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The CEO's Asset: Sold To My Enemy Novel Cover

The CEO's Asset: Sold To My Enemy

I spent two years trying to please Xander Yates, thinking he was the man who would help me save my family’s struggling manufacturing business. As a former senior legal counsel, I thought I knew how to handle sharks, but I never expected the man I loved to be the one who would try to skin me alive. Everything shattered at a high-end gala when I felt a chemical fire start in my marrow. Xander had spiked my drink, chasing me through the hotel corridors with a predatory smile, ready to take by force what I wouldn't give him willingly. I barely escaped into an elevator, stealing a key card from a man in a sharp grey suit and collapsing in room 8086. That stranger turned out to be Crockett Blackburn, the "Ice King of Wall Street" and a man my family had spent years avoiding. He didn't save me out of the goodness of his heart; he saved me because he saw a "messy variable" he could turn into a weapon. By morning, Xander was blackmailing me with a video of me drugged, and Crockett was offering me a deal that felt like a deal with the devil. He would save my factory, but only if I gave him 51% controlling interest and became his personal legal counsel. The humiliation was total. Xander called me a junkie and a slut, while Crockett looked at the bruises on my neck with the cold, clinical assessment of a man checking a damaged piece of equipment. When a secret bid was leaked, Crockett didn't hesitate to pin the blame on me, accusing me of working with my ex to drive up the price. I was a pawn in a game between two monsters, one who wanted to destroy my body and another who wanted to own my soul and my family’s legacy. I had lost my apartment, my reputation, and my safety in less than twenty-four hours. "I don't like it when people break my things," Crockett told me as he applied ointment to the marks Xander left on my throat. I realized then that if I wanted to survive, I had to stop being the victim and start being the predator. I signed the contract, moved into Blackburn’s penthouse, and prepared for a scorched-earth war against the Yates family. I don't care if Crockett Blackburn is using me as a leash—as long as he lets me be the one to bite.
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Chapter 5

The leather chair felt like it was made of needles. Daniella sat rigid, her hands clasped on the table to hide their shaking.

Crockett opened the folder she had provided. His fingers were long, elegant. Daniella watched them flip the page, and an unwanted memory of those fingers on her skin flashed through her mind. She bit the inside of her cheek.

"Back to the point," Crockett said, tapping the paper. "Your factory is bordering on bankruptcy. Why should I pour water into a leaking bucket?"

Daniella took a breath. She forced herself to look at his tie, not his eyes. "Because we have the best skilled labor in the borough. If we can just-"

She reached for her own copy of the file. Her elbow knocked her purse. It tipped over.

A single piece of paper fluttered out. It drifted through the air and landed on the carpet, right at Crockett's feet.

They both looked.

It was the printout of her self-documented injury report. The itemized list was clear: Digital Photographs - Soft Tissue Contusion, Dated.

Daniella lunged for it.

Crockett was faster. He snatched the paper up.

He read it. His expression shifted. The smirk vanished, replaced by something darker.

"Soft tissue contusion?" He read the words out loud. His eyes snapped to her wrist, where the faint yellow bruise from Xander was visible under her sleeve.

"It's none of your business," Daniella said, snatching the paper from him. She crumpled it into a ball.

"If I caused that..." Crockett started, his voice devoid of emotion, "I will cover the medical costs."

"It wasn't you!" Daniella snapped. Her face was burning. "It's old."

He ignored her, his gaze calculating. "A prudent choice, documenting it yourself. But Yates's uncle is the DA. This report is useless without leverage."

Daniella felt a sharp sting in her chest. To him, her assault was just another piece on a chessboard. An accounting error.

"Mr. Blackburn, can we stick to business?" she hissed.

"This is business," he said. He stood up. He walked around the long table.

Daniella wanted to run, but she was glued to the chair.

He stopped behind her. He placed his hands on the armrests of her chair, boxing her in. She could smell him-cedar and power.

"You want this money, Miss Diaz. But I see no collateral."

He leaned down. His breath ghosted over her ear.

"The land is frozen by the bank," he whispered. "What do you have left? I know about the encrypted ledger you took when you broke your NDA. That is the only asset you possess that interests me."

Daniella's spine stiffened. She stood up abruptly, shoving the chair back. It hit his legs, but he didn't budge.

She turned to face him, inches apart. "If you think I'm going to trade my only insurance policy for a loan, you are mistaken."

She waited for him to get angry. To throw her out.

Instead, the darkness in his eyes cleared. He looked... impressed.

"Good," he said. He straightened his tie. "I don't do business with fools. You passed."

Daniella blinked. "What?"

"If you had handed it over, security would be escorting you out right now." He walked back to his chair and sat down. "Now. Let's talk about the real terms."

Daniella felt like she had whiplash. The man was a psychopath.

"What terms?" she asked warily.

"I want 51% controlling interest in Diaz Manufacturing," he said. "And I want you."

"Excuse me?"

"As my personal legal counsel," he clarified. "You're a former Senior Counsel. You know the law, but you're hungry enough to bend it. I need that."

"Why me?"

"Because you hate Xander Yates," Crockett said. "And his backer, Inga Andrews, is a mutual problem. I have a use for that hate."

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