I could barely catch some sleep.
The mattress I was lying on was soft enough to get me to sleep, the silence was there, even in a mansion wrapped in marble and money, the air reeked of unease for me.
The message still haunted me.
> Do not wear white. That was hers.
Even without the name mentioned, I knew exactly who "she" was.
Juliet Moreau.
Lucian's ex-fiancée, my former friend.
My back ached as I sat up in bed. How long had Juliet been part of this world? How long had she known Lucian? Did she ever warn me when I was too naïve to notice? Or had she kept it from me, waiting for the perfect moment to strike?
I gripped the duvet tighter like it had done anything bad to me.
Was she the reason he hated me?
No, Lucian's rage wasn't personal like that. It was surgical. Controlled. And whatever happened between us, I wasn't the root.
I was just... collateral.
Elara entered my room at exactly 6:45 a.m., knocking once before stepping inside without waiting.
"The head of the Arain family will be joining the Vales for breakfast today," she announced, handing me a slate gray dress and heels. "Formal, but not excessive. Your presence has been requested."
"Requested," I repeated, like I hadn't gotten the message earlier. "That's generous."
She didn't explain further. Maybe she knew nothing other than that.
As soon as Elara left, I went straight to the bathroom, showered as quickly as possible and got dressed. I tied my hair backwards in a simple low bun with a band. I purposely wore no jewelry and makeup. I made it as a reminder to myself that I wasn't here to impress anyone. Just to survive them.
I located the dining room by following a man whom I knew was also coming for breakfast. The room had massive pillars, decorated with crystal chandeliers, and contained a long table that could seat twenty people. At the far end was a man sitting proudly. I recognized him as someone I had seen in news headlines.
Reginald Arain.
CEO of Arain Capital.
Ruthless. Sharp-eyed. He is a man who'd sued half his competitors, forcing them into bankruptcy.
He stood up just as I stepped in. He is so tall, broad-shouldered, with his wet grey hair slicked backwards. He gave a smile that didn't move his eyes as he looked at me.
"Miss Cole," he said smoothly. "So this is the girl Lucian is marrying." He asked.
I didn't know how to respond to that or who he was asking. I simply nodded and took the seat Elara indicated was mine to sit on. The one three spaces away from him. I noticed that the rest of the table was empty, save for Lucian's father, Malcolm Vale, who was sitting silently with a newspaper in hand.
Lucian entered a moment later.
His presence changed the room's atmosphere. Maybe just from my end. He was putting on a neatly tailored navy suit. His jaw lacked a single strand of hair. It was clearly shaved. His black shiny hair, perfectly styled. A man carved from discipline.
He walked to his seat, never glancing at me. He sat across the table and gently picked up his coffee with no word waiting to come out of his mouth.
Reginald, however, was the one who kept talking.
"I'll admit, I was surprised by your father's offer," he said, voice like fine-cut stone. "I didn't think the Coles would have the nerve to propose a union after what happened."
My hand froze around my fork. On hearing that.
Lucian's gaze flicked to me. Just once. Then back to his plate.
I forced my voice to stay calm. "After what happened?"
Reginald raised an eyebrow. " Oh, your father didn't tell you." he asked, acting surprised.
Lucian's jaw tightened.
I glanced toward Malcolm Vale, expecting him to interrupt or take the conversation from there, but he only turned a page in his paper. Acting like he wasn't listening to what Reginald was saying.
"What exactly did he not tell me?" I asked. Expecting an answer from Reginald. Who let a chuckle and took a sip of his coffee.
"Let's just say... your father was more involved in the destruction of Lucian's mother's legacy than anyone wants to admit," he continued.
My breath size.
I turned to Lucian, stunned. "Your mother?"
Lucian didn't answer.
Reginald leaned back on his seat, clearly enjoying himself. "Your father's company (Cole Global) was a partner in a multi-million-dollar development deal. The one that Lucian's mother had secured as a clean, legitimate investment after years of trying to separate herself from the mafia's shadow."
He paused, gaze gleaming. "But your father betrayed her. He signed off on an acquisition behind her back. A hostile one. Sold the shares to competitors who folded the project into a shell company. A week later, Lucian's mother had a stroke."
The room spun.
"No one could prove the betrayal caused it," Reginald continued. "But let's just say... the timing was poetic."
My mouth went dry.
Lucian stared at his plate like he might snap the porcelain in half.
"Lucian," I whispered. "Is that true?"
His eyes met mine, and the storm behind them finally cracked.
"Yes."
One word.
Sharp and final.
I looked down, shame curling in my chest like smoke.
"I didn't know," I said quietly. "I swear."
Lucian's eyes narrowed. "But now you do."
Reginald stood. "Lovely breakfast, Malcolm," he said casually. "You've raised a fine, cold-blooded heir. I almost feel bad for the girl."
Lucian didn't react. Malcolm nodded once.
I remained frozen.
As Reginald Arain left, I realized something with perfect clarity.
This wasn't just a marriage. It was retribution.
Everyone went their separate ways after finishing their breakfast. It was obvious that the breakfast setup was organized just for me. To know the truth and my purpose in the Vale family. That's all.
Later in the evening that same day, I took a seat in the library alone, staring at the wall and thinking about how my life was being played by my father. Who had sold off more than just my future?
He'd helped destroy someone's mother. A woman who was trying to walk away from the past.
And now Lucian, who is her son, was going to make sure I paid the price my father had incurred.
I am the daughter of the man who ruined his family.
He isn't going to take it easy on me. I must pay. In silence, in obedience, and with a lifetime of knowing exactly what I cost him.
When the door cracked open, I expected Elara. But it was Juliet.
"Hello, darling," she said smoothly. "Surprised?" Her red lips moved with a little smile that felt like nothing.
She walked in towards me, with her
designer heels clicking on the tile, causing a sound that moved with the rhythm of my heart. I felt sick immediately.
"Not really," I said. "I figured you'd show up eventually."
She smiled wider. "Lucian has exquisite taste. Even when he's angry."
"What do you want?" I asked.
"To see who replaced me," she replied, circling me like a hawk. "I thought it might hurt. But... I see now he's not even trying to replace me. He's punishing himself."
I stood. "You don't know anything about him."
Juliet arched a brow. "Don't I?"
She stretched her hand, reached out to my shoulder and brushed off a strand of hair. "He doesn't need love. He needs control. You were chosen because you won't fight back. Not enough, anyway."
I stepped back. "I won't let you get into my head."
Juliet's smile sharpened. "Oh, sweetheart. I'm already there," she said, then turned and walked out. The clicking sound her heels made echoed down the corridor.
And for the first time since I stepped into this mansion, I felt something colder than fear. The weight of a war I didn't know I'd entered.
One woman has already lost.
One man is still burning.
And I, standing between them both without a shield.
That night, I received a package outside my bedroom door.
No note.
Just a gold colored box.
Inside was a necklace. Thin. Gold and delicate.
With a single word engraved on it.
(Asset).
The necklace sat on my hand long after I took it out of the box.
An asset?
Not "bride." Not "beloved." just an asset.
This particular label stripped me down to my function and value-a thing, not a woman.
I placed it back into the gold box as it was. I couldn't control how my heart beat fast out of anger. The message was quite clear. Lucian didn't just want to control me; he wanted me to remember why I was here.
Because of a signature.
Because of a deal.
Because someone needed to bleed, and I was the most convenient vein.
A knock came just after noon.
I didn't bother to ask who it was. Elara entered like always, armed with a new file.
"Mr. Vale has requested you sign this."
She placed the folder on my desk, crisp and heavy.
"What is it?" I asked.
"A confidentiality agreement. Standard protection."
"Protection for whom?"
Her face remained neutral. "For the Vale name. For the company and for him."
I opened the folder, scanning the first few lines. It wasn't just a non-disclosure agreement. It was a muzzle. A legally binding vow to never speak of our marriage, his past, our interactions, or anything that happened under this roof without direct written consent.
"This is insane," I murmured.
Elara didn't flinch. "This is normal. And binding."
"There's a clause about voiding my inheritance if I breach it," I said, narrowing my eyes. "Except I'm not entitled to anything. I'm not even married yet."
"You will be."
"Is he afraid I'll tell someone the truth?"
"He's not afraid," she said. "He's prepared."
I looked up at her. "Is this how it was with Juliet?"
Something flickered across her face. A shadow, maybe.
But she didn't answer.
I flipped to the last page. "And if I refuse?"
She finally met my eyes. "Then you go home. But not to your old life."
I swallowed.
"Lucian already bought the mortgage on your family home and paid off the debt with the condition that default leads to foreclosure. You walk away, and your parents lose everything."
My hands went cold.
I hadn't just been traded.
I was being tethered. Paper by paper. Chain by chain.
I looked back down at the document. The lines were precise, cold, and filled with enough legal landmines to ruin me in six different ways.
"What if I add conditions?"
Elara blinked. "What kind of conditions?"
"I want copies. Digital and hard. I want my legal counsel to review them."
"That's not part of the offer."
"Then neither is my signature."
She paused. Then pulled out her phone.
Five minutes later, Lucian entered.
No warning, no knock. Just presence. I felt goosebumps all over my body as he came in.
He was putting on a dark suit, with sleeves rolled up slightly. And his silver Rolex wristwatch glinted. His appearance shows a man who never had to explain himself and definitely wouldn't start to.
"Why are you delaying Seraphina?" he asked while shutting the door behind him.
"I'm reading," I replied. "Not that it seems to matter."
He stepped forward. "It's a precaution."
"It's a prison," I said.
He looked amused. "You're not the first woman in this house to sign one."
"Then I guess she wasn't the last casualty either."
His jaw tightened slightly. "Is that a dig at Juliet?"
I said nothing.
He took the contract from my hands, flipped to the signature page, and then placed it in front of me.
"Sign it, Seraphina. Or I promise you, you'll wish you had."
I narrowed my eyes. "Are you threatening me?"
"No," he said. "I'm warning you. Because this isn't a game. This isn't about dress fittings or sulking or dramatic window stares."
He leaned closer.
"This is about control. And survival. You want your family to be safe? Sign the contract. You want me to keep my distance? Sign it. You want to be seen as more than a pawn in this world? Sign it and learn the rules." "Isn't it simple?"
I stared at him. "And if I don't care about the rules?"
"Then I'll surely bury you in them," he said with a soft but lethal voice.
As I picked the pen up, my hand trembled.
"What happens after I sign?" I asked.
"You get escorted to your new quarters," he said. "A wing closer to mine. We'll begin public appearances this week. You'll attend a Vale charity gala next Friday as my fiancée."
"And Juliet?"
He paused. "Juliet will be there too."
I bit down on the fury. Then he handed me the pen. I stared at it for a while with my heart burning in anger before signing my name. Slowly, writing one alphabet at a time. A part of me wanted to tear the paper into pieces, but I held myself.
Immediately I was done, Lucian collected the contract paper from the table I signed it on, closed the folder, and slid it into his briefcase without a word. As if nothing had happened. Not even a thank you.
He didn't say a simple welcome to the family. He just walked out.
Elara stood silently for a beat. Then she gestured for me to follow.
The new quarters were colder than the last.
More modern. Fewer windows. One massive wardrobe already stocked with gowns in black, gray, and navy. Nothing soft, nothing warm.
A second room is locked.
"Is that his?" I asked.
Elara didn't answer.
She handed me a card with an itinerary.
"You'll have your first etiquette review with Mr. Vale's PR advisor at four. Then dinner with the family at seven."
I blinked. "This night?"
"Every night you're summoned."
"And if I say no?"
She didn't blink. "You won't."
By evening, I was dressed in a floor-length gown I hadn't chosen, seated beside a man who barely spoke, at a table surrounded by ghosts in the form of portraits and stories I didn't know.
Malcolm Vale sipped wine and discussed political donors.
Lucian read emails in silence.
No one asked me a question; no one acknowledged I was new. Just another beautiful face.
I quietly excused myself, heading straight to my room, before being deserted by everyone. I didn't care about the meals I left.
The moment I stepped into my room, I noticed the lights were low, like someone had turned them down. The silence felt heavy.
I stepped forward to my bed, weary, and was about to sit down when I noticed a brown envelope neatly placed on my pillow. It had no seal.
Just my name, handwritten.
I opened it carefully. Inside was a photo. Black and white.
My father... shaking hands with Reginald Arain.
And in the background?
A younger Lucian. A woman who I assumed was his mother was standing beside him. Smiling.
Below was a writing. It was clearly Lucian's unmistakable handwriting:
"Every empire needs a trigger. Thanks to your family, I became mine."
"What does that mean?" I asked myself.