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THE BILLIONAIRE WHO BOUGHT HER SILENCE Novel Cover

THE BILLIONAIRE WHO BOUGHT HER SILENCE

He paid her to disappear, and she took his heart instead. When a single photograph threatens to destroy Damon Vance’s billion-dollar empire, the ruthless CEO does what he’s always done: he controls the narrative. His solution? Pay off the woman at the center of the scandal and make her disappear. But Aria Monroe isn’t the kind of woman who stays gone. A photographer with a broken past and nothing left to lose, she takes his money… and something he didn’t expect, his peace. When fate throws them together again in a villa by the Italian coast, their deal unravels faster than Damon’s control. The headlines call her his mistress. The world calls her a liar, but behind closed doors, truth burns hotter than rumor. Now, with Miles Rowan, the man who orchestrated their fall, closing in, Damon and Aria must decide: will they fight the lies together or let love become their final scandal? A story of power, trust, and the love that begins where control ends.
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Chapter 7

By daybreak, the storm had wiped out the clouds. The sea shone again, peaceful and deceiving, the type of blue that made you forget the ferocity beneath its surface. Aria awoke late, sunshine flowing across her bed like an undeserved pardon.

Downstairs, the home was alive with gentle motion. The staff responded quickly, replacing fresh flowers and laying out new linens. There was a faint electricity in the air, unspoken.

Damon was already dressed, standing in the corridor with his phone and that familiar calculating frown.

"You're up," he said, without looking up. "Good. We may have company."

She blinked. "Company?"

"An unscheduled visitor. American. Claims to be your friend."

"My friend?" Her pulse jumped. "Who?"

He handed her his phone. On the screen was a photo captured by security-Elliot Carter.

Her stomach dropped. "Oh my God."

"Should I know the name?" Damon asked.

"He's-" She swallowed. "He's my ex. We used to work together at The Chronicle. He's a journalist."

Damon's gaze sharpened instantly. "Then he's not here for nostalgia."

"No. If Elliot found me here, it means someone told him where to look." She looked up, heart pounding. "Miles."

Damon slipped the phone into his pocket. "Then this reunion isn't unexpected for him. It's engineered."

Within the hour, the car arrived. The sound of tires on gravel echoed across the courtyard. Aria watched from the window as Elliot stepped out-tan, confident, that same infuriating charm that once convinced her she could trust him. He wore sunglasses despite the soft light, and a press badge peeked from his jacket.

Damon stood beside her, his expression unreadable. "You want me to handle this?"

"No," she said quietly. "If I hide now, he'll know something's wrong."

"You think you can control him?"

"I think I can remind him of who I used to be."

He studied her, then gave a slow nod. "All right. But he's not walking through those gates alone. I want to see the eyes behind the story."

When Elliot entered the villa, it felt like time tripping over its own feet.

"Aria," he said, smiling like he hadn't been the one to sell her name to tabloids two years ago. "You look different. I was worried."

She crossed her arms. "You were worried? Or curious?"

He glanced at Damon. "So, this is where you've been hiding. Damon Vance's latest headline."

"Careful," Damon said quietly, stepping closer. His presence was a wall of calm threat. "You're a guest in my home, Mr. Carter. Speak accordingly."

Elliot smirked. "Of course. I just came to talk."

Aria met his gaze. "Then talk. But don't pretend this is about me. You're here because someone sent you."

Elliot's smile faltered-just a fraction. "Maybe. Or maybe I'm here to save you from drowning with him."

For a heartbeat, the room held its breath. The waves outside were the only thing moving-steady, rhythmic, ancient. Aria's fingers tightened around the edge of the table as she studied Elliot's face, searching for the man she'd once trusted.

"Save me?" she repeated, her voice quiet but sharp. "From what, exactly?"

"From him," Elliot said, gesturing toward Damon. "You think you're safe here? The man's empire is sinking. He's toxic, Aria. And if you're standing too close when he goes under, he'll take you with him."

"Interesting," Damon said, voice even. "You seem unusually invested in her safety, given you helped bury her reputation the last time she trusted you."

Elliot's jaw flexed. "I made a mistake. She knows that."

Aria's laugh was brittle. "A mistake? You leaked my photos, Elliot. You destroyed my career."

He flinched, just barely. "That was Miles' doing. I didn't know how far he'd go."

"You knew enough to take the payment," she shot back.

The words hit harder than she expected-they hit him harder, too. He looked at her for a long moment, and the charm slipped. Beneath it was guilt, old and unfinished. "I didn't come here to fight," he said. "I came because Miles isn't stopping. He's about to release something big, and this time, Damon's not the only target."

Damon stepped forward, his presence magnetic and cold. "What kind of something?"

Elliot hesitated, looking between them. "He's got documents-personal correspondence, deals, charity fund transfers. But he's also got surveillance. Photos. Videos. He's claiming he has footage that proves Aria was involved in falsifying evidence during her last assignment."

Aria's blood went cold. "That's a lie."

"I know," Elliot said. "But the story's already drafted. It goes live in two days."

Damon's expression hardened into calculation. "Then he's not just coming after me. He's trying to erase her credibility."

Elliot nodded. "He wants to burn everything you both are-his empire versus your integrity. That's how he wins."

For a moment, none of them spoke. Then Damon said, "And what do you get out of telling us this?"

Elliot sighed. "Redemption, maybe. Or maybe I just got tired of working for the devil."

Aria frowned. "Miles is paying you?"

"Not anymore," Elliot said. "Not since he started hinting I'd make a good scapegoat."

Damon folded his arms, assessing him. "If you're telling the truth, you've just made yourself a target."

Elliot nodded. "That's why I came here. Because as much as I hate to say it, the only person Miles actually fears is you."

Damon glanced at Aria. "Then maybe we finally have a piece worth playing."

She met his eyes, uncertain whether this was victory or another trap. "You trust him?"

"No," Damon said. "But I don't need to trust him to use him."

Elliot gave a thin smile. "That's what I always liked about you, Vance. You make loyalty sound like strategy."

"Because it is," Damon replied.

The storm outside had ended, but the one inside the villa was only beginning.

Elliot leaned back against the marble counter, trying to look casual but failing. The tension in the air had its own gravity, pulling all three of them into a silence that hummed louder than the sea outside.

Aria broke it first. "If Miles has proof, we need to see it."

"Already tried," Elliot said. "He's keeping everything encrypted-probably off-grid. But I know how he operates. He'll leak it through a third party, someone with credibility. That's his style-dirty hands wearing clean gloves."

Damon began pacing. "Then we intercept the release before it drops. We get ahead of the narrative."

"That's not enough," Aria said. "You've been reacting since this started, Damon. Every move Miles makes, you follow. Maybe it's time to stop playing defense."

He stopped pacing and looked at her. "You're suggesting we bait him."

"I'm suggesting we set the story on fire before he gets to write it."

Elliot's eyebrows lifted. "She's got a point. Miles doesn't know how to handle unpredictability."

Damon gave a slow, dangerous smile. "Then we give him exactly that."

They spent the next hour around the table, papers spread like battle plans. Damon moved with sharp precision, calculating each step; Aria countered with instinct and creative chaos; Elliot filled in the gaps, a reluctant ally tethered by guilt and fear.

It shouldn't have worked-but somehow, it did. By the time the sun dipped behind the hills, they had a plan.

Damon leaned forward, tapping a finger against the map of connections they'd drawn. "Tomorrow, I will release a statement admitting to nothing but addressing everything. Acknowledging the investigation, pledging transparency, and shifting the focus. Miles will panic-he needs control, not clarity."

"And while he's panicking," Aria added, "we trace his leak. Follow the communication chain, find where he's storing the files."

Elliot nodded. "I can run interference with my contacts in the media. Slow the leak long enough for you to move."

Damon looked between them. "If this works, Miles loses his leverage. If it fails, he takes all of us down with him."

Aria held his gaze. "Then we don't fail."

He smiled faintly. "You make it sound simple."

"It's not simple," she said. "It's necessary."

Later that night, the villa fell quiet again. The fire had burned low, the scent of smoke and salt mingling in the air. Aria stood at the window of her room, watching the lights of the distant town flicker like scattered stars. Behind her, footsteps approached.

She didn't turn. "You should be asleep."

Damon's voice came from the doorway. "So should you."

"I don't sleep well before battles," she said softly.

He walked closer until their reflections merged in the glass-two silhouettes against a restless sea. "You surprised me today."

"How so?"

"You didn't flinch. Even when Elliot arrived."

"I've already lost everything once," she said. "Fear loses its power after that."

He studied her reflection in the window, then said quietly, "You haven't lost everything."

She turned to face him. "What's left?"

"You," he said simply. "And maybe that's what Miles never understood."

Elliot nodded. "I can run interference with my contacts in the media. Slow the leak long enough for you to move."

Damon looked between them. "If this works, Miles loses his leverage. If it fails, he takes all of us down with him."

Aria held his gaze. "Then we don't fail."

He smiled faintly. "You make it sound simple."

"It's not simple," she said. "It's necessary."

Later that night, the villa fell quiet again. The fire had burned low, the scent of smoke and salt mingling in the air. Aria stood at the window of her room, watching the lights of the distant town flicker like scattered stars. Behind her, footsteps approached.

She didn't turn. "You should be asleep."

Damon's voice came from the doorway. "So should you."

"I don't sleep well before battles," she said softly.

He walked closer until their reflections merged in the glass—two silhouettes against a restless sea. "You surprised me today."

"How so?"

"You didn't flinch. Even when Elliot arrived."

"I've already lost everything once," she said. "Fear loses its power after that."

He studied her reflection in the window, then said quietly, "You haven't lost everything."

She turned to face him. "What's left?"

"You," he said simply. "And maybe that's what Miles never understood."

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