
The Billionaire and the chef
"I didn't marry you for love, Elara. I married you for the land."
Five years ago, Elara Sterling wore a gold mask and shared a night of forbidden passion with Silas Vane, the "Ice King" of Seattle. Then, she vanished.
Now, she's back-not as a socialite, but as a struggling mother desperate to save her son. But Silas isn't the man she remembers. He's cold, powerful, and he just bought her father's debt.
The terms of the "Sterling Clause" are simple: Marry him for one year, and her debts are erased. But there's a catch. Silas doesn't just want the Sterling Port; he wants the son he never knew he had.
As Elara steps into a world of vipers and corporate sabotage, she must decide: Is she a wife, a prisoner, or the only woman powerful enough to melt the Ice King's heart?
In the game of power, love is the ultimate hostile takeover.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 6
The master suite was a cathedral of glass, obsidian, and shadows. It was cold-not just in temperature, but in spirit. Elara stood in the centre of the room, her small, battered suitcase looking pathetic against the backdrop of a walk-in closet that was larger than her entire apartment in Oregon. The walls were lined with dark velvet, and the floor was a seamless expanse of polished stone that felt like ice beneath her feet.
"The bathroom is through there," Silas said, shedding his suit jacket and tossing it carelessly over a bespoke leather chair. "I've had the staff stock it with whatever it is women use. If something is missing, tell Arthur. He'll have it flown in by morning."
"Whatever women use?" Elara echoed, her eyebrows shooting up in disbelief. "You mean like soap and a toothbrush, or are you expecting me to have a ten-step skincare routine to match the size of your ego?"
Silas paused, his hand frozen on the buttons of his shirt. He turned to look at her, a slow, dangerous smile tugging at the corner of his mouth-a smile that suggested he found her defiance more entertaining than insulting. "Your tongue has gotten significantly sharper in five years, Elara. I remember you being much quieter during our last... encounter."
"Five years ago, I didn't have a son to protect from a man who thinks people can be managed like sub-folders on a hard drive," she snapped.
She retreated into the bathroom, locking the door with a satisfying, metallic click. She lingered in the shower longer than she should have, letting the steaming water wash away the scent of fast food and the lingering, oily fear of the contract. When she finally emerged, she dressed in her most modest, oversized flannel pyjamas-the ones with the faded sheep on them. They were thick, unsexy, and she hoped they made her look as unappealing as a woolly cloud.
She stepped back into the bedroom and froze.
Silas was already in bed. He was propped up against the headboard, a tablet in his hand, his chest bare. The sight was a physical blow to her senses. He wasn't just lean; he was corded with hard, functional muscle, his skin a bronzed contrast to the charcoal silk sheets.
"The sheep," Silas said, his gaze raking over her pyjamas with a dry, amused glint. "Is that supposed to be a deterrent? Because it makes you look like a teenager trying to hide from a thunderstorm."
"It's comfortable," Elara said, clutching her spare pillow like a shield. "And I'm not hiding. I'm establishing boundaries."
"Then get in." He patted the vast expanse of the mattress. "I don't bite, Elara. Unless I'm invited to, and the biometric locks on that door won't open until I say so. You're safer in here than anywhere else in the world."
Elara crawled into the far edge of the bed, leaving a literal no-man's-land of silk between them. She turned her back to him, pulling the duvet up to her chin until only her eyes were visible. The silence in the room was heavy, broken only by the rhythmic, steady sound of Silas's breathing and the soft hum of the mansion's climate control.
She thought she wouldn't sleep. She thought her mind would race with escape plans and legal loopholes. But the bed was too comfortable, and the scent of Silas-sandalwood, expensive scotch, and something primally masculine-was intoxicatingly familiar. Slowly, against her better judgment, her eyelids grew heavy.
...
The Next Morning
Elara woke up to a weight across her waist. It was warm, heavy, and possessed a steady, thumping heartbeat.
She gasped, her eyes flying open as the morning light filtered through the tinted glass. She wasn't on her edge of the bed anymore. Somewhere in the middle of the night, gravity-or perhaps a subconscious yearning she refused to acknowledge-had pulled them together. She was tucked firmly against Silas's side, her head resting in the crook of his neck. His arm was draped over her, his large hand resting possessively on her hip.
She tried to slide away, her heart hammering, but his grip tightened instinctively in his sleep.
"Don't," he grumbled, his voice thick and gravelly with sleep. "It's barely 6:00 AM."
"Silas, let go," she whispered, her pulse racing for an entirely different reason now. The heat radiating from him was overwhelming. "The staff... Leo could walk in..."
Silas opened one eye-a piercing, smoky grey that looked even more intense in the soft, early light. He didn't move his arm. Instead, he leaned over, his face so close to hers that she could see the dark flecks in his irises.
"Leo is sound asleep. And the staff knows better than to knock before eight unless the building is on fire." His gaze dropped to her lips, and for a fleeting second, the five years of bitterness and secrets vanished. There was only the heat of the man who had changed the trajectory of her life.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
"Mommy! Daddy! The ninja is awake, and I can't find the cereal box!"
The spell shattered instantly. Elara scrambled out of the bed, nearly tripping over the heavy duvet. Silas sat up, running a hand through his sleep-mussed hair, looking remarkably unbothered for a man who had just been caught in a compromising position by a four-year-old.
The door burst open. Leo stood there, his hair a chaotic mess of curls, wearing one of Silas's expensive silk ties tied around his forehead as a headband.
"Why are you guys in the same bed?" Leo asked, his eyes darting suspiciously between them. "Mommy said Daddy's bed was for 'important business.'"
Silas choked on a laugh, a genuine, deep sound that Elara had never heard before. It transformed his face, making him look younger-human. He looked at Elara, his eyes dancing with mischief. "She was right, Leo. Very important business. We were discussing the... alligator budget and the logistics of the moat."
"Did the alligators win?" Leo asked, climbing onto the bed and sitting right between them, effectively claiming the centre of the Vane empire.
"They're gaining ground," Silas said, reaching out and ruffling the boy's curls. It was a small, natural gesture, but Elara saw the way Leo instinctively leaned into the touch. Her heart twisted.
"Good," Leo said, then looked at Silas with a dead-serious expression. "But Mommy looks like a sheep. Did you eat her breakfast?"
"Not yet," Silas murmured, his eyes locking onto Elara's over their son's head. The playfulness in his voice held a hidden, dark edge of promise. "But the day is young, and I have a very large appetite."
Elara flushed a brilliant crimson, grabbing her silk robe from the foot of the bed. She had to get out of this room before she forgot that this man was her captor, not her husband.
"I'll make pancakes," she announced, practically fleeing toward the door. "With chocolate chips. Ninja fuel!"
"And bacon!" Leo shouted, jumping up and down on the six-figure mattress.
As she reached the hallway, she heard Silas's low, commanding voice trailing behind her. "And coffee, Elara. Black. Like my soul."
She couldn't help it. She smiled. Just a little. As she walked toward the kitchen, she realised the 'Ice King' wasn't just melting-he was becoming something far more dangerous. He was becoming a father.
Keep Reading
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to
Unlock All Chapters
You may also like

7.9
Amara Benson believed her mother loved her until she was traded to a powerful man for profit, Victor Grey. On her engagement night, she gets drugged and ends up waking up in the bed of Damian Kane, a cold billionaire who is feared by many.
The scandal spreads and the engagement is called off. Weeks later, Amara realizes she's pregnant. She is taken by Damian under a contract marriage meant to end after childbirth. But Damian hides a past filled with danger and lies.
As a kind doctor offers her safety and truth, Amara must choose between forced loyalty and real love.
When she learns she is the true heiress, the fight for her heart and fortune begins.

7.6
Jocelyn Yang lived in the grand Turner Mansion, not as a guest, but as a prisoner. Ever since her father's death, the ruthless billionaire Elam Turner forced her to atone for sins her father never committed.
On her nineteenth birthday, a male classmate secretly sent her a diamond necklace. Elam, who had flown back from London overnight, flew into a psychotic, jealous rage at the sight of another man's gift.
He mercilessly crushed the delicate necklace into the marble floor with his custom leather shoe.
"Did you forget what you are?" Elam hissed, dragging her into a pitch-black storage room. "You take gifts from other men behind my back?"
He pinned her to the dusty floorboards and violently assaulted her. The next morning, a wire transfer of $500,000 hit her bank account. He had humiliated her, broken her spirit, and was now casually trying to buy her silence. Later, when a broken bike left her walking miles through a freezing rainstorm, he just shoved scalding tea into her bleeding hands.
"Look at you," he sneered. "You look like a stray dog ruining my floors."
Jocelyn curled up in the cold, her lips bleeding and her heart shattered. She couldn't understand his terrifying obsession. If he hated her so much, why did he refuse to let her go? Why did he look at her with such manic hunger while systematically destroying her life?
Staring at the massive sum of hush money on her phone, a desperate spark of vengeance flared in her chest. Jocelyn wired every single cent back to Elam's account. She picked up her charcoal pencil, vowing to win the upcoming art competition and buy her escape from this monster forever.

7.5
To save my dying father, I made a deal with the billionaire Christopher Kirkland. I became his secret, a bird in a gilded cage he paraded around when it suited him.
But I was just a pawn in his twisted game to win back his ex-girlfriend.
He proved it when he publicly outbid me for my own mother's heirloom necklace, only to gift it to her right in front of me.
Then he threw me out of the penthouse. My few cherished belongings-my books, a photo of my parents-were tossed out.
"Chaney doesn't like clutter," he told me, erasing my entire existence for her.
A text on his phone confirmed the brutal truth.
"Our little game is working perfectly," she'd written. "She's completely fooled."
Years later, after she betrayed him and his empire nearly crumbled, he came back begging. He thought he could buy my forgiveness. He was about to learn that my freedom had no price tag.

8.4
"You don't belong in my world," he growled, his hand tightening around my waist.
"Then why do you keep pulling me deeper into it?" I whispered.
Ten years ago, I lost everything, my parents, my innocence, my trust in fate.
I only remember his shaking hands... and the birthmark on his arm.
Now, the most feared man in the city wants me.
A billionaire who commands blood and silence.
A mafia king who kneels only in the dark, only for me.
But what happens when I discover that the man I love...
...is the same man who destroyed my life?

9.3
He was supposed to be my brother. The cold CEO everyone feared. The man who controlled the entire country's business world.
But one night, he looked at me and calmly destroyed everything I thought I knew.
"We're getting married."
I laughed, but he didn't.
Now every door in my life is closing, every choice is disappearing, and the one man I'm not supposed to love refuses to let me go.
Because to Lucien Hale, this was never forbidden. It was inevitable.
And the most terrifying part? The closer I get to him, the harder it becomes to run.

9.8
Haylee always thought she belonged to the wealthy Bowen family.
But on the night of her birthday, her younger sister Cynthia handed her a crushing DNA report, sneered that she was taking her trust fund and fiancé, and shoved her violently off the yacht into the freezing Atlantic.
Washing ashore on a dark island, Haylee was brutally assaulted by a drugged stranger.
When she was finally rescued, she stared at a tiny television screen in absolute horror.
Her adoptive father was calmly declaring her mentally unstable and officially dead to the press.
Meanwhile, Cynthia was on screen flaunting a massive diamond ring from Haylee's own fiancé, inheriting everything that was rightfully hers.
Discarded like trash, stripped of her identity, and suddenly pregnant with a stranger's child, Haylee was forced to flee the country with nothing but a heavy silver signet ring she found in the dark.
She never understood how the family she had loved and trusted for years could erase her existence so ruthlessly.
"Are we going to see the bad people who bullied you, Mom?"
Five years later, Haylee stepped off a plane at JFK Airport, holding the hand of her genius five-year-old son.
She was no longer a helpless victim, but a top-tier medical director holding the key to a billion-dollar empire.
"We aren't running anymore," Haylee said softly, her voice laced with steel. "We're here to take everything back."