Chapter 4

The Maybach tore through the midnight streets of Manhattan, the streetlights flashing across Eleanore's pale face in rapid succession.

Inside her purse, her phone began to vibrate violently. The shrill ringtone pierced the quiet cabin. Eleanore looked down. The screen lit up with Johan's name. Her stomach clenched, a conditioned response to his relentless control.

Before she could reach for it, a large, warm hand reached across the seat. Alexander snatched the phone from her purse. Without breaking eye contact with her, his thumb pressed down on the power button until the screen went black.

He tossed the dead phone back into her bag.

"Get used to ignoring him," Alexander commanded, his voice leaving no room for argument. "He doesn't exist anymore."

The car pulled up to the curb in front of the New York City Hall. The massive stone building looked imposing and cold in the dark. A sharp gust of wind swept down the street, making Eleanore shiver violently.

Alexander stepped out of the car. He shrugged off his heavy wool overcoat and draped it over Eleanore's shoulders as she stepped onto the pavement. The coat swallowed her, wrapping her in his body heat and the ever-present scent of cedar.

The building should have been closed hours ago, but Alexander's vast legal team had already paved the way with an emergency executive waiver. L. Thorne held the heavy brass doors open.

They walked side-by-side up the empty marble staircase. The sharp click of her heels and the heavy thud of his dress shoes echoed in the cavernous hall. Every step felt like a nail being driven into the coffin of her old life.

Thorne led them to a small, wood-paneled office on the second floor. An older judge, brought in specifically under the pretense of a high-security private arrangement, sat behind a desk. He didn't ask questions about the mandatory twenty-four-hour waiting period-the waiver took care of that. He simply pushed a piece of paper forward.

"Marriage License," the judge mumbled, adjusting his glasses. "Fill out the highlighted sections."

Eleanore took the pen. Her hand shook so badly she could barely grip the metal barrel. She wrote her name. Then, she moved to the spouse section. Alexander Briggs. Seeing the two names linked together in black ink made the absurdity of the situation crash over her.

The judge stood up and gestured for them to stand in front of his desk.

"We are gathered here today to unite this man and this woman in matrimony," the judge began, his voice a dull monotone that somehow made the words feel heavier.

Eleanore stared straight ahead at the judge's tie, refusing to look at the man standing next to her.

"Do you, Eleanore Coffey, take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?"

Eleanore's throat closed up. The silence stretched for one agonizing second. Two seconds.

Alexander turned his head. His dark, intense gaze locked onto the side of her face. The sheer weight of his stare forced her to look at him. His eyes were a storm of warning and an odd, terrifying reassurance.

She swallowed hard. "I do."

The judge turned to Alexander. "Do you, Alexander Briggs, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?"

Alexander didn't hesitate for a fraction of a second. "I do." His voice was deep, resonant, and absolute.

"The rings," the judge prompted.

Eleanore froze. Rings? The contract didn't mention rings. She hadn't brought anything.

Alexander reached into his trouser pocket. He pulled out a small, black velvet box. He flipped it open with his thumb.

Sitting on the black cushion was a massive, flawless blue diamond ring, surrounded by a halo of crushed white diamonds. It caught the harsh fluorescent light of the office and threw it back in blinding sparks.

Eleanore's breath hitched. It was the most beautiful, terrifying thing she had ever seen.

Alexander took her left hand. His large fingers wrapped securely around her trembling ones. He picked up the ring and slid it onto her ring finger.

It slid over her knuckle with zero resistance. It fit perfectly. Flawlessly.

Eleanore stared at her hand in shock. How did he know her exact ring size? She pushed the thought away. He was a billionaire. His assistants probably had her entire medical history on file.

"By the power vested in me by the State of New York, I now pronounce you husband and wife," the judge said, stamping the Marriage Certificate with a loud, metallic crunch. "You may kiss the bride."

Eleanore turned her face slightly, expecting him to press a polite, fake kiss to her cheek for the sake of the judge.

Instead, Alexander's hand slid around to the small of her back. He yanked her flush against his hard chest. His other hand cupped the back of her neck, his thumb pressing into her pulse point.

He tilted her head up and brought his mouth down on hers.

This wasn't the desperate, drug-fueled kiss from the hotel. This was slow, deliberate, and entirely possessive. He tasted her deeply, branding her with his heat, letting her feel the absolute physical dominance he held over her. Eleanore's knees went weak. Her heart hammered wildly against her ribs.

When he finally pulled back, her lips were swollen and her eyes were wide.

Alexander turned to the desk and picked up the freshly stamped Marriage Certificate. He stared at the red seal for a long moment. A muscle worked in his jaw.

They walked out of the building. A cold, misty rain had started to fall over Manhattan.

Alexander opened a large black umbrella. He pulled Eleanore close to his side, ensuring she was completely shielded from the rain. In doing so, the entire left side of his expensive suit was exposed to the downpour.

They got back into the Maybach.

He turned his head, looking at Eleanore as the car pulled away from the curb.

"Congratulations, Mrs. Briggs," Alexander said, his voice a low, dark rumble. "You're free."

Chapter 5

The morning sun cut through the large glass windows of the SoHo cafe, illuminating the dust motes dancing in the air.

Eleanore sat in a corner booth, staring blankly at the oat milk cold brew in front of her. She hadn't slept. The drug had finally worn off, leaving her body aching and her mind spinning in a chaotic loop.

Halle Floyd stomped in, her heavy combat boots hitting the floorboards with purpose. She marched straight to Eleanore's table, took one look at the dark, bruised circles under Eleanore's eyes and her bloodless lips, and immediately pushed a mug of steaming hot water across the table. "You look like you've been chased by ghosts all night. Drink."

Eleanore wrapped her trembling fingers around the ceramic mug, the burning heat the only thing keeping her from collapsing into a dead faint.

Halle slammed her designer tote bag down. "Where the hell have you been?" Halle demanded, her chest heaving. "I called you twenty times! I was ten seconds away from calling the NYPD and telling them Johan finally kidnapped you."

Eleanore didn't say a word. She slowly unzipped her purse, pulled out a folded piece of paper, and slid it across the table.

Halle snatched it up. Her eyes scanned the document. She frowned, thinking it was a joke, until her eyes hit the red seal and the names printed in bold black ink.

Halle's jaw dropped. She slammed her hands on the table and stood up, her chair scraping loudly against the floor. Several customers turned to look.

"Are you out of your mind?!" Halle whisper-shouted, leaning over the table. "You married him? You married the wolf of Wall Street?!"

Eleanore rubbed her temples. "It's a contract, Halle. Three months. He gets to humiliate Johan in a boardroom, and I get my father's debts paid off. It's a transaction."

Halle yanked her phone out of her pocket. Her thumbs flew across the screen. She shoved the phone into Eleanore's face.

The screen displayed a Forbes article. The headline read: Alexander Briggs: The Machine That Dismantles Empires. The photo showed Alexander walking out of a courthouse, his eyes cold, his expression entirely devoid of human empathy.

"Look at him, El," Halle pleaded, her voice tight with panic. "This man doesn't have a heart. He has a calculator in his chest. If he's using you to get to Johan, what happens when he's done? You think he's just going to let you walk away? Men like that don't make deals unless they own the board."

Eleanore looked at the picture. She saw the ruthless predator the world saw. But then, unbidden, the memory of last night flashed in her mind-Alexander standing in the freezing rain, his shoulder getting soaked just to keep her dry under the umbrella.

She pushed the phone away. "I don't care. Anything is better than Johan. Johan was going to lock me in a cage. Alexander is just using me for PR."

Halle let out a long, frustrated sigh. She grabbed Eleanore's hand and squeezed it hard. "Fine. But we are getting your stuff out of your apartment right now. If Johan finds out about this, he's going to burn your place to the ground."

They left the cafe and took a cab to Eleanore's small apartment on the edge of the Upper East Side. It was a cramped, fourth-floor walk-up she paid for with her art restoration gigs. It was her only safe haven.

Eleanore unlocked the door. She immediately pulled her suitcase from under the bed and started throwing clothes into it.

Halle went to the bathroom to pack the toiletries. A minute later, she walked out holding a small, framed photograph she had found shoved in the back of a drawer.

It was a picture of Eleanore and Johan from college. Johan was laughing, his eyes bright and clear, completely devoid of the paranoid darkness that consumed him now.

Halle looked at Eleanore with pity.

Eleanore stopped packing. She walked over, her face a mask of stone. She snatched the photo from Halle's hand, ripped the frame apart, and tore the photograph directly down the middle. She threw the pieces into the trash can.

"That boy died a long time ago," Eleanore said coldly. "The man wearing his face is a monster."

Suddenly, three heavy, rhythmic knocks pounded against the apartment door.

Eleanore and Halle froze. The color drained from Eleanore's face. Johan.

Halle grabbed a heavy metal baseball bat from behind the door. Eleanore took a shaky breath, tiptoed to the door, and looked through the peephole.

It wasn't Johan.

It was a man in a sharp black suit. L. Thorne. Behind him stood two massive bodyguards.

Eleanore exhaled a shaky breath and opened the door.

Thorne didn't smile. He held out a sleek, black keycard with an embedded gold chip, along with a thick, wax-sealed envelope.

"Good morning, Mrs. Briggs," Thorne said politely. "Mr. Briggs requested that you keep this certified copy of your marriage license on your person at all times, for your protection. He also requests that you relocate to The Elysium immediately. Your safety is his primary concern during the duration of the agreement."

Eleanore crossed her arms, her defensive instincts flaring. "I can stay here. I have a deadbolt. I don't need to move into his penthouse today."

Thorne didn't argue. He simply stepped to the side and pointed toward the small window at the end of the hallway that overlooked the street.

"There are three black Range Rovers parked on your block," Thorne stated flatly. "They belong to the Conway family. They have been watching your fire escape since 6:00 AM. This location is compromised."

Eleanore's stomach twisted into a tight knot. She walked to the window and peered through the blinds. Down on the street, two men in leather jackets were leaning against a black SUV, staring directly up at her building.

A cold sweat broke out on the back of her neck.

She turned around, her jaw set. She grabbed her suitcase. She hugged Halle goodbye, promising to call, and walked out the door with Thorne.

As they walked out of the building, the bodyguards formed a tight wall around her, completely blocking the line of sight from the street.

Eleanore slid into the back of the armored SUV. As the car pulled away, she looked out the tinted window. Her safe haven was gone. She was now entirely in Alexander's world.

Chapter 6

The sound of shattering glass violently disrupted the quiet morning at the Conway Estate in Long Island.

Johan hurled a priceless Ming dynasty vase across his mahogany-paneled study. It exploded against the wall, sending sharp shards of porcelain flying across the Persian rug.

He stood in the center of the room, his chest heaving, his tie ripped open, and his eyes bloodshot. His phone lay on the desk, the screen glowing with the paparazzi photos from last night. Alexander Briggs, kissing Eleanore's forehead in the parking garage.

The heavy oak doors of the study swung open.

Percival Conway, the patriarch of the family, walked in. He leaned heavily on a gold-tipped cane, his face purple with suppressed rage.

Percival slammed his cane against the floor. "You pathetic fool! You made a spectacle of yourself at the Plaza! Over a bankrupt girl!"

Johan spun around, his hands balling into fists. "She is mine! Alexander has no right to touch her!"

At the mention of Alexander's name, a complex shadow of fear and deep-seated disgust crossed Percival's eyes.

"Alexander Briggs is a shark," Percival spat. "And you are acting like bleeding bait. You need to focus on Karlie Christensen. That marriage is the only thing keeping our stock prices from tanking."

Johan slammed his hands down on the desk, leaning forward. "I will marry Karlie. But I will not let Alexander take Eleanore. I'll kill him first."

Percival walked slowly toward his son. He leaned in close, his voice dropping to a cruel, venomous whisper. "Do not forget what you are, Johan. You are a bastard. You sit in that chair because I put you there. Do not make me regret throwing the real heir out on the street."

Johan's entire body went rigid. The color drained from his face, leaving him looking sickly and hollow. The ghost of his illegitimacy-the twelve-year nightmare of being the fake son who stole the throne-clawed at his throat.

Johan let out a bitter, twisted laugh. "The real heir? He's nothing but a street dog playing dress-up on Wall Street."

The sharp click of heels interrupted them. Karlie Christensen walked into the study, holding a porcelain teacup. She wore a perfect, sympathetic smile, acting as if she hadn't just heard the most toxic family secret in New York.

"Johan, darling," Karlie cooed, offering him the tea. "You need to calm down. We can handle this."

Johan looked at her fake smile. All he could see was Eleanore's cold, disgusted eyes from the night before.

He violently slapped the cup out of Karlie's hand.

The hot tea splashed across Karlie's designer dress. She shrieked, jumping back, a flash of pure hatred crossing her eyes before she forced her face back into a mask of victimhood.

Percival shook his head in disgust. "If you cannot control your temper, the board will find someone who can." He turned and walked out of the room.

Johan stood by the window, his breathing ragged. He pulled out his phone and dialed his assistant.

"Cut all funding to the Chelsea Art Restoration program," Johan ordered, his voice shaking with malice. "Call every gallery in Manhattan. If anyone hires Eleanore Coffey, they are dead to Conway Group. I want her starved out."

He hung up the phone. A cruel smile touched his lips. She would come crawling back. She always did.

Suddenly, a loud, screeching crash echoed from the front gates of the estate.

Johan frowned and looked out the massive window overlooking the driveway.

Three black, armored Maybachs glided toward the security checkpoint. They didn't slow down. From the lead car, L. Thorne tapped a localized EMP override on his tablet. The Conway estate's multi-million-dollar security mainframe short-circuited in a fraction of a second. The heavy wrought-iron gates silently slid open, entirely paralyzed by the technological breach. The cars roared up the long, winding driveway without a single scratch to their pristine paint, tearing up the immaculate gravel, and slammed on their brakes right in front of the central fountain.

Conway security guards rushed out, pulling their weapons, but they froze when they saw the license plates.

The door of the lead Maybach opened.

Alexander Briggs stepped out. He wore a bespoke charcoal suit that fit his massive frame perfectly. He didn't look at the guards with guns. He didn't look at the house.

He slowly looked up, his dark eyes locking onto the second-floor window. He stared directly into Johan's eyes through the glass.

Alexander raised his left hand to adjust his tie. The morning sun caught the thick, platinum wedding band on his ring finger, flashing a blinding beam of light directly toward the window.

Alexander's lips curved into a cold, mocking smirk. He had come home.

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