
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 2
Eleanor Whitmore did not sleep.
She lay in the darkness of her Brooklyn apartment, staring at the faint crack in the ceiling above her bed, replaying every second of the previous night.
I need a wife.
The words had not sounded desperate. They had sounded strategic. Controlled.
Like everything else about Sebastian Calloway.
Her phone sat on the nightstand beside her, screen black, silent.
She had expected regret by morning.
A message retracting the offer. A legal threat.
Something that made more sense than a billionaire proposing marriage like a corporate acquisition.
Instead, there was nothing. Which somehow made it worse.
Ellie rolled onto her side, exhaling sharply. This was insane.
She had spent six years building credibility-refusing bribes, dodging intimidation tactics, and surviving lawsuits from men who thought their money made them immune to scrutiny.
And now she was considering marrying one of them.
Not for love. Not for money.
For access. For truth.
And maybe-though she hated admitting it, and for the way his voice had shifted when he spoke about Lydia.
She had seen grief before. She knew what it looked like.
And Sebastian Calloway had not looked like a murderer.
He had looked like a man carrying something unbearable alone. That was the dangerous part.
Sympathy blurred objectivity. And she could not afford blurred lines.
Her phone buzzed.
She froze.
One message. Unknown number.
A car will arrive at 10:00 a.m. If you choose not to enter it, I will understand. - S.C.
No pressure.
No insistence.
Just choice.
Her pulse quickened.
He was giving her control. Or making her think she had it.
At exactly 9:58 a.m., a black Rolls-Royce Phantom idled outside her building. Subtle.
Ellie stepped out into the crisp morning air, coffee in hand, heart steady but alert.
The driver opened the rear door without speaking. This was absurd.
She hesitated only a second before sliding inside.
The interior smelled of leather and quiet wealth.
As the car pulled away, she noticed something. They weren't heading toward Calloway Industries' headquarters.
They were leaving Manhattan.
Her stomach tightened.
The estate appeared like something torn from an English countryside painting and placed aggressively in upstate New York.
Iron gates. Stone walls. Security cameras discreet but unmistakable.
The car rolled to a stop before a sprawling gray-stone manor.
Ellie stepped out slowly, scanning her surroundings.
This was not a bachelor's penthouse. This was a fortress.
"Ms. Whitmore."
She turned. Sebastian stood at the top of the stone steps, no tuxedo this time.
Instead, a charcoal suit, no tie, white shirt open at the collar.
Less polished. More dangerous.
Daylight suited him in a way she resented.
He descended the steps with measured calm.
"You came," he observed.
"You sent a car," she replied.
His mouth twitched faintly. Touché.
"Walk with me." Not a request. But not a command either.
She followed him inside. The interior was quieter than she expected. No staff in sight. No movement.
"Do you live here alone?" she asked.
"Yes." The answer was simple. Too simple.
They entered a private study-dark wood shelves, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking barren winter trees.
A single desk. Two chairs facing each other. A negotiation room.
Sebastian gestured for her to sit. She didn't.
"Before we discuss anything," she said firmly, "I want clarity."
He leaned lightly against the desk, folding his arms. "Ask."
"If this is a manipulation tactic to control the press..."
"It isn't."
"If this is about cleaning your image..."
"It isn't."
"If you are guilty of anything involving Lydia..." His expression hardened.
"I am not."
The air thickened. She stepped closer, testing him. "Then why me?"
That question lingered between them longer than the others.
Sebastian's gaze sharpened, but something deeper moved beneath it.
"Because you don't want me," he said quietly. The honesty startled her.
"You don't admire wealth," he continued.
"You aren't impressed by power. You don't need access to my social circle." His eyes held hers.
"And you are intelligent enough not to be easily deceived."
"You just described why I'd be a terrible wife."
"A real one?" he asked softly.
"Yes."
"I'm not asking for real." The word echoed heavier than he intended.
Something flickered in his eyes, a flash of something almost vulnerable.
Ellie crossed her arms. "Explain the full terms."
Sebastian straightened.
"Legally binding marriage. Public announcement within forty-eight hours. You move here."
Her eyebrows lifted. "Here?"
"Yes."
"That's not necessary for optics."
"It is for security." Her pulse slowed.
"There have been threats," he said evenly. "Anonymous messages. Encrypted warnings."
"About the board vote?"
"Yes."
"And Lydia?" His silence was answer enough. A chill crept under her skin.
"You think whoever killed her is still watching you."
"I know they are." The certainty in his voice made her throat tighten.
She swallowed. "And you think marrying me puts me in the crosshairs."
"I think you're already there." The words landed like a stone in her stomach. He stepped closer.
"Your recent article criticizing offshore laundering was circulated in private investor threads tied to my board members." Her breath hitched.
"You've been noticed."
She hated that a small part of her felt vindicated. And terrified.
"Why not hire private investigators?" she demanded. "Why involve me at all?"
"Because this is not just financial." His voice dropped slightly. "This is personal."
He moved around the desk slowly, deliberately, until they stood only a few feet apart.
"You believe truth matters more than comfort," he said.
"More than safety." Her heart beat harder.
"And you believe power protects you," she shot back.
He leaned in just enough for her to feel the warmth of his breath.
"No," he murmured. "I believe power attracts predators."
The intimacy of the moment startled her. This was no longer business-only territory. This was dangerous.
She stepped back first.
"Let's discuss boundaries."
A flicker of approval passed through his expression.
"Yes."
"No intimacy," she said immediately.
"Agreed."
"No emotional expectations." A pause.
Then, "Agreed."
"Separate bedrooms."
"Of course."
"Freedom to publish once the year ends."
"Unrestricted."
"And if I uncover evidence that implicates you?" Her gaze locked onto his.
"Then you publish it." Her breath caught.
"You'd risk that?"
"If I am guilty," he said calmly, "I deserve exposure." The conviction in his voice unsettled her more than any denial would have.
"You sound very sure of yourself."
"I am." Silence fell. The tension between them felt like a wire pulled too tight.
"You understand," she said carefully, "that people will assume I married you for money."
"I will arrange a prenuptial agreement that leaves you with nothing beyond modest compensation for relocation."
Her eyes narrowed. "You're determined to remove any reason for me to stay."
"Yes."
"Why?" His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
"Because this cannot become complicated." The words held more weight than they should have.
Ellie studied him. For the first time, she noticed the exhaustion beneath the control. The faint shadows under his eyes. The rigidity in his posture as if he had not truly relaxed in years.
"You don't want a wife," she said quietly.
"No."
"You want an ally." He didn't deny it.
"And what happens," she pressed softly, "if this stops being strategy?"
His gaze darkened. "It won't."
The certainty should have reassured her. Instead, it ignited something reckless.
"Arrogant," she murmured.
His lips almost curved. "Careful, Ms. Whitmore."
"Or what?"
For a split second, something unguarded flashed in his eyes. "Or you may discover I'm not as controlled as you think." The air between them shifted.
He stepped back first this time. "I will not touch you without consent," he said evenly. "Not publicly. Not privately."
That wasn't the reassurance she expected. It felt... intimate. Deliberate.
"Why are you really doing this?" she asked again, softer now.
He walked to the window, staring out at the barren trees.
"Because Lydia trusted the wrong person." His voice lost its polish. "I will not make that mistake again."
She felt that sentence more than she heard it.
This wasn't about optics. This was about betrayal. And revenge.
Her phone buzzed suddenly.
Both of them stilled. Unknown number.
She answered cautiously. Silence. Then a distorted voice:
"Curiosity is dangerous, Ms. Whitmore." The line went dead.
Her blood ran cold.
Sebastian's expression transformed instantly, and no longer the controlled billionaire.
Now he looked lethal.
"They've escalated," he said quietly.
"You knew this would happen."
"I suspected."
Her heart pounded. "This is your life," she whispered.
"Yes."
"And you're asking me to step into it."
"I'm offering you the truth," he corrected.
The room felt smaller. Darker. More real.
She looked at him, at the man she had intended to destroy.
At the danger circling him. At the truth buried under layers of corporate deception.
And she realized something terrifying. She wanted to know.
She stepped forward. "If I do this," she said steadily, "there will be no lies between us."
A long pause. Then...
"No lies."
She extended her hand. This time, not as a journalist. As a partner in something dangerous.
Sebastian looked at her hand for a fraction of a second. Then he took it.
His grip was warm. Firm. Controlled. But not indifferent.
"Welcome to the war," he said quietly.
And for the first time since she met him.
Eleanor Whitmore felt afraid. Not of him.
But of what standing beside him might awaken.
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9.7
Luna Elena Frost was never chosen, only assigned.
Bound to Alpha Alaric Ashbourne through a cold contractual marriage, she endures three years as a Luna in name only. He never comes home, never defends her, and never looks at her, while his heart belongs to another woman.
At his grandmother's funeral, Alaric publicly dissolves their marriage, humiliating Elena before the entire pack. In that moment, she finally understands the truth. She was never wanted.
But the Moon has not abandoned her.
A forgotten night resurfaces. Her long-silent wolf begins to awaken. And secrets buried within her bloodline start to surface, drawing danger from every direction.
Cast out by the pack that once used her, Elena must flee, survive, and uncover her true power.
Only then does the Alpha realize his mistake.
By the time he turns back in regret, the Luna he rejected may already be gone forever.

7.1
I sat alone at my long marble dining table, staring at a plate of cold truffle risotto. My husband, Jere, was late again, claiming he was stuck in a "war zone" of a board meeting for a multi-billion dollar merger.
A single Instagram notification shattered the silence. It was a photo of a candlelit birthday dinner, featuring a man's hand resting on a white tablecloth. I recognized the slight veins, the jagged scar on the thumb, and the navy-faced Patek Philippe watch I had spent six months tracking down as a wedding gift. Jere wasn't in a boardroom; he was celebrating his ex-girlfriend Irina's birthday while texting me to "don't wait up."
The next morning, I followed him to a VIP hospital wing. I watched through a cracked door as my husband cuddled a five-year-old boy and whispered tender promises to Irina. When he came home, he tried to buy my silence with a rare pink diamond bracelet, but I found the receipt: he had bought two identical ones. He had branded his wife and his mistress with matching jewelry, using hidden trackers to keep us both on a leash. When I confronted him, he didn't flinch. He coldly reminded me that he owned my father's massive debts and could send him to prison for insolvency fraud with one phone call.
"Stop with the attitude, Deliah," he said.
I felt like a ghost haunting my own life, trapped in a gilded cage by the man who paid for my mother's heart surgery while keeping a secret family across town. The humiliation peaked at our rescheduled anniversary dinner when Jere received a text, threw a stack of hundreds at me like I was a stranger, and abandoned me in a crowded restaurant to rush back to her.
"Pay the bill," he commanded before walking out.
Standing in the wreckage of a shattered crystal vase back at the penthouse, I realized my silence was the only thing keeping his empire standing. I pulled the crumpled divorce papers from my purse and signed my name with a steady hand. I wasn't just walking away; I was calling his sister to help me burn his perfect world to the ground.

9.2
Jacqueline Blackburn, a desperate Ivy League tutor, walked into the sleazy Veridian VIP club just to save her job.
But her billionaire client, the ruthless Christian Montgomery, mistook her for a cheap escort, blowing cigar smoke in her face and treating her like trash.
When she furiously turned to leave, a drunk former client attacked her in the hallway, tearing her white dress open and pinning her by the throat.
She fought back, stabbing the man's hand with a pen, only for Christian to emerge from the shadows and brutally crush the attacker's bleeding hand under his heel.
Instead of letting her go, Christian draped his heavy suit jacket over her exposed skin, trapped her in his dark suite, and forced her to sign a suffocating contract.
"You have exactly ninety days, or I will personally ensure you cease to exist in my city."
She thought she could just keep her head down, teach his nephew, and survive.
But she didn't understand why this terrifying underground tyrant was suddenly so fixated on her.
Why did he use his immense power to isolate her, publicly claim her at a billionaire gala, and track her every move?
When she received a chilling midnight text demanding she pack her bags and move into his sprawling estate by 8:00 AM, the terrifying reality set in.
She hadn't escaped the wolf. She had just walked directly into his cage.

7.7
Eva Brooks, a 25-year-old woman, was set up by her best friend. Her fiancé broke up with her and demanded compensation for allegedly cheating on him.
Eva had a one-night stand with the richest CEO in Dominic City, Ethan Owen. He was arrogant and offered her a job as his secretary.
As his secretary, Ethan couldn't shake his fondness for Eva. He became obsessed with her, worrying that she was cheating on him.
He broke up with his fiancée to become engaged to Eva, but will his fiancée let him go? Will Eva accept a relationship with her boss?

7.4
"Will you be a good girl for Daddy?" His husky voice dripped with lust.
"Yes, please fuck me hard, Daddy." I answered, breathlessly.
His hands were all over my body as he pressed into me roughly and I could feel my pussy swelling in response to his hardness.
"Good," he whispered against my ear, teeth nipping at my skin. "Because you'll be a damn good whore."He bit down again, pulling away from me long enough to grab one of my wrists and pin it above my head, then began fucking me hard, his hips rolling violently and slamming into mine in time with his movements.
•• •• ••
Camille Caldwell, tasked by her wealthy father to learn the ropes of business under the watchful eyes of a dear and trusted mentor, Gavriel found herself juggling between being a dutiful secretary and a seductive temptress at night.
At first, all she wanted from him was for him to give a good report to her father of her behavior, but as she got closer to him, she couldn't resist the magnetic attraction that drew her to him.
When Billionaire Gavriel Donovan agreed to take the only daughter of his friend under his wing as his secretary, he merely counted it as doing a favor for an old friend, but Camille will have him doing the unthinkable, and he'll have her pinned beneath him, screaming for more pleasure.
Can their forbidden desires survive in a world where their romance is regarded as abominable?
Was Gavriel willing to put his friendship and reputation on the line for a girl he was old enough to father?
*****
This book unapologetically contains very dark, raw, and mature contents. Do not open unless you'd love to be stuck in a sex-filled, lusty, and romantic world.

7.4
Standing on the edge of a limestone quarry in the pouring rain, I thought we were just having another family argument.
Then my mother, Ardell, screamed that I’d let the life insurance lapse, and my brother, Hakeem, stepped out of the shadows with a cold, calculating look in his eyes.
I told them I knew the truth—that Hakeem had cut the brake lines on my father’s car—but they didn't flinch. Instead, Hakeem shoved me hard, sending me tumbling into the abyss.
I hit a jagged ledge thirty feet down, the sound of my spine snapping like a dry branch echoing through the rain. As I lay paralyzed and broken, my mother watched from above, asking if I was dead yet, before Hakeem whistled for the starving wild dogs that lived in the quarry floor.
"Nature will clean up the mess,"
Hakeem said, walking away while the first set of teeth sank into my throat.
The agony was a tidal wave, but the rage was hotter, a nuclear hatred for the family that stole my future and the daughter I’d never see grow up. I died in that dirt, consumed by fire and teeth, wondering how a mother could choose a car payment over her own child's life.
But then, I gasped for air, sitting bolt upright in my old trailer bedroom. I looked at the calendar: May 12, 2014.
I was seventeen again, but I wasn't the same girl. Inside this malnourished body was the mind of a world-class trauma surgeon and the elite hacker known as 'Phantom.'
This time, I wasn't going to the quarry; I was going for their throats.