
The ceo's obsession
Mason Blackwell doesn't do weakness. The 38-year-old billionaire built his tech empire on ruthless control-until one moonlit night in his forgotten hometown, he watches her paint rebellion across the walls he's about to demolish.
Harper Voss, 21, is a wildfire in human form: broke, brilliant, and allergic to authority. Her murals scream freedom; her eyes dare anyone to cage her. One look at her defiant brushstrokes shatters Mason's iron rules. He doesn't want her permission. He wants her everything.
He starts small-buying her studio's lease, whispering threats to her employers, orchestrating "coincidences" that trap her in his orbit. Protection disguised as possession. Gifts laced with chains. Every move calculated to make her need him, crave him, break for him.
Harper pushes back hard-defacing his billboards with savage art, spitting fire at his arrogance, refusing to bend. But the heat between them is lethal. His touch brands her; her resistance only feeds his madness. When a dangerous rival sets his sights on Harper-her talent, her body, her future-Mason's control snaps.
He'll destroy empires, cross every line, and claim her in ways she never imagined. Because in Mason's world, obsession isn't love.
It's ownership.
And Harper is about to learn she's already his.
Possessive. Ruthless. Irresistible.
A standalone dark billionaire romance with intense age-gap tension, morally gray obsession, and an HEA that burns.
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Chapter 2
Harper Voss didn't run.
She walked-fast, deliberate strides carrying her away from the warehouse, backpack slung over one shoulder, paint still wet on her skin like war paint. The night air bit at the drying crimson streaks down her throat and between her breasts, a constant reminder of Mason Blackwell's fingers, his breath, the hard ridge of him pressed against her thigh.
She refused to look back.
But she felt him watching. Felt it like a physical touch crawling up her spine.
Her phone burned in her pocket. The unknown number's message looped in her head: Finish the job or the mural isn't the only thing that burns tonight.
She'd been painting sabotage murals for the local activist collective for months-small, anonymous hits against the developers circling Oakwood like vultures. This Blackwell guy was the biggest one yet. And now he'd seen her face. Touched her. Tasted the air between them.
She turned down the narrow alley behind her rented studio, heart hammering. The building was a crumbling brick two-story with peeling paint and a back door that never quite locked right. She slipped inside, bolted the deadbolt, and leaned against it, breathing hard.
The fluorescent bulb overhead buzzed to life.
Her studio looked like chaos had thrown up: canvases stacked against walls, spray cans in milk crates, half-finished pieces dripping color onto tarps. In the center stood her latest commission-a massive canvas she'd been avoiding for weeks. A portrait. Not of a person. Of power. A man in a sharp suit, face half-shadowed, eyes cold. She'd started it as satire after hearing Blackwell's name whispered in town meetings. Now it felt prophetic.
She stripped off her tank top-too stained, too ruined-and tossed it in the sink. Standing in just her bra and jeans, she stared at the portrait. The painted version of him looked back, almost smug.
A knock.
Three sharp raps on the back door.
Her pulse spiked.
She froze.
Another knock-slower, more insistent.
"Harper."
His voice. Low. Velvet. Right through the thin metal door.
She didn't answer.
"I know you're in there." A pause. "I can smell the paint."
She pressed her forehead to the cool steel. "Go away, Blackwell."
Silence stretched. Then the doorknob rattled-gently at first, testing.
"I don't like being told no."
Her laugh came out shaky. "Get used to it."
The rattling stopped.
She exhaled, thinking he'd left.
Then she heard it: the soft click of something electronic. A beep.
Her stomach dropped.
She spun, eyes darting to the corners of the room. High on the far wall, tucked behind a stack of frames, a tiny red light blinked once-then steadied.
A camera.
Freshly installed. Professional grade. Not hers.
Rage boiled up hot and fast.
She grabbed a ladder, climbed, and yanked the device free. Wires trailed like veins. She crushed it under her boot, glass crunching.
Then she stormed to the door and flung it open.
Mason stood there-coat unbuttoned, shirt still smeared with her paint, sleeves rolled to reveal corded forearms. He didn't look surprised. He looked... satisfied.
"You broke my camera," he said mildly.
"You put a fucking camera in my studio."
"Security." He stepped forward without invitation. She didn't move aside. Their bodies brushed-chest to chest-in the narrow doorway. "For your safety."
"Bullshit." She shoved at him. He caught her wrists again, same grip as before. Firm. Unyielding.
His eyes dropped to her bare torso. To the black lace bra barely containing her, paint still streaking her skin. To the way her chest rose and fell with fury.
"You should cover up," he murmured. "Unless you want me to finish what we started outside."
Heat flooded her cheeks-and lower. Traitorous body. She jerked her wrists free. "You think you can just-"
He moved faster than she expected.
One hand cupped the back of her neck, the other splayed across her lower back, pulling her flush against him. Her breasts crushed to his chest. His thigh wedged between hers again-higher this time, pressing right where she ached despite herself.
"You think I won't?" His mouth hovered over hers. Close enough she tasted mint and danger on his breath. "I already own this building, Harper. Lease signed yesterday. You're renting from me now."
Her eyes widened.
"And I own the street cameras. The utility records. The coffee shop where you work mornings." His thumb stroked the paint line down her throat-slow, deliberate. "I own every door between you and the world tonight."
She should have screamed. Kneed him. Run.
Instead her hips rocked forward-tiny, involuntary-grinding against the thick length straining his trousers.
He groaned. Low. Animal.
"That's it," he breathed against her lips. "Fight me all you want. Your body already knows who it belongs to."
She bit his lower lip-hard enough to draw blood.
He hissed, then kissed her.
Not gentle.
Devouring.
Tongue claiming her mouth like he'd been starving for it. One hand fisted in her hair, angling her head; the other slid down to grip her ass, lifting her onto her toes so his cock notched perfectly against her core through denim.
She moaned into his mouth-hated herself for it-then kissed him back just as viciously. Teeth clashing. Nails digging into his shoulders through fabric.
He backed her into the studio, kicking the door shut behind them. Pushed her against the nearest wall-right beside her half-finished portrait of him.
The irony wasn't lost on either of them.
He broke the kiss only to drag his mouth down her neck, following the paint trail. Tongue flicked out-tasting crimson and salt and her skin. She arched, fingers threading into his hair, pulling hard.
"Not here," she gasped. "Not like this."
He lifted his head. Eyes black with hunger. "Then where?"
She shoved him back-hard. He let her, but only a step.
She reached behind, unclasped her bra. Let it fall.
His gaze devoured her bare breasts-nipples tight, flushed. Paint still streaked across them like deliberate marks.
"Upstairs," she said, voice rough. "My apartment. If you're going to ruin me, do it where no one can hear me scream your name."
A slow, dangerous smile curved his bloodied lip.
He scooped her up-effortless, bridal style-her legs wrapping around his waist instinctively. His cock pressed right against her soaked center as he carried her toward the narrow stairs at the back.
Halfway up, he paused. Pinned her to the wall again. Ground against her in slow, torturous circles.
She whimpered-actual sound of need.
"Say it," he growled.
"Say what?"
"That you're mine tonight."
She laughed breathlessly. "I'm nobody's."
He thrust harder-once, punishing. Stars burst behind her eyes.
"Lie to me again," he warned, "and I'll edge you until dawn without letting you come."
Her nails scored his neck.
"Fine," she hissed. "Tonight... I'm yours to break."
He rewarded her with a deep, filthy kiss-then carried her the rest of the way.
The apartment door slammed behind them.
He dropped her on the bed-mattress dipping under their weight.
He loomed over her, shedding his ruined shirt. Muscles carved from years of control, scars she didn't expect tracing his ribs-old fights, old pain.
She reached for his belt.
He caught her wrist.
"Not yet."
He pinned both her hands above her head with one of his. The other trailed down her body-slow, possessive. Cupped one breast, thumb circling the nipple until she writhed.
"Please," she whispered-hated how desperate she sounded.
He leaned down. Mouth hovered over her ear.
"I told you. I take what I want."
His fingers dipped beneath her waistband-found her drenched.
She bucked.
He circled her clit-once, feather-light.
Then stopped.
Her eyes flew open.
"Mason-"
A knock echoed from downstairs.
Violent. Urgent.
Then a voice-male, unfamiliar.
"Harper! Open up! It's Ethan. We need to talk-now. Langston's men are circling the block. They know about the mural."
Mason's hand froze between her thighs.
His eyes met hers-dark, lethal.
"Who the fuck is Ethan?"
Her breath caught.
And in that suspended heartbeat, the sound of shattering glass came from below.
The back door.
Someone had just broken in.
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8.6
I was eight months pregnant with the heir to the city's most powerful crime family. My husband, Austen, told me he was hosting a private celebration to honor me and the baby.
But when I walked into the warehouse, the steel doors slammed shut behind me.
I wasn't in a ballroom. I was locked inside an industrial glass freezer.
Through the thick glass, I saw Austen standing with his assistant, Deb. They were laughing. He told me he didn't care about his son; he only cared about the trust fund that would unlock upon my father's death.
"Cool her off," he ordered.
His men dumped buckets of ice water onto me. The shock was instant. I begged him to stop, screaming for the life of our child, but he just watched with cold eyes.
As I collapsed into a slush of ice and my own blood, I felt the baby fade away.
Austen thought he had won. He thought my father, the Don, was dead and buried. He thought I was just a helpless, spoiled princess he could dispose of to seize the throne.
He was wrong.
With my last ounce of strength, I looked through the glass and mouthed three words: "He is coming."
Before Austen could react, the warehouse doors didn't just open—they exploded inward.
And through the smoke walked the man Austen thought was worm food.
My father wasn't dead. But my husband was about to wish he was.

8.3
'Happy married life Liora,' my stepsister, Camille, chuckled, mockery dripping from her voice.
She leaned closer to me, her lips brushing against my ear as her voice dropped down to a whisper,
'Though your husband already started it with another woman.'
****
Sold off in a marriage of convenience to save her dying father and his crumbling company, Liora Bennett thought she was prepared for any sacrifice. But nothing could prepare her for Sebastian Carvers.
The ruthless billionaire who is just as cold as he is handsome, and he makes it devastatingly clear that she is just an unwanted burden in his life.
But Liora is about to discover that she didn't just walk into a miserable marriage- she walked straight into his trap and she would never be able to resist a man like him.
Now, with her father's legacy and her own future on the line, her only choice is to outmaneuver the most powerful and cunning man she's ever met. Can she beat him at his own game before he destroys everything she has left?

9.7
For seven years, I was Grant Charles’s shadow—his top executive assistant by day and the woman in his bed by night. I managed his billion-dollar empire and handled his every crisis, believing our bond was the one thing his money couldn't buy.
Everything shattered when I walked into his penthouse and found Aimee Austin sitting on his lap, wearing nothing but his favorite white dress shirt. Grant didn't even look guilty; he just stared at me with cold, arrogant eyes and told me I was dripping rain on his expensive Persian rug.
When I tried to resign, he showed me exactly how cruel he could be. He knew I had drained my life savings to pay for my mother’s specialized care for her dementia. "Without my salary and the foundation subsidy, she’ll be on the street in a month," he whispered, his voice dripping with malice. "Is your pride really worth her life?"
He didn't stop there. He tried to break my spirit by publicly humiliating me at a high-end restaurant, orchestrating a "setup" to show me that without his protection, I was nothing more than a common servant. He wanted me to realize that without him, I was a nobody with no future.
I couldn't believe the man I had protected for nearly a decade was weaponizing my dying mother to keep me as his subordinate. He thought he owned every inch of me, and he was waiting for me to come crawling back on my knees to beg for my old life.
But Grant made one fatal mistake: he assumed I was a charity case. He had no idea I was the secret heir to the billion-dollar Klein Trust, currently frozen behind a single marriage clause. I didn't need his money; I just needed a husband.
Instead of begging for my job, I walked straight into the office of the only man Grant feared—the ruthless litigator Julian Vance. I threw a marriage contract on his desk and gave him an offer he couldn't refuse. It was time to stop being a shadow and start a war.

7.0
For three years, I played the perfect, submissive wife to Alpha Julian Sterling.
When I finally got pregnant with his heir, I thought it would warm his cold heart. But the first thing he did when he returned from his trip was hand me a Mate Rejection Agreement.
He had brought back his ex-lover, Serena.
Julian coldly declared our marriage was just a political chore. To clear the path for her, he fired me from the company I built, watched her mock my late father, and threatened to throw me out as Rogue meat if I didn't submit.
The most chilling part was a hidden clause in the divorce papers. It stated that because I was a wolfless Omega, if I were ever pregnant, he would terminate the pup to protect his pure bloodline.
I had given him everything, only to be discarded like trash. I touched my flat stomach, terrified and disgusted that the man I loved would gladly kill his own child just to please his new queen.
"Prepare the documents to accept the rejection," I told my lawyer calmly.
Julian thought he had won, throwing away his useless, barren Omega. He had no idea I was taking his only heir with me, and I would burn his entire empire to the ground before he ever found out.

7.6
The harsh glare of the spotlight hit Harper's custom wedding dress as she smiled at her groom.
But a single phone call from his mistress, Lila, made Chase violently shove his way down the aisle and sprint out of the hotel.
He left Harper to face the flashing cameras and the mockery of hundreds of guests.
Her mother-in-law dragged her into a hallway and slapped her hard across the face.
"You cannot even keep your own man in the room. You are making a mockery of this family."
When Harper rushed to the hospital, Chase blamed her for Lila's theatrical, fake miscarriage.
He threatened to pull every cent of capital from Harper's investment firm if she dared to walk away.
The Young family then used the media to frame Harper, turning her into a public pariah who viciously "killed" an unborn child.
Mobbed by ruthless paparazzi, Harper was pushed into the freezing rain, her knees bleeding on the concrete.
She couldn't accept that her entire life and career were being destroyed by a mistress's pathetic lie.
When Chase later tried to buy her silence with a pink diamond—the exact same one he had just gifted Lila—her remaining love turned to absolute ice.
But fate intervened when she was rescued from the mob by Antoni Donovan, the most ruthless billionaire on Wall Street and her biggest corporate rival.
Discovering that Antoni was actually her best friend's older brother, a dangerous smile spread across Harper's face.
She picked up his gold-lettered business card.
She was done being the victim; she was going to use the wolf of Wall Street to crush her ex-husband.

7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call.
He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar.
In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave.
But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund.
They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime.
I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess.
The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door.
This time, I didn't shed a single tear.
I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street.
"The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."