
The Golden Boy's Contract
Nafisa Musa, a driven university student from Kaduna, Nigeria, works as a cleaner at one of Madrid's most famous football stadiums, saving every cent to finance her dream business back home. Her disciplined life shatters the night she attends a staff celebration. Devastated and drunk after a betrayal, world-class midfielder Diego Herrera encounters Nafisa, and in a moment of raw, desperate honesty, they share an unprotected night of passion.
When Nafisa discovers she is pregnant, she chooses silence over scandal. However, Diego's ruthless agent, Eduardo, quickly uncovers the truth. To protect his star's immaculate brand, Eduardo intercepts Nafisa and offers her a massive, life-changing financial contract, a legally binding agreement for complete silence and separation. Nafisa, viewing the money as the only way to secure a future for her child and launch her dream business, signs the "Unspoken Contract."
Months later, Diego, haunted by the memory of that one authentic night, discovers his agent's deceit. He is forced to confront the truth: he has a child, and his own team and privilege have stripped him of the choice to be a father. He must now fight his gilded cage and the cold contract to prove to the fiercely independent Nafisa that his love is more real than the money that bought her silence.
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Chapter 3
The headache was not merely pain; it was a punishment, a persistent, throbbing reminder of the previous night’s spectacular failure. Diego tried to focus on the perfect emerald stripes of the pitch, the smell of damp grass and fertilizer, anything concrete, but his mind was a broken projector, flashing brief, confusing images.
He had been out here for an hour, running drills that were purely mechanical. His body moved, but his reflexes were sluggish. His precision was gone.
He remembered the bitter sting of betrayal. He remembered the whisky. And then, he remembered the dark eyes, the sharp voice, the raw, beautiful fury of a woman who was real.
Who was she?
The question was a frantic mosquito buzzing around his consciousness. He could recall the energy, the fierce conviction when she spoke of her business, of Kaduna, but he could not picture her face clearly. He had sought authenticity, and now the price for that moment of honesty was a gap in his memory that felt terrifyingly significant.
He had looked up toward the VIP boxes, feeling an odd, pulling sensation, as if she were still there. He had squinted into the glass, trying to pierce the reflection, but the glare had been too strong.
A familiar voice, smooth as polished steel, cut across the pitch. "Running drills already, Diego? That's the spirit."
Eduardo was striding across the sideline, impeccably dressed in a tailored suit that seemed impervious to the humidity. He looked fresh, alert, and entirely devoid of human weakness, a perfect counterpoint to Diego’s internal wreck.
Diego stopped, letting his breath hiss out. "Couldn't sleep, Eduardo."
"Naturally. The press is already running the photos of Isabella and the sponsor. It's messy. Good thing we have damage control." Eduardo held up a sleek tablet, dismissing the matter with a wave of his hand. "We have a pre-recorded statement scheduled. A sincere expression of disappointment, a promise to focus on football, a reminder of your charity work. It’s all very Golden Boy."
Diego felt the familiar knot of revulsion at the mention of his carefully managed persona. "Do you ever get tired of the act?"
Eduardo’s smile was thin and pitying. "I get tired of losing revenue, Diego. And last night was an expensive indiscretion. You disappeared for nearly two hours. We had the President of the Federation asking after you."
He lowered his voice, his expression hardening. "More importantly, there are whispers. Security had a breach report, minor, regarding a staff key card. And there are, well, rumors of a non-authorized guest leaving your private area at sunrise."
Diego’s blood ran cold. He gripped the football in his hands, the leather digging into his palms. "I don't know what you're talking about." The lie felt clumsy and weak.
"I think you do," Eduardo pressed. "You were heavily intoxicated, Diego. You were grieving. I understand. But you cannot afford a mistake that bleeds into the public arena. The narrative of the heartbroken, dedicated star is valuable. The narrative of the star drunkenly sleeping with a stadium employee is a disaster. It hints at abuse of power, it smells of scandal, it will cost us every lucrative, family-friendly deal on the table."
Eduardo stepped closer, his voice dropping to a confidential whisper that held immense menace. "I have already dealt with the security report. We pinned the missing card on a dismissed night guard. The cleaner who saw you disappear, a man named Javier, has been generously tipped and instructed to forget the entire event. I need your word, Diego, that whoever that woman was, she is gone."
Diego stared out at the goalpost, his jaw tight. A storm of memory was trying to break through the fog. He knew Eduardo was lying about Javier’s "generous tip"; the agent dealt in threats veiled as transactions. But what if the woman was a staff member? He had seen the intense ambition in her eyes, the desperate need. If he was honest, she was the opposite of Isabella. She was not looking for fame.
But what if she wanted money? The cynical voice of his fame-crushed self rose up. Everyone wanted something.
"She was nobody, Eduardo," Diego lied again, tasting the ash of the whisky and his shame. "It was dark. I barely remember. Just a desperate mistake."
Eduardo relaxed, brushing an invisible speck from Diego’s shoulder. "Excellent. That's all I needed to hear. Now, go hit the showers. We have a meeting with the media team to ensure your sincere expression of disappointment sells."
As Eduardo walked away, his stride proprietary and confident, Diego felt a crushing sense of inevitability. He was a product, a commodity, and Eduardo was the warehouse manager. The woman, whoever she was, had been a random act of vandalism, quickly cleaned up.
He kicked the ball wildly, sending it soaring high over the empty stands and crashing into the far perimeter fence with a muffled thud. He hated himself for lying, and he hated Eduardo for making the lie necessary. His desire for authenticity had already been leveraged into a cover-up. The weight of his obligation, the crushing sense of needing to be the Golden Boy, had won.
Diego retreated toward the tunnel, his headache pounding a rhythm against his skull: Gone. Gone. Gone.
Meanwhile, across the city, in a small, slightly run-down apartment that smelled faintly of old plaster and strong coffee, Nafisa Musa was methodically preparing for her day. She was not a morning person, but she was a disciplined person, and discipline always trumped desire.
She sat at her small, rickety desk, reviewing the first chapter of her marketing final. The words swam slightly. She was running on three hours of sleep and an unsettling nervousness she couldn't shake.
She felt different. Not just physically tired, but fundamentally altered, like a fault line had opened in her carefully constructed routine. The mistake of the previous night was a heavy stone in her stomach.
You have worked too hard to ruin this over one drunk celebrity, she chastised herself, tapping a pen against the text book. Focus on the degree. Focus on the money.
But her mind kept drifting to the hallway, to the raw, broken look in Diego Herrera’s eyes. She had seen through the star to the scared, damaged man underneath. That was the problem; she had felt empathy, a dangerous, expensive emotion that had led her to abandon her most sacred rule: Never be reckless.
She remembered leaving the dark office, slipping out before the first hint of gray light touched the sky. She had walked for miles, shaking off the lingering effects of the alcohol and the intense, temporary connection.
Nafisa had stopped by a pharmacist on her way home, her hands clammy. She had purchased an emergency contraceptive pill, paid for with the day’s cleaning wages, and swallowed it immediately. It was a humiliating, terrifying, necessary precaution.
It is dealt with. It is over, she repeated, reciting the words like a business mantra. Risk mitigated. Losses confined.
She closed her textbook with a snap and stood up, reaching for her coat. She had a second job now, tutoring a Spanish teenager in economics via video conference. It was more money, slower money, but cleaner money. She needed to earn back the wages she had just spent on the pill, and she needed to double her savings rate. The fear was a powerful accelerant.
Just as she reached the door, a tiny flash of light from the floor caught her eye. It was small, silver, and complex. Nafisa bent down and picked it up.
It was a key card. Not the magnetic strip type used for the main stadium doors, but a high-level access card, engraved with a small, stylized crest of the club's administration and an encoded number.
She recognized the card. It was one of the Master Access cards used to enter the exclusive executive suites, the medical wing, and, most importantly, the private changing room corridor. Diego’s private corridor. It must have fallen from his wallet or pocket during their frantic encounter in the darkened office.
Nafisa’s blood ran cold for a second, then a hot wave of panic washed over her.
This was not a mistake. This was evidence. This was a tether.
If the card was reported missing, and security reviewed the cameras from the night, her presence in that hallway would not be difficult to verify. Her visa, her job, her entire, carefully constructed life in Spain could be instantly compromised. She could be accused of theft, of using her access to steal proprietary club information.
She stared at the card. It was a ticking time bomb.
She had to get rid of it. But throwing it away was too risky; someone might find it. She couldn't mail it; that would leave a paper trail. She had to return it discreetly, silently.
But how do you sneak a key card back into the highest security areas of a famous stadium without being seen?
A new, terrifying thought gripped her. She looked down at the card, then up at the faded printout of her business plan tacked to the wall.
What if I already failed to mitigate the risk? What if the pill doesn't work?
The nausea she had felt all morning intensified, now mixed with a chilling, financial fear. If she was pregnant, her two years of careful planning would evaporate. Her dreams of Kaduna would become impossible. She would have to disappear, find a low-wage job in the shadows, and forget her degree.
She slipped the key card into the deepest, most secret pocket of her wallet, the one she reserved for emergency cash. It felt heavy and cold, a new, unwelcome debt against her future.
Nafisa knew two things with absolute certainty: she had to get that key card back, and she had to know, quickly, if her single, drunken moment of recklessness had permanently derailed her life. The nine months ahead were a terrifying fiscal cliff, and the pill she had taken was just a single, flimsy safety net. She was now running a desperate race against her own biology.
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8.7
On her eighteenth birthday, Elinor thought she was finally an adult. But a single text message reminded her she was just property.
Boyd Walker, the ruthless billionaire who dictated her every breath, threw a contract onto her bed. He had bought her adoptive father's medical debt—one billion dollars. And she was the sole collateral.
The punishment for even a hint of rebellion was catastrophic.
When her disabled friend tried to check on her, Boyd had his good leg shattered in front of a live security feed just to teach her a lesson.
When she fought off an entitled frat boy at school and came back with a bleeding arm, Boyd didn't comfort her.
Driven by a twisted, suffocating jealousy, he held her under a freezing bath, then tied a red thread with a silver bell around her ankle.
"You are a pet that needs to learn its boundaries."
Every time she moved, the high-pitched ring was a humiliating reminder of her gilded cage. The billion-dollar debt was a chain she could never break, and the monster holding the leash would destroy anyone who dared to help her.
Stripped of her money, her friends, and her dignity, Elinor lay completely still in the dark room for three days, refusing all food and water.
If Boyd wouldn't give her freedom, she would take the only thing she had left to control—her own death.

8.5
I was Landon Mercer's secret girlfriend and loyal assistant for four years. I thought my absolute devotion would eventually win his heart.
But he casually announced his engagement to a wealthy heiress, reminding me I was just a convenient nobody from an orphanage.
When I got trapped in a horrific car crash and begged him to call an ambulance, he just hung up on me, annoyed that my bleeding was ruining his romantic getaway.
He even blackmailed me with my orphanage's land lease, forcing me to attend his engagement party as a prop.
At the party, his elite family and friends brutally humiliated me.
They deliberately crushed my broken arm, poured red wine over my head, and kicked me into a freezing pond.
When Landon finally pulled me out, he didn't care that I was suffocating and turning blue.
"Are you out of your mind? You come out here and cause a scene during my engagement party?"
He threw a stack of cash at my shivering body, furious that I had embarrassed him in front of his wealthy guests.
Looking at the hundred-dollar bills floating in the muddy water, my four years of foolish love completely died.
To him, I wasn't even human; I was just a cheap toy he could abuse and pass around.
I didn't cry, and I didn't beg.
I dragged my soaked, battered body into a car and headed straight to the penthouse of his biggest billionaire rival.
It was time to burn Landon Mercer's world to the ground.

8.9
She wanted stability. She found Adrian Blackwell. Dominant, dangerous, and determined to make her his.
After catching her boyfriend of three years cheating, Elena Carter swore never to fall in love again. On a reckless whim, she walked into a blind date arranged by her family and impulsively proposed a flash marriage.
All she wanted was a quiet, dependable man.
What she got was Adrian Blackwell-a ruthless billionaire known for crushing rivals with a single glance. Cold to the world, dangerously charming behind closed doors, Adrian doesn't ask. He takes.
From the moment she slips on his ring, Adrian makes one thing clear:
"You're mine, Elena. No man touches what belongs to me."
But as whispers of his past lovers surface, Elena's heart twists with emotions she swore she'd buried-jealousy, heartbreak... longing. Then, a brutal accident unearths a forgotten memory: a reckless one-night stand years ago... with the same face as her husband's.
Everything falls into place.
Every twist, every detour
It was always Adrian.

8.4
When Emma Walsh catches her boyfriend cheating just days before their holiday getaway, she's left heartbroken, homeless and jobless. Stranded in New York City with nothing but her luggage, she wanders into a bar where one reckless night with a brooding stranger changes everything. Liam O'Connor, an emotionally guarded man who is a brilliant lawyer and a single father, had promised his mother that he would return with his girlfriend. With Christmas fast approaching, he needs a fake girlfriend to survive the holidays back home. And Emma needs a fresh start with a little revenge. The deal is simple: fake smiles, pretend love with no real feelings. But when Emma meets his adorable daughter, bonds with his mother, who is warm-hearted, and starts to notice the cracks in Liam's cold exterior, the difference between real and fake starts to blur. Especially when his ex returns and secrets from the past threaten to uncover everything.
Can two broken hearts find something good under the mistletoe?

8.7
The monsters we killed came back wearing our children's faces.
The moon we murdered is singing again from inside the girl who murdered it.
One mother with claws and one daughter with a god in her teeth must descend beneath the lake where the dead rehearse the end of the world.
This time the lock is a heartbeat.
This time the key has to break herself to turn.

9.1
The best way to get back at a cheating bastard? Make him sick to his stomach for the rest of his life!
Days before her wedding, Corinne caught her fiancé cheating with his coworker in what she thought was their future home.
Furious, she tore everything apart, ended the engagement, and decided on a bold revenge plan.
To make him regret it for life, she set her sights on marrying his powerful uncle. Confident in her scheme, she tried to win over the cold, untouchable man, only to realize too late that she had mistaken his identity.
The man she married was far more dangerous than she imagined!
Corinne decided to make a quick escape. "Let's get a divorce. We're clearly not right for each other... "
He cornered her with a knowing smile, "Not right for each other? Funny, that's not what you said last night in bed. Want me to remind you how wrong you are?"