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The Contract Omega Novel Cover

The Contract Omega

Twenty-four hours. Half a million dollars. Or his mother dies. Omega Caelen Ryn is out of options: his mother is dying, treatment costs half a million dollars, and loan sharks are closing in with brass knuckles and threats. Then a lawyer appears with an offer from Alpha billionaire CEO Aldric Fenmore: marry him for two years, every debt disappears, and his mother will be saved. The rules are brutal: separate bedrooms, zero feelings, don't fall in love. Their marriage is a transaction. Nothing more. Their first kiss is for the cameras. In public, they play devoted spouses. Behind closed doors, they're strangers. Until Monaco. When Aldric's race car spins out at 200 mph, Caelen realizes the truth-he's fallen in love with his husband. And when Aldric kisses him after his victory, raw and desperate and real, the contract between them shatters completely. They broke every rule. They fell impossibly in love. Aldric's ex returns, the man who destroyed his ability to trust, bringing a ruthless business rival and a plan for revenge. What starts as sabotage escalates into kidnapping, violence, and a premature labor that leaves both their lives hanging by a thread. In the trauma room, as Caelen bleeds out, the doctor delivers words that break Aldric completely: "You have to choose. We can only save one." The husband he loves. Or the child they never planned for. In that impossible moment, every vow they made, every sacrifice they offered, and every fragile dream they built together came down to a single, devastating choice. A contract that was supposed to end. A love that refused to.
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Chapter 5

Caelen POV

The next morning arrived without me.

I didn't wake so much as surface, my eyes already burning, my body weighed down by exhaustion that didn't soften anything. The house was silent, but not the ordinary kind. It felt deliberate. The kind of quiet that only exists because someone decided it should. Somewhere down the hall, a door closed softly. Footsteps crossed thick carpet, unhurried and precise. Nothing rushed. Nothing felt accidental.

When Sebastian knocked, I was already sitting up, staring at the wall as if it might tell me what to do.

"Good morning," he said, as if mornings still belonged to normal people. "I'll show you the essentials."

I followed him because there was nowhere else.

The house was too big.

That was the first thought that settled as we moved down the wide corridor toward the stairs. Not beautiful. Not impressive. Just too big. Big enough that my body felt misplaced, like I had wandered into something that wasn't meant to notice me.

The foyer opened beneath us, marble gleaming, a chandelier heavy with intent. Two curved staircases flanked the space, perfectly symmetrical. The flawlessness made my skin prickle. The kind of place that told you, immediately, when you weren't meant to stay.

My footsteps sounded wrong, too sharp, too human.

Sebastian moved with the calm of someone who no longer saw wealth. He gestured as he spoke, his tone even.

"This is the formal living room."

I looked inside. Furniture arranged for display, not comfort. Chairs angled toward each other, tables polished, meant to be seen, not used.

Next was the dining room. The table could seat twenty, with chairs aligned so precisely that it made my teeth ache. Someone must care too much to keep it perfect, every detail obsessively maintained.

We passed the kitchen. The air changed, citrus cleaner layered over food. Stainless steel and stone gleamed under warm lights. A man in a white jacket moved quietly at the far end, efficient and contained.

"Henri," Sebastian said. "Chef. He'll handle meals and dietary needs."

Henri nodded briefly. Not welcoming, more like an acknowledgment of a routine change. I nodded back, feeling like I didn't belong, and hated myself for trying.

The library stopped me. My feet paused of their own accord. Two stories of shelves, packed with books, some worn, some untouched. A ladder leaned against a section. The smell of paper and dust caught me off guard. I stopped before I realized I had.

Sebastian noticed. "Mr. Fenmore spends time here when his schedule allows," he said softly, his tone shifting like he was speaking about a person, not a title.

We moved on. A home theater with heavy doors. An indoor pool reflecting ceiling lights like dark glass. A gym with equipment arranged as if no one ever sweated here. After a while, the house blurred together, room after room wrapped in the same careful quiet.

"The staff will introduce themselves tomorrow," Sebastian said. "Tonight, only essentials."

"Staff," I echoed.

"Yes. Mrs. Calder is the housekeeper. Mr. Collins manages the grounds. Security rotated in shifts."Elaine was Mr. Fenmore's personal assistant. The way Sebastian said her name made it clear she mattered."

We went upstairs. The second floor held guest rooms and offices, spaces for quiet meetings, quiet lives. Nothing looked accidental.

By the third floor, the atmosphere shifted. Quieter. Insulated. The carpet muffled my steps, as if the house was swallowing sound.

"This level is private," Sebastian said. "Mr. Fenmore's suite is in the east wing. Yours is in the west."

Opposite ends. Close enough to watch, far enough to remain untouched.

He opened a door and stepped aside.

My room was larger than my entire apartment.

The bed looked like it belonged in a showroom, white linens pulled tight. A sitting area with a couch and chairs spaced too far apart. A desk near the window, a computer already set up. A closet lined with empty hangers.

The bathroom was marble and glass, a deep tub, rainfall shower. Towels folded perfectly, toiletries arranged like decorations. Everything in soft blues and grays, elegant, impersonal. Like the room was designed for someone who didn't exist yet.

My suitcase sat on the luggage rack like a joke.

Sebastian's gaze flicked to it. He said nothing.

"Your clothes will arrive tomorrow," he said. "A stylist has been arranged."

Properly. Because what I own isn't enough to exist here.

"Dinner is at seven," he continued. "Breakfast at seven. Mr. Fenmore prefers punctuality."

"Does he expect me at every meal?" I asked.

"Dinner, yes. Breakfast if his schedule allows. He travels often-business and racing."

Racing. That word unsettled me more than his money.

"Rest tonight," Sebastian said. "Tomorrow we'll discuss routines and your schedule."

"My schedule?"

"Public appearances, charity events, family obligations. You're a Fenmore now. There are expectations."

Then he left.

Silence pressed in immediately, loud, oppressive. I stood there, forgetting how to move.

***

In my old apartment, there had always been noise, pipes, neighbors, and traffic. Sometimes it annoyed me, but it also meant I wasn't alone. Here, the house held itself, like it didn't need anyone.

I touched a hanger out of habit. Smooth, heavy, expensive.

My phone buzzed.

Mira.

Haven't heard from you. Is everything okay? How's your mom?

For a moment, I wanted to tell her everything. That I traded my life for my mother's heartbeat. That I didn't know how to breathe here.

But I didn't answer honestly. I couldn't.

Mom had surgery. It went well. I'm dealing with a lot. Will call soon.

Her reply was quick: Okay. Love you. Here if you need me.

I held the phone tighter than I intended, wishing she could be angry for me.

A knock at nine.

I opened the door, Aldric Fenmore.

His tie was loosened, top button undone. It made him look almost human. His eyes were sharp, unreadable.

"May I come in?" he asked.

It was his house. The question still mattered.

"Yes," I said.

He entered, remaining standing.

"I want to set some ground rules."

Of course.

"Privacy," he said. "This is your room. I won't enter without permission. I expect the same with my suite."

"Understood."

"Discretion. Outside these walls, we're a legitimate married couple. Act accordingly."

"What does that mean?" I asked. "Act how?"

"Publicly, we appear connected. Not excessive. Just enough that no one questions it."

A performance.

"Independence," he continued. "You may pursue interests and friendships. No romantic relationships."

"I wouldn't-"

"I know," he said. "Just clarifying."

He handed me a business card with a private number on the back.

"If you need something, ask Sebastian. If it's urgent, contact me."

Our fingers brushed briefly, controlled, warm. He didn't react.

"Boundaries," he added. "Physical and emotional. We're not a real couple. Don't develop expectations beyond the contract."

Pride flared in me.

"I won't," I said. "I'm not interested in you that way."

His face flickered, something quick, gone before I could name it.

"Good," he said. "Then we'll coexist peacefully."

Heavy silence.

"Why me?" I asked. "There must be hundreds of Omegas."

He hesitated.

"Your pheromone profile is compatible with mine. Rarely. It makes the illusion more believable."

"That's it?" I asked. "Compatibility?"

"That, and your background. No entanglements. No motive beyond your mother's safety."

I swallowed. Of course, I was convenient.

"I mean no offense," he said softly. "I needed someone I could trust not to manipulate the situation. You're here for your mother, that's honest. I respect that."

He exhaled slowly.

"One more thing," he added.

His tone sharpened.

"I was engaged once," he said. "Four years ago. An Omega who seemed perfect."

I stayed silent.

"He faked a bond mark. Lied for months. I nearly believed it," he said, voice tightening before he masked it. "He was selling information about my company."

"I'm sorry," I said.

"I don't ask for sympathy," he replied. "Just explaining why I keep my distance. Why does this remains business."

"I'm not him," I whispered.

"I know," he said. "That's why I chose you. You're predictable. Safe."

The word stayed with me longer than it should have.

"Don't make me regret this, Caelen," he said.

First time he used my name.

"I won't," I promised, because I couldn't afford to fail.

He nodded once. Paused at the door.

"Goodnight."

"Goodnight."

When he left, the room felt colder.

Morning arrived too fast.

Mrs. Calder woke me at six with a tray, coffee, pastries, fruit, the kind my mother used to make.

"The ceremony is at eleven," she said gently.

Right. The signing was legal. This was the performance.

By nine, strangers were adjusting my clothes, my hair, my face, until I looked like someone they approved of.

In the mirror, I looked like someone who belonged.

That was the point.

The chapel was small and cold. An officiant, two attorneys, Sebastian, a photographer who didn't smile. No Mira. No mother.

I walked down the aisle alone.

"Do you, Aldric Fenmore, take Caelen Ryn as your lawful spouse?"

"I do."

My turn.

Two years, I thought.

"I do."

The rings were simple platinum, matching.

Aldric's hand enveloped mine, warm, real. His pheromones faintly flared with the touch.

The kiss lasted two seconds, no warmth, no hesitation. Just enough for proof, enough for a picture. He pulled away immediately.

The camera clicked.

A hollow ache hit me, sharp and unexpected. I hadn't expected anything from it. That didn't stop the hollow feeling from settling in afterward.

Congratulations drifted toward Aldric like he'd closed a deal.

I looked down at the ring on my finger.

It didn't sparkle like love.

It felt like a lock clicking shut.

Standing there, I knew I couldn't go back, even if I didn't yet understand what I'd lost.

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