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Bending The Billionaire

Bending The Billionaire

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12 Chapters
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"What do you want in return for saving my brother?" Aria's voice was steady, but inside, her heart raced. Damian Cross didn't blink. "You." One night of chaos binds Aria Vale to New York's most dangerous billionaire. To save her reckless brother from debt collectors, she signs away her freedom in a contract. She thinks she can resist him. She thinks she can bend the rules without breaking. But Damian didn't build an empire by letting anyone defy him. And Aria has never been good at obeying rules. Every defiance pulls her deeper. Every look, every bantar turns their deal into something more, an obsession disguised as desire. And when a rival drags Aria's buried secret into the light, Damian becomes the only man who can keep the truth buried forever and save her relationship with her brother. It started as a deal. But how will it end-love, ruin... or betrayal?

Contents

Chapter 1 Episode One

The low hum of jazz curled through the gallery, soft enough that the hiss of champagne being poured could be heard in the background. The light was angled perfectly to kiss the edges of every frame, each painting lit like it had been blessed by some quiet god. Guests murmured in clumps, slow-moving as they examined the art, but never close enough to touch it.

Aria Vale stood with one foot slightly behind the other, balancing her clipboard against her hip. She smiled with the kind of warmth that put people at ease,

"This piece," said the man in front of her, leaning closer to the oil painting as though proximity would change its price tag, "I'll take it for two-twenty."

He was in his late fifties, well-fed, ruddy-cheeked, with the kind of silver hair that came from expensive salons, not age. His name, according to the RSVP list, was Phillip Lansing. Real estate money. He wore a navy blazer that cost more than Aria's rent, and a tie with a knot so sharp she imagined he'd measured it in the mirror.

Aria tilted her head like she was considering the price.

"Mmm," she murmured, tapping the pen lightly against the clipboard. "Tempting." She let her gaze wander, just briefly, toward the front entrance. "But if I don't call the artist back, she's gonna think it's already sold".

The little pause worked. Lansing's expression flickered. "Already sold?"

"I did say she's... in demand." Aria's voice was low, as though they were discussing something illegal. She let her eyes drift toward the couple in red heels and a tailored grey suit, no, not that grey suit. This was a younger man, some hedge fund type she'd seen before. The woman's gaze lingered on Lansing's painting just long enough for him to notice.

Lansing adjusted his tie, a faint stiffness in his shoulders. "Fine. Three hundred. But that includes delivery."

Her smile widened. "Of course, Mr. Lansing. We'll ensure it arrives without a scratch."

She scribbled the details, her handwriting neat but quick. Delivery was always included for a piece this size, but she'd let him believe he'd won something. The truth was, Lansing had paid exactly what she'd wanted all along.

As he wandered off toward the champagne table, she let out a slow exhale. Not from relief, she'd never doubted the sale, but from the mental shift it took to reset her expression after every negotiation. She glanced toward the catering table where a group of servers stood, one of them fiddling with a tray of untouched canapés.

Her heels were pinching. Her stomach gave a quiet, hollow protest; she'd been running on two coffees and half a protein bar since morning. Not unusual.

"Aria," one of the servers murmured as she passed. "He's still here."

She blinked. "Who?"

The server tilted her head toward the far end of the gallery. Grey suit. Tall. By the Rothko. Hasn't moved in twenty minutes. Just staring."

Aria didn't turn to look. Not yet. She was good at that, pretending not to notice until she decided it was the right time to notice. People revealed more when they thought you weren't paying attention.

She ducked into the small back room. The "office" was barely bigger than a walk-in closet: one scuffed desk, an ancient laptop, a stack of packing invoices leaning precariously to the left. Her bag sat on the chair, the strap faded where the faux leather had given up.

She pulled out her phone: two missed calls from Elijah. Her battery was down to six percent, and the charger at home was on its last legs. She debated calling him back now, but tucked the phone away. If it was important, he'd text.

Outside the doorway, she could hear fragments of conversation, names of artists, murmurs about investments, and the pop of another champagne bottle.

She stepped back onto the gallery floor, scanning the crowd without making it obvious.

And then she saw him.

Tall. Dark hair, just neat enough to be intentional without looking like he'd tried too hard. The suit, teal, perfectly cut, no flashy pocket square, no ridiculously expensive watch. His hands were in his pockets, his stance relaxed but deliberate, like he'd chosen the exact angle to stand at. He was looking at an abstract painting, bold streaks of crimson over deep indigo, but his eyes weren't glassy with polite interest. They were focused.

Aria adjusted the strap of her clipboard and started toward him, weaving through a trio of women in glittering cocktail dresses. As she closed the distance, he turned to look at her.

He didn't glance. He looked.

It was the kind of look that made time pause for half a second, not because it was romantic, but because it was unblinking.

The corner of his mouth moved, not quite a smile. "Tell me why this is worth three hundred thousand dollars."

Aria met his gaze, letting her head tip slightly as though amused by the question. She could've gone the safe route, artist's technique, critical reviews, the gallery's reputation. Instead, she said, "The artist painted it in the week his fiancée left him for someone she met at a dinner party. That streak of red?" She gestured toward the most violent slash of paint. "That's not just paint. That's spite."

One eyebrow lifted, "And people pay for that?"

"They pay for stories," she said smoothly. "The art just gives them something to point at while they tell it."

A pause. His eyes didn't leave hers. "Interesting."

She smiled, polite, professional, and asked, "Would you like me to have someone prepare the paperwork?"

He shook his head. "Not tonight." But he didn't move, didn't look back at the painting. Instead, he gave the smallest of nods, as though filing her away for later, and stepped aside to let her pass.

Aria greeted another guest, her focus back on the job, but when she glanced back a few minutes later, he was gone.

She was halfway through a polite laugh at something she didn't hear when she caught sight of him again, at the far end of the room, near the service corridor that led to the staff-only area.

No champagne in his hand now. No conversation partner. Just him, watching her like the rest of the crowd was scenery.

She broke eye contact first, forcing herself to listen to the woman beside her gush about "how divine the brushwork is." But the hairs along her neck were already on alert. She knew the types who came to galleries for sport, for ego, for curiosity. He wasn't any of those.

The woman's voice faded as Aria excused herself with a polite, "If you'll excuse me, I should check on a delivery detail."

She slipped behind the partition wall into the staff hallway. The hum of voices dulled, replaced by the soft buzz of the fluorescent light overhead. She headed for the office, intending to grab her bag and move out.

"Miss Vale."

The voice was low, close, without the throat-clearing most men used to announce themselves. She turned.

The "teal suit" stood a few feet away, hands still in his pockets, eyes locked on hers.

"You didn't answer my question," he said.

She blinked. "I thought I did."

"Not why it's worth the money," he clarified. "Why do you care enough to sell it like you believe it?"

Aria tilted her head, a practiced, unhurried move. "Because that's my job."

"That's an answer," he said evenly. "Not the truth."

Her lips pressed into a small, almost-smile. "If I told you the truth, you wouldn't buy it."

"I didn't say I wanted to buy it."

"Then we have nothing to discuss."

She stepped past him, her shoulder brushing the edge of his suit jacket, but he didn't turn to follow.

Only when she was back in the noise of the gallery did she let out the smallest breath. And right on cue,

"Aria!"

The voice was female, sharp with authority. Cassandra Voss, the gallery's co-owner and Aria's unofficial handler, was gliding toward her in a black sheath dress and heels that could be used as weapons.

"You've got three VIPs in from Monaco," Cassandra said, slipping an arm through hers. "Don't vanish on me."

"I was checking..."

"You can check after they've spent," Cassandra cut in smoothly, smiling for the benefit of the passing guests. Then, lowering her voice: "And who's the man in the teal suit?"

Aria didn't miss a beat. "Another window-shopper."

Cassandra's smile didn't move, but her eyes sharpened. "He doesn't look like a man who shops for windows."

Before Aria could answer, a server appeared at Cassandra's elbow, murmuring something about a call waiting in the office. Cassandra gave her a final, meaningful look before disappearing toward the back.

Aria turned toward the crowd, scanning for teal. But he was gone. Again. A little bit disappointed, she decided to focus on attending to the guests and selling more art pieces before the day ended.

Four hours later, Aria and the other sales rep pack up the rest of the paintings into the storehouse and close for the day.

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