
The CEO's Accidental Bride (Contract Marriage)
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.
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Chapter 6
Ivy's POV
We fell into a rhythm without anyone announcing it.
Coffee in the mornings, him at the counter, me at the island, the city waking up below us. He made mine the way I liked it after watching me once. I did not ask how he remembered. I was afraid of the answer.
Late nights became conversations. His work. My work. Lucy's upcoming exams. The difference between a building worth saving and one beyond repair. He listened like my words mattered. I started to believe they did.
We stopped pretending to be strangers somewhere around week eight.
The almost-kiss happened on a Thursday.
Lucy had gone back to Connecticut. The penthouse was quiet. Adrian was in the library when I found him, a glass of whiskey in his hand, his tie loosened, his guard down in a way I rarely saw.
"Rough day?" I asked.
"My mother called." He did not elaborate. He did not need to.
I sat across from him. The fire was low, the room all shadows and warmth. He looked tired. Not the performative tired of a man who worked too hard. Something deeper.
"She makes you feel like you're never enough," I said. It was not a question.
His eyes met mine. "How did you know?"
"Because I recognize it."
The silence stretched. He set down his glass. He leaned forward. I leaned forward. The space between us was inches, then less. I could feel his breath on my lips. His hand came up, not quite touching my face, hovering like he was asking permission I had not given.
The phone rang.
He pulled back. The moment shattered. He answered the call, work, something urgent and I left the room before I could do something I could not take back.
I fell asleep on the couch three nights later.
I woke to darkness and the weight of something across my shoulders. A coat. His coat. The one he wore to meetings, expensive wool, smelling like him. He had draped it over me sometime in the night and left me there, undisturbed.
I pulled it tighter. I told myself it meant nothing. It was the kind of thing anyone would do.
I did not believe myself.
Zoe cornered me at lunch the next day. "You're in trouble," she said, stabbing her salad. "Real trouble."
"I'm fine."
"You fell asleep on his couch and he covered you with his coat. That's not fine. That's the beginning of a rom-com where someone ends up crying in an airport."
I laughed. It sounded hollow. "We have rules."
"Rules don't stop feelings. You know that, I know that. The only person who doesn't seem to know that is the man whose coat you're currently wearing."
I looked down. I had not realized I brought it with me. Zoe's face softened. "Ivy. Talk to me."
"I don't know what to say." I wrapped my hands around my coffee. "He's kind. He's careful. He remembers things I tell him. He looked at Daniel and said that was his failure, not yours, and I"
"Fell in love with him."
"No." The word came out too fast. "I'm not, I know the rules. I know what this is. A contract. After six months we make a clean exit."
Zoe said nothing. She did not need to.
---
I found out the truth by accident.
Sloane left a file on the kitchen counter. Legal documents. I was going to ignore them, but the top page had Lucy's name. I read it before I could stop myself.
Petition for Guardianship. Vale family court filing. In re: custody of Lucille Vale.
I read it twice. Three times. The words blurred.
Adrian was fighting for Lucy. Her mother, his stepmother was trying to keep her, or control her, or something the legal language made sound clinical and brutal. And our marriage wasvpart of the argument. Stability. A family unit. Proof that Adrian could provide the kind of home the court would approve.
I had been chosen because I was useful. The folder slipped from my hands, papers scattered across the floor.
I stood there, staring at them, and felt something crack in my chest. I should have expected this.
That was the worst part. I had walked up to a stranger in a hotel bar and offered myself as a solution to a problem. I had signed a contract. I had agreed to terms. I had been useful.
That was all I ever was to Daniel. Useful when he needed an audience. Useful when he needed someone to come home to and discarded when I stopped being convenient.
And now I had done it again. Volunteered to be the temporary solution. Pretended it was different because this time the man was kinder, because he made pancakes, because he remembered how I took my coffee.
The kindness was real, I believed that. But it did not change the fact that I was here because I fit a need, not because he wanted me.
I sat on the floor of the kitchen, surrounded by legal documents about a girl I had started to love, and I let myself feel it.
The hurt. The shame. The terrible, familiar weight of being chosen for what I could provide instead of who I was.
Adrian found me there an hour later.
He stopped in the doorway. He saw the papers, saw my face. Something in his expression shifted from surprise to something I could not read.
"You found the file," he said.
"I wasn't snooping. Sloane left it out."
He crouched down, gathering the papers. His hands were steady. His voice was steady. "I was going to tell you."
"When? After the six months were up? After I signed the exit papers and walked away?"
He looked at me. "Ivy"
"I'm not angry." I was not. I did not know what I was. "I'm not angry. I'm just...I should have known. I walked into this with my eyes open. I offered myself as a solution to a problem. I don't get to be hurt that you took me up on it."
His jaw tightened. "That's not what this is."
"Isn't it?" I stood up. My legs were unsteady. "You needed a wife for the court case. I needed a way to stop feeling pathetic. It was a transaction, that's all it was supposed to be."
He stood too. He was close enough that I could see the tension in his face, the way his hands had fisted at his sides.
"It was a transaction," he said slowly. "And then it stopped being one."
I stared at him. "What?"
"I didn't tell you about Lucy because I didn't want you to feel like this. Like you were being used." He ran a hand through his hair, a gesture I had never seen from him. "I needed the marriage for the court filing. That was true. But that's not why I said yes."
I waited. My heart was going to break through my ribs.
"I said yes because you walked up to me in a bar and told me love was a scam and marriage was logistics and I had never heard anything more honest in my life." He stepped closer. "I said yes because you were angry and brave and you looked at me like I was a person, not a portfolio. I said yes because I wanted to know you."
"You could have told me."
"I was going to. When it was real." His voice dropped. "I didn't want you to think I married you for a reason that had nothing to do with you."
I opened my mouth. I closed it. I did not know what to say.
He was looking at me like I was something precious. Something he was afraid to break.
And then he said the words that undid me.
"The court case matters," he said. "Lucy matters. But Ivy" He stopped. Swallowed. "You are not temporary. Not to me."
I wanted to believe him. I wanted to so badly.
But Daniel had said similar things, once. Before I learned that words were cheap and promises were negotiable and I was always, eventually, the one left behind.
"I need" I stopped. My voice was shaking. "I need to think."
I walked out of the kitchen. I walked down the hallway. I closed my bedroom door behind me and leaned against it, my heart pounding, his words still echoing in my ears.
You are not temporary. I wanted to believe him, but I had believed Daniel too.
And now I was standing in a bedroom in a penthouse that was not mine, married to a man I had started to love, wondering if I was nothing more than a box he needed to check.
I pulled out my phone. Zoe had texted hours ago: You okay?
I typed back: I think I made a mistake.
The three dots appeared immediately. Then disappeared. Then appeared again.
Zoe: What kind of mistake?
I stared at the screen. I could not answer. I did not know how.
My phone buzzed again. A message from Adrian. Come back to the library. Please.
I stared at it. My thumb hovered over the keyboard.
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9.0
Adaline Poole thought she had escaped her family's toxic corporate grip by moving to London and adopting a stray cat named Monty.
But when she returns to her empty apartment, her father delivers a chilling ultimatum: he has kidnapped the cat and will euthanize it by morning unless she accepts an arranged marriage with Barron Cooke, a notoriously elusive billionaire.
Her entire family becomes complicit in her sale. Her mother demands she secure their elite status, and her brother secretly spies on her social media to feed Barron her every move. Horrified to discover Barron is a thirty-three-year-old "fossil" twelve years her senior, Adaline resorts to sabotage. She goes to a Soho club, takes a scandalous photo with a frat boy, and sends it to the old billionaire to disgust him into canceling their upcoming dinner.
But her rebellion backfires horribly when the frat boy spikes her drink with a powerful narcotic. As her body burns with a terrifying, feverish heat, she collapses in a dark corridor. Stripped of her phone and betrayed by her bloodline, she is left utterly defenseless as a predator approaches to drag her away.
Suddenly, the heavy fire door is kicked open by a towering, terrifyingly handsome stranger who effortlessly neutralizes her attacker.
"Please... help me," Adaline begs, deliriously throwing her burning body into his arms.
She has absolutely no idea that the handsome savior she is clinging to is Barron Cooke himself.

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.

8.8
I discovered I was pregnant with twins from my marriage to Ell Steele, the ruthless CEO of the Steele Group. But he saw me as a gold-digging nobody, unworthy of his heir.
He stormed into our penthouse with his lawyer, slamming down abortion consent forms and a divorce NDA, offering five million to terminate and vanish. "You're not fit to carry my child," he spat, gripping my jaw.
I refused the abortion, signed the zero-payout divorce to keep my company insurance for my dying mom's ICU bills, but stayed on as an admin assistant. Brittany, his mistress, spilled coffee on my reports, got me demoted to the dusty sub-basement sorting old files.
She framed me for attacking her, security dragged me out, slamming me into doorframes that cramped my belly. Trapped in a sabotaged freight elevator, I nearly miscarried in the dark, gasping for air while Ell rescued me—only to find my prenatal pills and rage.
At the gala, I warned Brittany the Angel's Tears necklace—Georgina's flawed design—was cracking. She accused me of theft; Ell ordered me stripped and searched publicly. It snapped anyway, shattering the diamond, but he blamed me, firing and blacklisting me on the spot.
Beaten down, humiliated, body aching from their cruelty—how could my husband, who I once loved, destroy me without a shred of doubt? What made him so blind to my pain?
Dragged from our home in the rain, a black Rolls-Royce Phantom pulled up. The butler bowed: "Madame Aura, your suite awaits." As Ell watched from his Maybach, I initiated the hostile takeover—time to bankrupt them all.

8.2
Justine abandoned her career as a top trauma surgeon to marry Congressman Carl McConnell. She did it to fulfill her dying sister's last wish: to protect her son, Leo, from this ruthless political family.
But the seven-year-old boy she swore to protect shoved her into a freezing koi pond, then cried to his father that Justine tried to drown him.
Carl didn't even check the security cameras. He hugged his precious heir and looked at his freezing wife with pure disgust.
"Are you out of your mind? Trying to hurt the heir to the McConnell family!"
He locked Justine in a 55-degree wine cellar while she was burning with a 102-degree fever. When she finally told him the truth, Carl flew into a rage and hurled a heavy brass-cornered book at her face, slicing her cheekbone wide open.
His mother even ordered the staff to starve her for seven days to reflect on her sins.
Justine stood in the dark, blood dripping down her face, her heart completely dead. She had sacrificed her brilliant future and her pride for this family, only to be tortured and discarded like garbage. How could they be so utterly devoid of humanity?
She pulled out her old medical kit and stitched up her own face.
Then, she signed the legal documents to permanently relinquish her stepparent rights, threw them at the housekeeper, and calmly looked at her abusive husband.
"I am divorcing you, Carl."

8.7
Emerson worked grueling twelve-hour shifts just to keep her five-year-old son, Leo, alive. Her only lifeline was her partner Alden, who was willing to give up his wealthy family to protect them.
But when Leo's bone marrow completely failed, the doctor delivered a death sentence. The only way to save him was a two-million-dollar treatment, or having another child with his biological father.
That father was Finnegan Mcconnell, the ruthless billionaire who had accused Emerson of faking her pregnancy and abandoned her five years ago.
Desperate for the medical fees, Emerson submitted her designs to Finnegan's company.
Instead of advancing the money, Finnegan tore her portfolio to shreds and trapped her as a prisoner in his estate.
To force her complete submission, he systematically destroyed her reality. He framed Alden with federal charges, leaving him facing twenty years in prison.
Alden's mother stormed into the pediatric ICU, violently strangling Emerson against the wall.
"Beg Finnegan to let my son go! You are a curse!"
Even Emerson's own adoptive mother showed up at the hospital, just to publicly mock her dying child.
Emerson was suffocating in despair. Finnegan already had a beautiful new wife and a five-year-old daughter—absolute proof he had been cheating while she was pregnant and alone.
He had his perfect family. Why did he have to hunt her down and sever every lifeline she had left, just to watch her drown?
With her son's heart monitor fading and Alden locked in a cell, her pride finally shattered.
Emerson walked into the top-floor executive office and dropped to her knees at the devil's feet, but the desperate mother looking up at him was preparing for a devastating revenge.

8.5
Cecile jolted awake from months of prescription haze, only to realize she was trapped in a live reality show designed to destroy her.
Her billionaire husband had orchestrated the broadcast to publicly humiliate her and elevate his own PR image. He ordered her to follow a degrading script. What was worse, her five-year-old son, Damien, was genuinely terrified of her. When an empty wine bottle rolled across the floor, the tiny boy instantly threw his arms over his head, bracing for a hit.
The production crew shoved microphones into the trembling child's face, trying to trigger his trauma for ratings. The live chat cursed Cecile as a toxic abuser. The show's golden girl maliciously tried to poach Damien on camera to prove Cecile was an unfit mother. The crew even rigged the game, forcing Cecile and her son into a freezing, rotting mud shack with a collapsed roof. They were all just waiting for her to break down and beg.
"A toxic woman like you doesn't deserve to be a mother."
The crew read the hateful comments aloud, expecting a hysterical meltdown. The realization that she had been manipulated into destroying her own child hit Cecile like a physical blow. How could a father subject his own son to this public cruelty?
The weak, easily manipulated Cecile was dead. She threw the PR script away, rolled up her sleeves, and picked up a rusted hammer. This time, she would protect her son and tear down anyone who stood in her way.