Follow
Chapters
Share
THE CEOS FAKE BRIDE: CONTRACTUALLY BOND TO MY EX Novel Cover

THE CEOS FAKE BRIDE: CONTRACTUALLY BOND TO MY EX

Reece Kay has thirty days to save her family's dying boutique. Thirty days to find millions she doesn't have. Thirty days before the bank takes everything. Her only option is a trust fund her late father left behind. The catch? She must marry. Not just any man. Rhys Lawson. The billionaire CEO who broke her heart five years ago. Rhys needs a wife to secure a ruthless business merger. Reece needs his name to unlock the money. The deal is simple. One year. No love. No intimacy. No emotions. But living under the same roof turns old wounds into fresh scars. Desire creeps in where hatred once lived. And when powerful enemies begin hunting for the truth, their fake marriage becomes more dangerous than either expected. Will Reece lose the contract... or risk losing her heart to the man who already destroyed it once?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I had never felt more exposed than I did standing in front of Barrister Lawson's polished oak desk the next morning. The office was too bright, the air-conditioner too cold, and my heartbeat far too loud. I held the shortlist in my trembling hands, three names printed in simple black ink that suddenly felt heavier than the entire Lawson estate.

The lawyer regarded me  calmly.

"Have you made your selection?"

My throat tightened.

"Yes."

The word barely left my mouth.

I passed him the sheet. He didn't snatch it or flip it dramatically. He lifted it with deliberate care, as if the thin paper carried explosive weight. His gaze skimmed the top name.

Adrian Lawson.

Expected.

Approved.

Safe.

His eyes moved to the second name.

Kade Lawson.

Reasonable.

Respectable.

Predictable.

Then his gaze slid to the third name.

Rhys Sterling Lawson.

The man whose shadow had stretched across my entire night.

The lawyer's brows lifted slightly. 

"A bold choice."

"It isn't a choice," I whispered. "It's... unfinished history."

He nodded once, neither judging nor comforting, then stamped the document with the Lawson gold seal.

"It is done."

My stomach dropped.

Done.

As in final.

As in binding.

As in no turning back.

"The trustees will meet with all three candidates," Barrister Lawson continued. "But due to his exceptional financial profile and the stability his empire could bring, Rhys Sterling has been pre-selected as your temporary spouse for the trust term."

I froze.

"He was chosen already?"

"Yes."

"But you only just submitted my shortlist."

"The trustees reviewed all candidates last night," the barrister said. "They deemed his application... strategic."

Strategic.

Of course it was.

My past had always been an inconvenience, his name showing up on that list had not been fate.

It had been intention.

Deliberate.

Calculated.

My blood went cold.

"So," I said softly, "he will be the one I marry."

"Temporarily," he corrected. "For contractual obligation only."

My heart didn't care about technicalities.

A knot formed in my chest.

"Your next step is to contact him," the barrister added. "A private meeting is required before you both sign the preliminary agreement."

My pulse stuttered.

I had to face him.

Face the boy who left.

Face the man who returned with an empire behind him.

Back in my bedroom, I sat stiffly at my desk. My laptop glowed like a spotlight on my uncertainty.

I opened a blank email window.

My fingers hovered uselessly over the keyboard.

How did one write to a man who had once been my entire world...and then vanished from it without a goodbye?

I inhaled deeply.

This wasn't emotional.

This was business.

I typed:

To: ExecutiveOffice@SterlingTechCapital.com

Subject: Request for a Private Meeting, Urgent

Then I froze again.

Too formal?

Too cold?

Good.

Better cold than cracked.

I continued.

Mr. Sterling,

This is Reece Kay. I have been informed by the Lawson trustees that you were selected as the primary candidate for the temporary contractual marriage requirement under the Kay–Lawson trust clause.

My chest tightened.

I kept typing anyway.

I am requesting a private, in-person meeting to finalize terms before we proceed. Please respond with a date and time suitable for you.

I hesitated.

Should I add Thank you?

No.

Politeness implied comfort. I was not comfortable.

I signed:  Reece Kay

My  stomach twisted.

I stared at the email for five full minutes.

My pride was dissolving.

My past was resurfacing.

And my future was suddenly in the hands of a man who had mastered silence.

I clicked Send.

The whooshing sound felt like a slap.

I didn't realize I was shaking until my phone buzzed with a random notification and I nearly jumped out of her skin. I grabbed my pillow, hugging it as if it could anchor me to reality.

Minutes passed.

Thirty.

Sixty.

Still nothing.

I paced my room.

I sat on the edge of my bed.

I opened my laptop.

I closed it again.

What if he ignored me?

What if this was his revenge?

What if he said yes too quickly?

What if he said no?

Rhys Sterling had built an empire, a kind of empire that held meetings with presidents and shut down markets with a single press statement.

Why would he respond to a girl he left behind eight years ago?

A girl whose family business was drowning.

A girl who was, to him, the past.

I sank onto my  bed, pressing a hand over my eyes.

This was foolish.

I should never have left him on the list.

Except... I needed answers.

I needed closure.

I needed...

A soft ding interrupted my spiral.

My laptop screen lit up.

1 New Email - SterlingTech Capital HQ

My heart lunged into my throat.

I opened it.

My breath caught.

It wasn't a secretary.

It wasn't an automated message.

It wasn't an assistant.

It was him.

From: Rhys Sterling

Subject: Re: Request for a Private Meeting, Urgent

My shaking fingers clicked the message.

Reece,

Your request has been received. I'm available tomorrow at 9 a.m. at SterlingTech Headquarters, Eleventh Floor, Executive Wing. Ask for me at the front desk.

R.S.

Short.

Controlled.

Emotionless.

And somehow more intense than any message I had ever read in my life.

He didn't ask why I needed to meet him.

He didn't ask how I felt.

He didn't even ask if I agreed to the marriage arrangement.

He simply accepted.

As if he'd been waiting.

As if this meeting wasn't surprising.

As if he saw it coming.

I read the email again.

Then again.

Then again.

Each time, the same chill spread across my skin.

Tomorrow.

I was going to see him.

Face-to-face.

The boy who had broken my heart.

The man the world feared.

The billionaire who had volunteered himself into my collapsing life.

I didn't sleep.

I tried.

But every time I closed my eyes, I saw flashes:

Rhys at seventeen, grinning with mango juice on his fingers, calling me stubborn.

Rhys at twenty, jaw clenched, telling a reporter old lives burned.

Rhys at twenty-five, stern, unreadable, staring at cameras like they were enemies.

I couldn't reconcile the versions.

I couldn't predict which one I would meet tomorrow.

I sat by my window as the hours crawled. The sky turned from black to steel blue to the pale wash of morning.

At 6 a.m., I forced herself off the bed.

I needed composure.

Strength.

Armor.

This wasn't a reunion.

This was a negotiation.

I showered.

Dressed.

Pulled my hair into a low, calm bun.

When I looked in the mirror, I didn't look like a girl meeting her past.

I looked like a woman walking into war.

At 8:12 a.m., I stood outside SterlingTech Headquarters.

The building was monstrous, glass and steel rising like a titan into the sky. Cars lined the circular driveway. Security was everywhere. Employees streamed in with company badges and expensive coffees.

My pulse thrummed.

I had stepped into another world.

His world.

I inhaled slowly and walked toward the entrance.

The revolving doors swallowed me into a marble lobby that felt more like an airport than an office. Screens lit the walls with market updates. A signature sculpture hung from the ceiling like a suspended storm.

I approached the front desk.

"Good morning," I said, voice steadier than I felt. "I'm here to see Mr. Rhys Sterling."

The receptionist's eyes widened slightly, just slightly, before she masked it with professional calm.

"Name?"

"Reece Kay."

"Of course, Miss Kay. Mr. Sterling is expecting you."

Expecting.

As if he'd been counting the minutes.

The receptionist pressed a button.

"Eleventh floor," she said. "You'll be escorted up."

I nodded and followed the usher to the private elevator.

My palms were damp.

My breath, unsteady.

My heart... terrified.

The elevator doors opened.

I stepped inside.

The doors closed.

I  was going up.

Up toward answers.

Up toward danger.

Up toward Rhys.

The boy I once loved.

The man I would soon confront.

As the elevator ascended, I whispered the truth I had been avoiding since the moment I saw his name on the list:

"I'm not ready."

But the elevator didn't care.

It kept rising.

I'd always imagined that walking into Rhys Sterling's world would feel like stepping into a storm.

I was wrong.

A storm has a sound.

A storm has chaos.

A storm has signs that warn you to run or hide.

But the moment the private elevator stopped on the top floor and the doors slid open, what greeted me was silence, thick, cold, and suffocating. The kind of silence that didn't come from peace.

It came from power.

And from someone who knew he owned every inch of the air I was about to breathe.

I stepped out.

The hallway stretched forward like a black mirror corridor, walls made of tinted glass, marble floors kissed by soft light, and quiet so deep it hummed in my bones.

I swallowed.

This wasn't an office.

It was a throne room.

And the man waiting inside was the king.

A woman in an all-black suit stepped forward with flawless posture.

"Miss Reece," she said. "Mr. Sterling is ready for you."

Ready.

The word hit me like ice water.

He was expecting me.

Wanting this meeting.

Waiting for it.

I followed her down the corridor, my heels clicking sharply, too  loudly, like an accidental rebellion against the oppressive quiet. My heartbeat thudded in my ears, matching the rhythm of my steps.

We stopped in front of two enormous black glass doors.

The assistant pushed one open.

"Go right in."

I inhaled slowly.

Held it.

And walked inside.

His office, no, his penthouse office, was  cathedral-level massive.

A sweeping wall of floor-to-ceiling windows revealed a breathtaking, dizzying view of the entire city below, cars like ants, buildings like toys, the world so small it could fit into his palm.

The room itself was minimalist and cold: black steel, dark marble, sharp lines. No personal photos. No clutter. No weakness.

And there he stood.

Back turned to me.

Hands in his pockets.

Staring out at the skyline like he owned every building, every streetlight, every breath the city took.

My lungs tightened.

Rhys Sterling.

Older.

Broader.

Colder.

Dangerously composed.

The boy I knew was gone.

This man...

This man felt like the final version of a prophecy.

I opened my mouth.

Before I could speak, his voice cut through the stillness.

Low.

Smooth.

Precise.

"You're early."

My heart jolted.

He hadn't even turned around.

I found my voice. "You replied late."

A pause, barely a second, but enough for tension to curl in the air.

Then he finally turned.

And the world tilted.

Those dark, unreadable eyes locked onto mine, eyes I used to recognize instantly, eyes that once softened when they looked at me.

Now they were guarded.

Sharp.

Like glass that could cut.

He studied me without blinking.

Five years of silence in one long, slow sweep.

"You look the same," he said quietly.

My pulse stuttered.

I didn't know if it was a compliment or an accusation.

"I don't," I whispered.

A corner of his mouth lifted, not a smile.

More like acknowledgment.

"No," he agreed. "You don't."

He took a step forward.

Just one.

It was enough to pull the air out of my lungs.

"How long have you been back in town?" he asked.

His tone was almost casual.

Almost.

"Since the boutique started drowning," I answered. "Since... everything fell apart."

His jaw flexed.

A flicker of something, anger? frustration?, crossed his face before disappearing.

"And this marriage," he said, "you're prepared for it?"

Prepared?

I felt my body stiffen. "Are you?"

He didn't blink.

"I wouldn't have put my name on the list if I wasn't."

My chest tightened.

There it was.

Confirmation that he chose this.

Not the trustees.

Not a coincidence.

Him.

"Why?" I asked, too fast, too raw. "Why your name? Why now?"

For the first time, his gaze wavered.

Barely.

But I saw it.

"It's not relevant."

"It is to me."

He exhaled through his nose, controlled frustration.

"You're thinking emotionally," he said. "This is a business arrangement."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the only one you need."

A spark of anger flared in my chest.

He was doing it again.

Building walls.

Controlling the narrative.

Silencing everything that mattered.

I stepped closer.

"Five years," I said softly. "You owe me more than business."

Silence.

Then he stepped toward me, closing the gap until only inches, painful inches, remained.

His presence swallowed the space between us.

He looked down at me with eyes too sharp, too intense.

"I owe you nothing," he said.

The words stung.

But when he said them, his voice shook, just barely.

Just enough for me to hear the lie.

I should've stepped back.

I should've remembered this was negotiation, not emotion.

But his eyes, 

God.

They pulled me in like gravity.

"What do you want from me, Rhys?" I asked, barely breathing.

His gaze dropped to my mouth.

My breath hitched.

Something hot and dangerous sparked between us, familiar and terrifying.

"I want clarity," he murmured.

"About the contract?"

"About you."

My heart stopped.

"Rhys..."

His hand lifted.

I froze.

He touched my chin, lightly, carefully, like I might break. The shock of warmth shot straight through me, burning everything I thought I'd buried.

"You walked into my building," he said softly. "Into my office. Into my world..."

His thumb brushed the corner of my jaw.

A trembling breath escaped me.

"...and you're acting like I'm the one invading yours."

Heat curled low in my stomach.

His face was inches from mine.

Dangerously close.

Much too close.

"Rhys," I whispered again, this time without strength.

His eyes darkened.

"Say my name like that again," he said quietly, "and I will forget every reason I had to stay professional today."

My knees almost buckled.

Then, 

A sharp vibration tore through the room.

His phone.

The moment shattered.

He stepped back quickly, too quickly, ripping the warmth away.

I steadied myself.

He didn't look at me.

He didn't speak.

He turned toward his desk, picked up the phone, and silenced it.

When he finally faced me again, the fortress was back.

Walls rebuilt.

Control restored.

"We need to discuss terms," he said, tone flat.

I swallowed hard.

Of course.

Of course he would hide behind business.

He always had.

I straightened my shoulders.

"Fine," I said. "Terms."

But my voice wasn't steady.

His eyes flicked to me.

They softened, just for a heartbeat.

"Reece."

My name on his lips felt like a bruise.

"This won't be easy," he said.

"No," I replied. "It won't."

"We'll fight."

"Most likely."

"You'll hate me."

"I already do."

A breath of a laugh escaped him, pained, bitter.

"Then we're starting honestly."

Silence wrapped around us again.

But this time, it wasn't empty.

It was heavy.

Charged.

Alive.

"We will sign the preliminary agreement tomorrow," he said.

I nodded.

"And today?" I asked.

His eyes held mine.

"Today," he said softly, "you walk out of here knowing one thing."

I waited.

He stepped closer again, just enough for the air to crackle.

"You're not the only one who isn't ready."

My breath caught.

Before I could speak, he turned away.

Conversation over.

Meeting done.

Feelings boxed.

But my heart, 

My heart was a live wire, sparking uncontrollably.

I walked toward the door.

At the threshold, I looked back.

He was staring at the skyline again.

Hands in his pockets.

Back to me.

Walls up.

But his reflection in the glass, 

God.

His reflection was watching me.

Not the city.

Me.

I turned and walked out before I could crumble.

The elevator doors closed behind me.

My pulse raced.

My lips tingled.

And every step away from the Black Glass Tower felt like stepping out of the gravity of a star I wasn't sure I could escape again.

You may also like

After His Mistress Killed My Son, I Ran Novel Cover
8.1
After her son’s life is cruelly taken by her husband’s mistress, a devastated mother decides she can no longer endure the betrayal and pain. Surrounded by the cold indifference of her billionaire husband, she chooses to disappear entirely, leaving her shattered past behind. This heart-wrenching modern romance follows her journey of escape as she seeks a fresh start, driven by the memory of her lost child and the need to break free from a toxic legacy.
Betrayed Wife Fights Back Novel Cover
8.3
After three years of a cold marriage, Isabella discovers her billionaire husband, Gabriel, has been maintaining a secret affair. Heartbroken by his betrayal and the cruelty of his elite family, she refuses to leave quietly. Instead of wallowing, Isabella reinvented herself to reclaim her dignity and fortune. As she systematically dismantles Gabriel's reputation and power, the man who once ignored her finds himself obsessed with winning her back.
Damian Cross : The Stranger I Paid To Ruin Me Novel Cover
8.3
Desperate to escape a forced marriage to a cruel man, Elara Vance takes a dangerous gamble. She hires Damian Cross, a cold and enigmatic billionaire known for his ruthless reputation, to ruin her social standing and break the engagement. However, the price of his help is far higher than she imagined. As Damian systematically dismantles her life, Elara finds herself trapped in a high-stakes game of desire and power where the lines of control blur.
Loathe by the Billionaire  Novel Cover
7.2
Kayla Robinson is at her breaking point. After catching her boyfriend and her best friend, in the backseat of her own car, her world shatters. To make matters worse, she's broke and in debt. Just when she thinks she has hit rock bottom, her powerful, and intimidating boss, Damien Blackwood, CEO of Blackwood Industries makes her an offer she can't refuse. Damien needs a wife to secure his corporate empire, and he's chosen Kayla for the role. She must play the part of the powerful Mrs. Blackwood while fighting her growing attraction to a man who is as dangerous as he is handsome. Now she's part of a high stakes game. When secrets unfold and traitors are revealed, would she be able to see it through? How long will it take for her to fall for Damien and breach her contract? Or will Damien fall for her first?
Married to My Enemy Billionaire Novel Cover
8.4
The night her father is arrested outside their Manhattan townhouse, Amara Bennett's world collapses under flashing cameras and whispered accusations. Behind the chaos stands one man. Damian Wolfe. New York's most feared billionaire CEO - ruthless, controlled, untouchable. Years ago, Amara's father betrayed him. Now Damian wants revenge. He offers her a deal: Marry him for one year. Play the perfect wife. And he will make her father's charges disappear. It's supposed to be punishment. A calculated humiliation. But inside his glass penthouse high above Manhattan, hatred begins to blur into desire. And when Amara uncovers a secret that proves her father may have been framed, she realizes she didn't just marry her enemy... She married a man who might destroy everything she loves. Because in New York, power is everything. And love is the most dangerous weakness of all.
My Fiancé Gambled Me to His Seven Brothers Novel Cover
8.2
After losing a high-stakes gamble, Chloe is handed over by her own fiancé to his seven powerful and enigmatic brothers. Trapped in a world of immense wealth and dark secrets, she must navigate the complex dynamics of the elite siblings who now claim to own her. As she struggles for her freedom, Chloe finds herself entangled in a web of obsession and billionaire rivalry, where the line between her captors and her protectors begins to blur.