Isla Turner got why Damari Evans wanted to grant his grandfather’s dying wish. But with a hundred women throwing themselves at him every day… why her? Just a regular personal assistant.
She asked the question out loud: "Why me?"
"I’m not interested," Isla replied without a beat of hesitation.
A flicker of something unreadable crossed Damari’s dark eyes, gone so fast Isla couldn’t pin it down before it vanished. He answered coolly, "That’s exactly why."
It clicked for Isla. Damari was a total workaholic who couldn’t be bothered with messy romance. Marrying someone obsessed with him would just suck up half his time. He didn’t want a real family—he just wanted a convenient marriage to keep his grandpa happy.
It made total sense, given how he was. Isla didn’t even think it was weird. She got it.
"Mr. Evans, I’m still not the right pick for this."
Her refusal didn’t faze him. He kept going, voice steady: "Three-year marriage contract. You play the good granddaughter-in-law for me, and I’ll give you whatever compensation you want. Money, connections, resources—name what you need, as long as I can give it to you."
The word resources hit her like a punch to the chest, and suddenly her little brother Mack’s too-pale face flashed through her mind. She hesitated.
Her parents had always favored boys over girls, and Mack had been their whole world. But even as a kid, Mack would sneak his favorite candy to Isla and tell everyone she was his favorite sister. On crisp, cold autumn afternoons, he’d wrap his arms around her from behind on their porch and promise he’d buy her a huge house one day, so she’d never have to huddle and shiver in the cold again.
This little brother, the one who’d warmed every lonely part of her childhood, had come down with kidney disease. After years of draining treatment, her parents had given up on him and had another boy instead. For years now, it had just been Isla and Mack against the world—she was the one carrying all the weight of his illness.
"Your brother needs dialysis three times a week. That’s a massive financial burden for most people. And if a matching kidney comes up? The surgery alone will run you close to a hundred grand."
Isla’s fingers tightened around her purse strap until her knuckles went white with every word he spoke.
"I can cover all of his surgery and recovery costs. And I can find you a donor."
Isla’s head snapped up, and her gaze collided with Damari’s. His eyes felt like they could see straight through every wall she’d put up.
He added, quiet and certain: "I can make him better."
Those six words were a lighthouse cutting through the black fog that’d swallowed her whole for months.
When she’d been dating Vicente Wood, she’d never breathed a word about Mack’s illness. She didn’t want to drag their relationship down with that kind of heavy baggage.
Just recently, a matching kidney had been found. The doctor told her to come up with thirty thousand dollars for the surgery and hospital stay, and that didn’t even count post-op care and meds. She’d already planned to take out a loan to cover it.
But on the exact same day she’d broken up with Vicente, Damari had offered her a deal she couldn’t afford to walk away from.
When she stayed silent, he probably took it as indecision. His voice softened, just a little: "Or are you planning to get back together with him? If that’s the case, just consider this me overstepping."
"I’m not," Isla answered immediately, sharp and decisive.
To other people, Vicente hadn’t done anything unforgivable. He hadn’t even physically cheated. Why was she so dead-set on throwing away a years-long relationship over something that seemed so small?
Only Isla knew how much she’d cared about that relationship. Even when she had plenty of admirers who could’ve easily handed her thirty thousand dollars (and more) if she’d just asked, she’d kept her distance and never breathed a word about how desperate she was. Three months ago, someone had slipped her a drug at a work event. She’d sliced her palm open on a broken glass just to stay conscious, then climbed down a drainpipe off a third-floor balcony to escape. Hiding under a bridge, bruised and bleeding, she’d called Vicente who was overseas for work, and she’d just casually said she was fine. She never told him she’d almost been assaulted.
He’d promised when he came back they’d get married, and Isla had believed him. She’d thought they were already acting like a married couple, even long-distance.
But reality was nothing like that. When he wasn’t with Isla, he was out celebrating his coworker Lilith’s birthday, watching fireworks with her at Disneyland, going to movie premieres together, chasing sunrises and sunsets side by side.
Even if Vicente still loved her, even if they got married—marriage wasn’t the finish line. It was just the start. Sooner or later, he’d regret it. His feelings for her would fizzle out in the boring, messy grind of daily life, and he’d probably keep seeing Lilith on the side anyway.
None of that was what Isla wanted. Lilith would always be a thorn stuck in her chest, throbbing and hurting no matter what she did.
Vicente was probably better than most guys. But Isla had given a hundred percent of herself to that relationship, and Vicente had only ever given eighty. That imbalance would kill their marriage eventually, no matter what.
Isla was more mature and practical than most girls her age. It didn’t take her long to make up her mind. If she couldn’t get a hundred percent pure, whole marriage even after putting everything on the line, she’d take a marriage that was just good for both of us instead.
Her resolve solidified. She looked up at him and said, "Mr. Evans, I agree."
He turned the car key, the engine purring to life. "Alright. Where’s your passport?"
Isla blinked, caught off guard. "It’s at my place, you…"
"I’ll drive you to get it, then we head straight to the registry office."
"It’s so late, they’ll be closed. Can’t we do tomorrow?" Isla’s head was still spinning—this was all happening so fast, she couldn’t keep up.
Damari pressed his foot to the gas, leaving her staring at his sharp, determined profile. "I’ll make the arrangements."
He drove her to her apartment building. To save every extra penny for Mack’s treatment, she lived in a dump without an elevator.
"Mr. Evans, just wait here for me. I’ll run up and grab it."
The door clicked shut behind her, leaving his sleek black Mercedes and his tall, broad frame standing out under the yellow streetlight like they didn’t belong here at all.
He followed her anyway. "This place doesn’t look safe."
Isla’s brain went totally blank for a second, and the words slipped out before she could stop them: "It’s not just looks. It actually is dangerous."
She froze, startled by her own bluntness, and hurried to backtrack: "Mr. Evans, I mean—it’s not that bad."
Damari watched her flustered, fumbling explanation with quiet curiosity as he followed her up the creaky stairs, a faint, unspoken smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
Isla unlocked her front door and awkwardly gestured over her shoulder: "Just give me one minute. I’ll be right back out."
He stood tall in her doorway, radiating that untouchable, commanding energy that always surrounded him. Vicente had never even set foot in this place. Damari was the first man to ever come inside her home.
Isla grabbed her passport and ID in a hurry, didn’t even stop to change her shoes. Damari glanced around the small space. Her living room was tiny, but it was neat and cozy, warm and lived-in.
A minute later, she was holding the documents out to him. "Mr. Evans, we can go now."
He pulled his gaze away from the framed photo of her and Mack on the counter, voice calm as ever: "Alright."
Thirty minutes later, they pulled up to the registry office. The staff had all been called in to work overtime, but not a single one looked annoyed. They greeted them with crisp, professional smiles: "Mr. Evans, everything’s ready for you."
After photos, forms, and the final stamp, Isla was standing outside holding her marriage certificate in her hands, still half-convinced she was dreaming.
On the exact same night she’d broken up with Vicente, her long-term boyfriend, she’d married her cold, untouchable boss.
On the drive back, Damari glanced at the certificate tucked in his glove compartment, his face still impassive. "The money will hit your account tomorrow. I’ll also start moving on finding that kidney donor right away."
Hearing that, a sharp, bitter twist pinched at Isla’s chest. It felt like she’d just sold herself to pay for her brother’s treatment. But this was her choice. She didn’t regret it.
"Mr. Evans, my doctor told me a few days ago they already found a matching donor. So you don’t have to stress about that part. It’s just…" She hesitated, then blurted it out: "The surgery and hospital fee is thirty thousand."
"Mr. Evans, you can just drop me off here. I’ll take a cab back to my place."
Instead, the car glided smoothly into the underground garage of a fancy five-star hotel a few blocks from Damari’s office. Isla hadn’t seen this coming, but the passenger door was already swinging open before she could protest.
"You’ll stay here tonight. It’s way closer to the office. Your commute from that apartment is ridiculous."
Every refusal she’d rehearsed died on her tongue when she met his sharp, penetrating gaze. She just nodded: "Thank you, Mr. Evans."
"Get some rest," he said, then pulled the door shut and walked off toward the elevators.
The suite was toasty warm from every direction. Isla was so exhausted from the night’s chaos that her legs almost gave out the second the door clicked shut behind her.
She unbuttoned her coat, heat flooding her cheeks when she remembered the thin, semi-sheer black lace slip her friend had forced her to pack for the work trip last week, clinging to every curve of her body.
She stared at the slip in the mirror over the dresser and huffed a dry, wry laugh at herself.
She headed to the bathroom, took a quick shower, and grabbed the plush bathrobe hung up on the hook by the shower.
She assumed it was just the standard hotel issue for guests, so she slipped it on without a second thought.
It was way bigger than a regular hotel bathrobe. At five foot six, Isla looked like she’d borrowed her dad’s robe, swallowing her whole.
The doorbell rang, and she assumed it was room service dropping off a complimentary welcome treat. She opened the door without even bothering to tie the belt tighter.
Damari was standing there, still in his tailored work suit.
His gaze dropped straight to her, and he didn’t look away. What she didn’t know was that this suite was his regular permanent executive suite—everything here was custom-made for him, including that oversized robe she was wearing.
Seeing his personal robe wrapped around her soft, still-damp body, her fresh-washed hair falling loose over her shoulders, water droplets tracing down her delicate collarbone and disappearing into the folds of the fabric… something deep and low stirred in his chest.
The ill-fitting robe gaped open at the top, just enough to show the flush of her skin still warm from the shower steam.
Isla Turner was this close to completely losing it. How the hell was it actually Damari Evans standing there?
She thought about darting back in to grab her coat, but that would only make her boss wait longer. Steel ing herself, she tugged her collar tighter and fastened her belt with extra care, making sure not a sliver of skin was showing before she pulled the door open again.
Putting on her most unbothered face, she asked, "Mr. Evans, do you need anything else?"
Her flushed cheeks gave her away instantly. Damari held out her phone to her. "You left this in my car."
"Thank you, Mr. Evans. Sorry for the trouble."
Isla grabbed the phone, keeping her eyes glued to the floor, and was just about to shut the door when his hand shot out to stop it. She had no choice but to look up, and met Damari’s unyielding, serious gaze. "When it’s just the two of us, I’m not your boss."
The door clicked shut behind him, and Isla slid down against it, pressing her palms to her burning cheeks. The word *husband* flashed unbidden through her mind.
She shook her head hard. All he wanted was a wife to please his grandfather. How stupid could she be, daydreaming about actually being his wife?
That night, she slept like crap. She dreamed of Vicente Wood, and another woman. In the dream, they were strolling hand in hand across the bridge at their old college, kissing under blooming apple trees. He baked her that spiced honey cake she used to love, and told her stories just like he used to.
Isla was just a background character, standing off to the side watching it all. Her heart ached so bad tears streamed down her face, and she tried to walk away. But Vicente never turned around. He never even glanced her way.
When she turned away broken-hearted, she spotted a man in a suit reaching for her through the swirling apple blossom petals. "Isla."
She woke up to harsh morning sunlight stabbing right across her bed. She touched her eyes and found leftover tear tracks, the ache from the dream still clinging to her chest.
Isla never was the type to wallow, especially not when it came to dumb boy stuff. She grabbed her fully charged phone and saw a dozen texts from Vicente, all rambling explanations. Just like she suspected, the girl was his mentor’s daughter. He claimed he only felt brotherly toward her, nothing romantic.
If she really was just the mentor’s daughter, why was he the only one stuck taking care of her? Why was 90% of her social media posts all about him? She knew damn well the girl was aware Vicente had a girlfriend. Isla was sick to her stomach over how the girl faked innocence while throwing herself at him nonstop.
She deleted all the texts, opened WhatsApp, and ordered a new work outfit from her go-to retailer, arranging for same-day delivery. Right after she sent over her address, an unknown number popped up on her screen.
She answered, and Vicente’s exhausted voice came through the line. "Babe, you’re finally online. I’ve been blowing up your phone all night."
Isla’s voice was ice-calm. "Don’t call me that. If I wasn’t clear enough before, let me spell it out for you, Vicente. We’re done."
"But Isla, I don’t have anything romantic with her. Ending things over this isn’t fair, is it?"
Isla took a deep breath, staring out at the morning sun. "Vicente, do you get it? Emotional betrayal hurts way worse than just cheating on you physically."
"Isla, where are you? Let’s meet up and talk this through—"
Isla hung up on him, flipped her phone to silent, and ignored every call that came after. She glanced at her reflection in the mirror; her eyes were still a little puffy from crying.
She splashed cold water on her face, trying to wash all the old memories away. Once her new outfit showed up, she changed and headed into work.
The night before, Damari hadn’t gone home. He’d stayed in the suite next door to Isla. Early that morning, his butler brought in breakfast.
Without looking up from adjusting his cufflinks, Damari said, "Bring a plate to Ms. Turner next door too."
"The lady checked out fifteen minutes ago. Oh, by the way—she left a piece of clothing behind. We don’t have her contact info, so we weren’t sure if she wanted it back."
Damari walked into the room next door. When he saw the sheer black nightgown laid out on the tray, his Adam’s apple bobbed hard. "She won’t need it. Throw it out."
Just as the butler reached for it, Damari’s voice stopped him. "Wait. Keep it. Get it cleaned."
He scanned the room; it was spotless, except for the faintly rumpled sheets. On the vanity, two long strands of dark hair sat, the only proof a woman had been there. His gaze landed on the robe Isla had borrowed, and something unreadable flickered in his eyes.
Back at the office, Isla was touching up her lipstick when her mom called.
"Isla, come home for dinner."
The word *home* pulled a bitter smile to Isla’s face. In a family that openly played favorites, she’d never once felt what a warm home was supposed to feel like. After Mack got sick, her parents kicked her and Mack out to Grandma’s house just to free up space for their precious youngest son.
She answered coolly, "I have to work late tonight. You guys go without me."
"Your grandma said she misses you. Just come back for a visit."
Her grandma—who’d worked herself to the bone saving up for Mack’s treatment—had fallen and broken her leg.
Isla’s hand slipped mid-stroke, and the lipstick dragged all across her cheek. Her face dropped, and her voice cracked with anger. "Why did you bring her over there? You know she’s not in good shape, she—"
"That’s exactly why she’s here, to recover with us. I picked up your favorite sides, so make sure you come early."
The call cut off abruptly, leaving Isla staring at the screen with a dark look. A cold voice from the doorway pulled her out of it. "Your lipstick’s smudged."
Startled, she looked up into the mirror and met a pair of calm, deep-set eyes, dark and mysterious like fog over still water.
She caught sight of the red streak streaking across her jaw, and Isla’s cheeks flushed bright red.
Was she just cursed today? How come Damari had to witness every single one of her embarrassing moments?
She fumbled, half-ready to greet him, half-ready to scrub the lipstick off, not sure which to do first.
He handed her a soft linen handkerchief. "Clean it up."
"Tell everyone the meeting’s in an hour." With that, he was gone, all business, like he hadn’t married her the night before.
No matter what, Damari was still that meticulous workaholic, completely unfazed by their brand-new status.
Isla wiped the stray lipstick off with the handkerchief. It didn’t smell like cigarette smoke at all, just had a faint, clean, woody scent.
When she realized there were tissues right next to her, she felt a little silly for using his handkerchief. After she cleaned it and blew it dry with the hand dryer, she folded it carefully, planning to give it back to him later.
With a few minutes to spare, Isla ground some coffee beans, filled the filter, and hit brew. Damari always worked late, always needed coffee. It’d been her daily job for a year now.
When Isla knocked on the CEO’s office door holding the mug, her heart was pounding like crazy. Yesterday, he’d just been her untouchable boss. Now he was her husband, even if it was only on paper.
"Mr. Evans, your coffee." She set it down, her long eyelashes fanning out over her cheeks to hide how nervous she was.
"Isla, you brought coffee for Damari, and nothing for me?" a teasing voice cut in.
She spun around to see a man leaning against the window, eyes that dripped with easy charm. A friend once told her those eyes could make even a stray dog feel like it was the most loved thing in the world.
Ambrose Burns threw his arms wide and strolled over. "Shocked, huh? Did my new fit knock you out?"
His outfit screamed old money, that effortless relaxed elegance that made Isla think of a suave mafia boss out of a mob movie.
She pushed the silly thought aside and stood up straight, polite as ever. "Mr. Burns, what would you like to drink?"
Ambrose slung an arm over her shoulder, an amused grin tugging at his lips. "The drink doesn’t matter. What I really want is—"
He leaned in, whispering mischievously right against her ear, "You to be my secretary instead. What d’you say?"
Isla had dealt with this kind of teasing more times than she could count. Normally, she brushed it off without a second thought. But things were different now. She and Damari had picked up their marriage license just last night. This felt like a slap in his face, right under his own nose. She kept her gaze lowered and answered coolly, "Sorry, Mr. Burns. I'm not interested in switching jobs."
"How much is your boss paying you? I'll triple it," Ambrose said, a sly grin tugging at his lips.
Isla met his eyes directly, her tone steady. "Mr. Burns, some things aren't for sale." She gently eased his hand off her shoulder. "Like loyalty."
Ambrose laughed at how dead serious she looked. "Isla, I gotta ask..." he dropped his voice, low and dirty, "Do you walk around looking that serious in the bedroom, too? Can you even let loose?"
Isla's ears burned bright red, and she glared daggers at the shameless man.
"Doesn't look like it. Wanna have your big brother show you how it's done?" Ambrose kept piling on the teasing.
A cold voice cut in sharp, "Show her what? Maybe you should show me too."
Isla stumbled back so fast, instinctively pressing herself to Damari's side. Damari was always strict at work, but he was respectful, never cracked crude jokes like this. Having him as her boss felt like having a solid wall to hide behind.
Ambrose just shrugged, totally unphased. "Just messing around."
Damari set down his pen, closed his folder, and pressed the intercom button, his voice even. "Send all the assistants in."
Madison led the other assistants in a minute later. Isla had no clue what Damari planned to do, but that quiet commanding energy of his had her stomach twisting in knots.
Ambrose was still clueless as to what was coming. "Got a meeting going on? Should I head out?"
Damari nodded at Madison, who stepped back and held the door open. The assistants clustered just inside, shifting awkwardly, none of them knowing what to expect.
Damari spoke in that same calm, even tone that sent a chill down Isla's spine. "Mr. Burns here thinks my assistants aren't up to par, and he's graciously offered to share his expertise with all of you. You should all take notes."
The assistants were confused, but when the CEO says jump, you don't ask how high. They nodded earnestly in unison. "Please, Mr. Burns. Enlighten us."
Ambrose's smile dropped right off his face. "Damari, c'mon, I was just joking."
Damari leaned back in his leather chair, hands clasped under his chin, and pinned Ambrose with that cold, sharp leader's glare. "Now that everyone's here, go ahead. Put on a show. Start yelling—you seemed so amused by this a minute ago."
The guy who'd spent all this time teasing Isla just got turned into the office clown. Even Ambrose could tell Damari wasn't playing around this time. He swallowed his pride, jaw tight. "You're really gonna do this over a junior assistant?"
Damari scoffed, dark and dangerous. "Recruiting my people right to my face? You really think I'm blind?"
Ambrose met that blazing glare, shocked how seriously Damari was taking this today. He huffed, reluctant as hell, and let out a weak, half-hearted yell: "Ah!"
Damari turned to the room of assistants. "What did you all think of that?"
Everyone got it now—Damari was defending Isla. But Ambrose was old money, powerful, none of them dared say what they really thought. Only Madison spoke up, blunt as ever: "Lacked emotion."
Damari nodded once. "Try again."
"C'mon Damari, this is going way too far, right?" Ambrose protested.
"This is too far?" Damari chuckled darkly, low and menacing. "If you think the audience is too small, I can round up the whole company to watch..."
"Alright, alright! I'm yelling!" Ambrose cut him off fast.
Finally Damari waved the other assistants out, then flicked his hand at Ambrose to dismiss him. "Go to the main conference room and keep shouting until you hit a thousand times. Then you can leave."
"I'm sorry, Damari, I messed up, okay?"
"Make it two thousand."
Ambrose had nothing to say to that.
Isla had run into Ambrose a handful of times before. He was a carefree playboy who never filtered a damn thing he said. This was the first time anyone had ever put him in his place like this, all because of her.
After everyone cleared out, Isla stood off to the side, worry written all over her face. Damari lifted his head and looked right at her. "Spit it out. What's on your mind?"
Isla furrowed her brow just a little. "Mr. Burns comes from one of the most powerful families in the city. It's not worth throwing away a good relationship over me."
Damari built this company from nothing, clawed his way up from the bottom. Even though he'd become a billionaire faster than anyone saw coming, he didn't have the generations of backing those old-money clans did. Isla didn't come from money or influence either, and she knew better than anyone how hard he'd fought to get where he was. She didn't want to ruin everything he'd built over her.
She dropped her gaze to the floor. "I've heard garbage like that my whole life. It doesn't get to me. I just... I don't want to be a burden..."
Before she could even finish her sentence, a large hand wrapped around her wrist and hauled her right down onto Damari's lap.
Back in high school, Isla had dated Vicente before he moved abroad, and that was it—a long-distance thing that fizzled out. Even when they were together in person, he never did anything this bold with her.
One thought blazed through her dizzy mind: how could anyone's thighs be this firm? The man worked out regularly, his well-honed physique hidden under that sharp tailored suit, and it felt like a rock against her soft curves.
Damari's perfect dark eyes held her startled reflection, his voice low and steady. "Isla, I don't know what kind of life you had before me, or how much you've had to carry. But starting now? You're mine. No one is going to disrespect you, not while I'm here."
Isla's eyes went wide. When she was dating Vicente, she'd always hidden how vulnerable she was, put on a brave face and acted like she didn't need anyone. When she joined Damari's company, her messy, poor background had come out anyway.
She'd spent her whole life learning that the world kisses up to the powerful and kicks the weak when they're down. Damari's words hit her like a stone dropped into a still pond, sending warm ripples spreading through her chest.
"Marrying you is never a burden. As for the Burns family..." he paused, holding her gaze, unblinking. "They're nothing."
He said it so casually, like one of the most prominent families in the country was just a fly to swat away. Even though their marriage started as a deal of convenience, this quiet, unshakable protection warmed her to her core. She mumbled a shy, "Thank you."
Damari stared at the girl in his arms, her pale skin flushed pink that crept all the way up to her ears and down her neck, like someone had dusted her with rouge. She was always so polite, so distant around him. This soft, obedient version of Isla was something he'd never gotten to see before.
He leaned closer, the warm, clean scent of his cologne wrapping around Isla. He asked, curious, "Why do you blush so easily?"
He kept his face cool, but his question was totally sincere. He'd dated more than his fair share of women, so he figured a girl his age would be pretty experienced—he had no idea Isla was as innocent as they came.
Flustered, Isla rushed to explain. "I've never done this before."
"What do you mean by that?" The second the question left his mouth, the air between them went thick with tension, crackling like static.
Her tight pencil skirt inched up her thighs as she sat, her sheer pantyhose hugging her long legs that dangled freely, brushing against his trousers every so often.
When she shifted nervously, she accidentally grazed his hard calf with her knee.
Isla bit her soft lip, her voice barely a whisper. "I've never sat on a guy's lap before. It's... new. I don't really know what to do."
Right after the words left her mouth, Damari's grip on her hand tightened just a little.
She winced, breathing out soft, "Mr. Evans... You're hurting me..."