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The Billionaire's Unwritten Wife Novel Cover

The Billionaire's Unwritten Wife

My name is Eleanor Whitmore, and I was sent to destroy him. Sebastian Calloway: cold, brilliant, untouchable. Britain's most powerful tech billionaire. A man whose fiancée died in a "perfectly clean" car accident... weeks before seventy-three million dollars vanished from his company. My job was simple: expose him. Instead, he offered me his last name. A contract marriage. One year. No love. No trust. No turning back. He says he's being framed. He says his fiancée was murdered. He says I'm in danger. I don't believe powerful men. But when someone tries to silence me, I realize the truth is darker than I imagined. Now I'm living in his penthouse. Wearing his ring. Sleeping in his bed. Pretending to be his wife. The world thinks I belong to him. The terrifying part? I'm starting to want to. And if I fall for the man I was supposed to destroy... It won't just ruin my career. It might get us both killed.
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Chapter 1

Eleanor Whitmore did not believe in fairy tales. She believed in evidence. In documentation. In paper trails that powerful men were careless enough to leave behind when they assumed no one was watching. Especially men like Sebastian Calloway.

The ballroom of the Astoria Grand Hotel shimmered in gold and crystal, its vaulted ceiling painted with Renaissance angels that looked as if they had never known the cost of rent.

Champagne flowed in endless rivers. Diamonds caught the light like tiny controlled explosions. The elite of New York moved in smooth, calculated circles.

Ellie adjusted the strap of her black satin dress borrowed, not owned and reminded herself that she did not belong here. She was here to work.

"Smile," Oliver Grant muttered beside her, straightening his bow tie. "You look like you're about to indict someone."

"I might," she replied calmly.

Oliver huffed a quiet laugh. "Just try not to get sued tonight."

Ellie's gaze drifted across the room, scanning faces, mapping power structures the way other women might admire suits or jawlines. Hedge fund managers. Venture capitalists. A senator pretending not to recognize a tech CEO currently under investigation.

And then the room shifted.

It was subtle, the way conversations dipped half a decibel, the way bodies instinctively parted. Power did not need to announce itself. It entered and was recognized.

Sebastian Calloway stood near the center of the room as though he had been placed there by design. He wore a perfectly tailored black tuxedo, crisp white shirt, and a black silk bow tie. His dark hair was swept back with deliberate restraint, revealing a sharp, aristocratic face and a faint scar cutting through his left eyebrow. It did not soften him. It made him look like a man who had survived something violent and had no intention of losing again. He wasn't smiling. He didn't need to.

There was a stillness about him. Controlled. Calculated. Untouchable.

"That's him," Oliver murmured.

Ellie didn't respond. She had seen photographs, of course. Business magazines loved him. Headlines called him "Britain's Most Elusive Tech Visionary" and "The Billionaire Who Doesn't Party." Yet here he was, hosting a charity gala for digital education reform. How generous. How strategic. How convenient. Calloway Industries had quietly transferred seventy-three million dollars through three shell corporations in the Cayman Islands over the last eight months. Seventy-three million dollars didn't disappear by accident.

And Eleanor Whitmore had built her career exposing men who thought it could.

"I'm going to circulate," she told Oliver.

"Ellie.."

"I'll be careful." She didn't add that careful had never stopped her before.

Sebastian Calloway hated events like this. They were necessary. Optics were currency. But the noise, the shallow laughter, the subtle negotiations masked as pleasantries-it exhausted him. Still, tonight mattered. The board needed reassurance. The shareholders needed distraction. And someone in this room was bleeding his company from the inside.

He felt her before he saw her. It was instinct-the faint prickle at the back of his neck that had kept him alive in rooms far more dangerous than this one. When his gaze found her, he understood why. She wasn't watching him the way the others were. There was no admiration in her eyes. No hunger. Only assessment.

Eleanor Whitmore. Investigative journalist.

Persistent. Uncomfortable. Brilliant.

He had read everything she had ever published.

He admired precision. He did not appreciate being its target.

She wore black-understated but striking-and carried herself with a kind of quiet defiance that suggested she had never been intimidated by wealth.

Interesting.

He watched her move through the crowd, asking seemingly casual questions, her expression polite but probing. She was closer than she realized. And if she continued, she would not only endanger him. She would endanger herself.

Sebastian set down his untouched champagne glass. Time to intervene.

Ellie felt him before she saw him. A shift in the air. A shadow stretching across her peripheral vision.

"Ms. Whitmore."

The voice was deep. Smooth. British. Controlled in a way that suggested years of discipline.

She turned slowly.

Up close, Sebastian Calloway was worse. Photographs had failed to capture the intensity of his eyes-a cold, stormy gray that seemed to dissect and categorize everything they landed on. He was taller than she expected. Broader. The faint scent of cedarwood and something darker lingered around him. He stood at a respectful distance. Yet somehow it felt intimate.

"You've been asking questions about my company," he said evenly.

Ellie lifted her chin. "I'm a journalist. That's generally how it works."

A flicker of something-amusement ghosted across his features before disappearing.

"You're investigating financial transfers that do not concern you."

"Seventy-three million dollars usually concerns someone."

A subtle tightening at his jaw. So she had the number correct. Good.

He stepped slightly closer, lowering his voice. "You're intelligent. I assume you understand that not every transaction is what it appears."

"And I assume you understand," she countered softly, "that journalists don't take assumptions at face value."

A beat of silence passed between them. The world around them continued in glittering ignorance. Sebastian's gaze sharpened. "If you continue down this path," he said quietly, "you will uncover something far more complicated than offshore accounts."

"Is that supposed to frighten me?"

"It's supposed to protect you."

The sincerity in his tone caught her off guard. Powerful men did not warn reporters. They threatened them. Or they smiled and lied.

"You're worried about me?" she asked skeptically.

"I'm aware," he replied carefully, "that you're looking at the wrong enemy."

Her pulse skipped-not from attraction. From intrigue.

"Then perhaps you'd like to clarify who the right enemy is." For the first time, his composure cracked-not visibly, but perceptibly.

"Not here."

Ellie studied him. Every instinct told her he was dangerous. But not in the way she had expected.

"What happened to Lydia Calloway?" she asked quietly.

That did it. The name landed like a blade. The room seemed to shrink.

Sebastian's expression did not change but the temperature around them dropped several degrees.

"My fiancée died in a car accident two years ago," he said, voice stripped of warmth.

"Yes," Ellie replied. "On a clear road. With a malfunctioning brake system that had passed inspection three weeks prior."

Silence. A muscle in his cheek twitched.

"You've done your research."

"I always do."

The orchestra swelled into a new movement. Applause broke out somewhere across the ballroom. Neither of them moved.

"You think I killed her," he said flatly.

"I think," Ellie answered carefully, "that seventy-three million dollars moved offshore shortly after her death."

She watched his eyes closely. There it was. Not guilt. Not fear. Rage. But not directed at her. Directed elsewhere.

"You are walking toward something you do not understand," Sebastian said, his voice low enough that only she could hear. "And if you publish before you have the full picture, you will be used."

"Used by who?"

He didn't answer. Instead, he did something unexpected. He exhaled. Not in frustration. In resignation.

"As of tomorrow," he said calmly, "my board will begin a vote to remove me as CEO of my own company."

Ellie blinked. That was not public information.

"Why are you telling me this?"

"Because the financial transfers you've traced," he continued, ignoring the question, "were bait." Her stomach tightened.

"For me," he clarified. "Not you."

The implications hit her slowly.

"You're being framed."

His gaze held hers. Yes. The word was quiet. Certain.

"And Lydia?" she pressed. A flicker of pain-real, unguarded-surfaced before he suppressed it.

"She was not an accident."

The admission hung between them. The noise of the gala felt distant now, like static behind glass. Ellie's entire investigation rearranged itself in her mind. If he was telling the truth, then she had been looking at the wrong villain.

"And you expect me to just believe you?" she asked.

"No." His eyes darkened slightly. "I expect you to verify it."

That surprised her. "You're offering access?"

"I'm offering you the truth."

She searched his face for deception. Found none. Only exhaustion.

"And what would that cost me?" she asked carefully. A slow, deliberate pause. Then:

"Your name."

She frowned. "Excuse me?"

"I need a wife," Sebastian Calloway said evenly. The words were so absurd that for a moment she thought she had misheard him.

"A what?"

"A wife," he repeated, as though discussing a merger. "Publicly. Legally. Immediately."

Her laugh was sharp and disbelieving. "You cannot be serious."

"My board cannot remove a married CEO without triggering a shareholder confidence clause tied to family leadership optics."

"That's the most unromantic sentence I've ever heard."

"This would not be romantic."

"You want to marry me," she said slowly, "so your company looks stable."

"I want to marry you," he corrected calmly, "so I can stay in power long enough to expose the people who murdered my fiancée."

The world tilted.

"And in exchange?" she asked, heart pounding despite herself.

"You will have unrestricted access to internal records. Full cooperation. No interference with your reporting." Her career flashed before her eyes. The story of the decade. Corporate betrayal. Murder. Billion-dollar sabotage.

"And after?"

"One year," he said. "Then a divorce. Clean. Financially protected."

"And if I refuse?"

"Then you will continue your investigation alone."

A quiet intensity settled over his features. "And they will come for you next."

A chill traced down her spine. She hated that part of her believing in him. Hated that another part was curious.

"You're asking me to gamble my reputation," she said.

"I'm asking you," Sebastian replied steadily, "to decide whether you want headlines or the truth."

The orchestra reached a crescendo. Applause thundered. Somewhere, cameras flashed. But in the small space between them, everything narrowed to a single, impossible choice.

Eleanor Whitmore had spent her life dismantling powerful men. She had never expected one to offer her a seat beside him. And she certainly had never expected herself to consider taking it.

Sebastian extended his hand. Not romantically. Not gently. As a contract.

"As of tomorrow," he said quietly, "the world can believe whatever it wants." His gray eyes locked onto hers.

"But you and I will know the truth."

Ellie stared at his hand, at the scar near his eyebrow, at the man she had arrived intending to destroy, and realized, with a sharp twist of fate that she might be the only person who could save him or ruin him completely. And she had never been afraid of either.

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