then. He simply made a note in a small black book.

That summer ended with a fire at the shop and a scholarship offer for Collette that seemed too good to be true. It was the first time they realized that dreams come with a price, and that some people specialize in collecting. The goodbye didn't happen at a party or a graduation ceremony. It happened at the old railway trestle, a rusted iron artery that had once carried the town's industry away and was now threatening to carry them away, too.

        The Weighing of the Heart. The air was thick with the scent of creosote and wild summer sage. Ian stood on the tracks, his duffel bag sitting like a heavy stone at his feet. He was headed to a state school three hundred miles away, a grueling engineering program he'd barely managed to afford by selling his father's remaining tools. Collette stood opposite him, clutching a leather-bound folder. She had been accepted into a prestigious pre-law program in the city, funded by the "anonymous" scholarship that felt like a lifeline, yet tasted like copper.

"Four years," Ian said, his voice cracking against the vastness of the woods. "In four years, I'll have the degree. I'll come to the city. We'll start the firm. Just like we said."

       "It's not just the time, Ian," Collette whispered. She looked at the iron rivets of the bridge, seeing them not as symbols of strength, but as constraints. "Everything is changing. My mother... She's already talking about 'networking' and 'debt.' I feel like I'm being drafted into a war I don't know how to fight yet." The Engineering of a Promise, Ian reached into his pocket and pulled out the small limestone cube he had carved years ago. He took her hand and pressed it into her palm.

"The physics don't change, Collette," he said, stepping closer until their foreheads touched. "Tension, compression, gravity. If the foundation is deep enough, the height doesn't matter. I don't care who you have to talk to or what books you have to read. You're the anchor. I'm the bridge. That's math." Collette looked down at the stone. To her, it wasn't just a rock; it was a physical constant in a world that was becoming increasingly fluid and dangerous.

"I'll wait for you at the pier," she said, a line that would haunt them a decade later. "Every summer. Every break. I won't let them change me, Ian. I won't let them turn me into one of them."

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