
The CEO's Accidental Bride (Contract Marriage)
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Ivy Bennett proposed to the wrong man.
He was supposed to be wearing green. He wasn't. But he said yes anyway.
Now she's married to a billionaire CEO she met five minutes ago, living in a penthouse she doesn't belong in, and trying very hard not to fall for the husband who was supposed to be temporary.
The contract says six months. No feelings. Clean exit.
But Adrian Vale has been looking for her for two years. And he's not letting go.
A mistake. A contract. The wrong man in blue.
The CEO's Accidental Bride (Contract Marriage) Chapter 1
Ivy's POV
"Are you cheating on me?"
The question ripped out of me before I could stop it. Daniel froze with one hand on the conference room door, the other still around the brunette from marketing's wrist. The brunette yanked her hand away first.
"It's not what it looks like," Daniel said instantly. I laughed once, sharp and ugly. "That line should be retired globally."
The brunette muttered something about leaving. "Please do," I said. Daniel stepped forward, lowering his voice. "Can we not do this here?"
"It happened once," he added. I studied his face. "Then you're either a liar or a coward, and I genuinely don't know which option is better for me."
His jaw tightened. "Ivy, come on. We've been off for months."
There it was. The pivot. The slide from I'm sorry to this is partly your fault.
I pulled the key to his apartment off my ring. I set it on the windowsill beside him. "I'm being done."
I made it to the elevator before the first tear fell. By the time I got outside, I was crying in earnest, standing on the sidewalk like a woman who had just been publicly fired from her own life.
My phone buzzed. Zoe: Did u survive the Daniel dinner thing? I typed with vicious speed. He's cheating. I hope the brown blazer burns in hell.
Zoe called immediately. "I'm outside. Don't move."
---
For three days I existed in a state that was part grief, part humiliation, part insomnia. I worked, answered emails and pretended I had a stomach bug so no one asked why I looked like I wanted to set things on fire.
The worst part wasn't even missing Daniel. It was knowing that I had been the last person in my own relationship to know it was dying.
On the fourth night, Zoe showed up with Thai takeout and the expression of a woman about to perform an intervention. "You need a rebound," she said. "I set up a blind date."
"I would rather chew glass," I told her. "He's vetted," she countered. "One man being trash does not mean all men are trash."
Two hours later, despite every instinct I possessed, I agreed to one drink at the Lark Hotel. "If he wears loafers with no socks," I warned, "I'm leaving." Zoe grinned. "Fair."
---
The Lark Hotel lobby glowed gold and amber. A piano murmured in the corner. I crossed the room with my pulse pounding.
Near the piano sat a man alone in a navy suit. Zoe had said green tie, but in the lighting, maybe she got the color wrong.
He looked like a man waiting for something. Tall, broad-shouldered, with black hair brushed back from a face so controlled it was almost severe. He looked expensive. Dangerous. Absolutely not my type.
I slid onto the stool beside him. He turned, and his eyes landed on my face. "Hi," I said.
He set down his glass. "Hello." That voice did something unfair to the air between us.
"You're here for the blind date," I said. One of his eyebrows moved a fraction. "Am I?"
Something reckless surged through me. Daniel's face. The lipstick on his collar, the last four sleepless nights, the anger.
"Actually," I said, "I don't want to do this the normal way." He watched me as if I had become interesting. "The normal way is we make strained conversation and pretend to enjoy ourselves."
"That does sound inefficient," he said. I leaned in. "Exactly. So let me save us both time."
He glanced briefly at my mouth. "Please."
"My ex-boyfriend cheated on me four days ago." He blinked once. "So I'm not in the mood for hobbies or love languages or where you see yourself in five years."
A sane woman would have stopped. I hadn't felt sane since Tuesday.
"So I have a proposal," I said. He looked amused now, just barely. "What kind of proposal?"
I took a breath. "The insane kind."
"Go on."
"Marry me."
Silence. The piano kept playing and I heard blood roaring in my ears.
"Not a real marriage," I said quickly. "A fake one. Strategic. You get tax benefits or family peace, and I get to stop feeling like the woman men waste time with."
He was still looking at me with terrifying concentration. I laughed, brittle. "See? This is why Zoe told me not to drink before arriving."
"I didn't say no," he said.
I stared at him. He turned slightly toward me, one arm on the bar. "How long?"
"Six months?"
"Public or private?"
"Public enough to be useful."
"No emotional obligations?"
"Definitely not."
He studied my face for one endless second. "All right."
"All right what?"
"I'll do it."
The world tilted. I actually checked over my shoulder for hidden cameras. "You cannot possibly be serious."
"I am," he said. "Neither was the question."
I should have been alarmed. Instead, I almost laughed. Because he was still calm while my nervous system did cartwheels.
"Who are you?" I asked.
"Adrian."
"Adrian what?"
"Vale."
The name meant nothing to me. Later, I would realize it should. Right then, all I knew was that a stranger with a devastating face had just agreed to my absurd, grief-fueled proposal.
He signaled to the bartender. "What are you doing?" I asked. "Ordering food," he said. "You look like you haven't eaten."
I looked at him over the menu he handed me. He looked back. And for the first time all week, through the ruin Daniel had left behind, I felt something that wasn't grief.
It was worse. It was possibility.
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The CEO's Accidental Bride (Contract Marriage) of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.1
Elinor's frail daughter, Cece, died in a sterile hospital room while waiting for her father to take her to Disney World.
But her billionaire husband, Derick, never showed up. At the exact moment Cece's heart monitor flatlined, the hospital TV broadcasted Derick affectionately holding the hand of his mistress and he has booked a clearance of the entire Disneyland to celebrate mistress's daughter's birthday!.
When Elinor confronted Derick with their daughter's ashes, he sneered and accused her of hiding the child just to get his attention. Elinor's heart was torn to shreds. How could a father be so blind and ruthless? Did Kamryn use his power to steal the very kidney that belonged to Cece? Why did her innocent baby have to die for their sick affair?
The suffocating grief inside Elinor finally crystallized into a sharp blade. She wiped the blood from her lips, canceled the simple divorce, and began her ruthless revenge.

9.1
Waking up with a cold, scaly hand wrapped around my throat wasn't the worst part.
The worst part was realizing I'd transmigrated into the body of Terra Mason—the most despised woman in the entire Enclave. She drugged high-level beast-men and forced them into life-binding bio-contracts. She locked an aquatic warrior in a dry basement until his organs failed. She treated the most lethal males in the city like broken toys.
Zev, the Level 6 serpent who's currently choking me, would rather blow up his own heart than spend another day as my slave. His affection metric? Negative ninety. His trust? Zero.
Then my system activates: the Kore AI. It gives me exactly 500 credits, a medical nano-gel, and a recipe for neutralizing the radioactive poison in mutant meat. Real food. In this world, that's worth more than gold.
I save Rhys, the dying aquatic male everyone left for dead. I season a slab of purple mutant steak until Sam, a battle-scarred grizzly shifter, groans at the taste—and his trust points finally tick above zero. When my backstabbing ex-best friend tries to steal my males and destroy me, I don't scream or throw a tantrum like the old Terra. I dismantle her with the truth.
But earning their trust means more than grilling meat. A scorpion swarm ambushes us at midnight. Sam throws himself between me and a stinger the size of my arm. As he stands over the corpse, fur receding from his claws, he stares at me and whispers, "You were testing me."
Yes. I was. Because in this world, the weak don't survive. And I refuse to be weak again.
Four beast-men. Four contracts. One system. And a whole lot of steak. Let this dystopian wasteland know—I'm not the monster they remember. I'm worse. I'm the one who's going to feed them until they'd kill for me.

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.

9.0
I am the undisputed ice queen of the ER, a doctor whose life is built on absolute control. A month ago, I impulsively married a stranger to create a legal shield against my ex-mentor's betrayal.
Our prenup had one strict rule: a fake marriage with zero interference in each other's lives. But tonight, my "husband on paper" was wheeled into my ER, unconscious, reeking of cheap whiskey, and suffering from a bleeding ulcer.
To authorize his emergency surgery, I had to sign the consent form as his wife, detonating a gossip bomb among my colleagues. Worse, his overbearing family found out he was hospitalized. To stop his terrifying mother from flying in and exposing our sham marriage, I had to lean over his hospital bed and take a fake, loving couple's selfie.
I didn't understand why this disciplined math professor was suddenly drinking himself to death, nor why my chest tightened when he looked at me with exhausted eyes and begged for homemade soup. My perfectly ordered, untouchable life was crumbling into a chaotic mess, and I was losing my grip on the narrative.
"We should probably spend some time together beforehand. We could be roommates."
To prepare for an unavoidable family dinner and a wedding, my stranger husband just asked me to move into his apartment. The ultimate uncontrolled variable has just crossed the line, and our fake marriage is about to become dangerously real.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

9.2
I woke up suffocating in the dark, only to find my mind trapped inside a tiny, plump, and entirely uncoordinated body.
A cold, mechanical voice echoed in my brain, announcing that I was dead in my original world and had transmigrated into a corporate revenge novel as the six-month-old illegitimate daughter of Edward McClure, the story's ruthless villain.
The system mercilessly outlined my doomed fate. Tonight, my cold-blooded father would abandon me to a state orphanage. By age two, he would officially sign my rights away, leaving me to die miserably at the hands of human traffickers. Outside my nursery, I could hear his terrifying footsteps approaching, his voice devoid of any human warmth as he debated throwing me out like garbage. I was completely helpless, trapped in a baby's body, staring up at a man who looked at me with pure, visceral disgust.
Why did I have to be reborn as the tragic cannon fodder of a tyrant destined to put a bullet in his own head? How was I supposed to win over a severe germaphobe when my unequipped infant reflexes made me literally pee and vomit all over his pristine Tom Ford suits?
"Your ultimate mission is to prevent Edward McClure's self-destruction. Step one: Survive tonight's abandonment crisis."
Hearing the system's terrifying ultimatum, I swallowed my adult panic, forced a pool of pitiful tears into my large eyes, and reached my chubby little hands toward the monster.






![[Dubbed Version] The Mistress, The Wife, The Lie](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/99c12cfc5145403706032049495/hcLcn6ZjMEUA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)




