/1/113399/coverbig.jpg?v=7c9a683bad4843e9e446d6d798136d61)
married a stranger. I ju
vy paper. The whole room felt like a tomb-no sound, not even a breath, just this pressure that made my e
married a stranger. I ju
e-not even once since I'd set foot in his penthouse. He was just a sharp silhouette, the city burning behind him. All that
they'd said. "He buys people, then sells their secrets." I'd only met his money, the kind you feel in your bones-the kind that pulled
key card, black with silver embossing-some sort of crest: a serpent coiled around a dagg
ever met anyone so sure they'd never be denied. "You're an occupant, not a guest. My staff wil
old and heavy into my
-nothing like a husband. It felt like he was sizing up machinery, not a person. H
g as you remain useful." He said it without blink or hesi
orced it down. My father once told me fear was a luxury. Poverty's a pri
I expected. He filled the room with his presence. "You have something I want. I can take a
m stone as I stood. Questions clawed at me-why me, why now, why any of this? W
before he died-the ones about the Vanes, edges charred, almost erased. My father hid too many
rying to sound strong. "Do
dn't bother turning. Just a black shape in the
voice cut colder. "You'll be too busy surviv
nd staring art. That's when it hit me: this wasn't just a sacrifice to save my mother. This was a we
y apartment," I tried.
have nothing. Everything you owned before this? Gone. You have no past
olent. Outside, the corridor stretched away like a throat
I caught a wild urge to bolt, run back to my messy, broke, normal
ay. He didn't see a person when he looked a
roughened to a whisper. "Your o
ed. I met his eyes-cold, shifting, like storm clouds-and held my ground. "You have
is eyes. Not anger, not fear-something else. He leaned i
urmured, mocking. "I
g at the room, the damp signature sealing my fate. I followed him into the shadow
tonight," h
look ba

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