Chapter 2

The chapel was too quiet.

Not solemn or sacred, just… empty. Heavy with tension instead of reverence.

Aria stood at the entrance, clutching her bouquet so tightly that a thorn from one of the roses pierced her thumb. She didn’t even flinch. Her heart beat too loudly in her chest, drowning out the pain, the soft murmur of the guests, the sound of organ keys that hadn’t been touched yet.

The veil felt like a curtain of iron draped over her head. She couldn’t breathe through the lace. The dress—borrowed, too long in the sleeves, tight at the waist—felt like it belonged to someone else’s life. And maybe it did.

This wasn’t her story. Not really.

This was her grandmother’s.

Our blood is old, Aria, Nana had whispered just two days ago from the hospital bed, IV lines running along her frail arms. You come from a legacy, a promise sealed generations ago. If we lose that connection, we lose everything. He’s the only one who can keep our family standing.

Aria hadn’t asked for his name.

She hadn’t asked for terms or reasons.

She had looked at her grandmother’s fading eyes, and then she had said yes.

Not for herself.

For the woman who raised her when her parents vanished in a plane over the Atlantic. For the woman who stayed up knitting her winter sweaters, who sold off her heirlooms to fund Aria’s dream of owning a flower shop in NYC. For the woman who never stopped calling her “our last hope.”

Now, here she stood.

Alone, about to marry a stranger.

Every step down the aisle echoed like a verdict.

There were no petals strewn across the floor. No flower girls. No beaming family. Just a smattering of unfamiliar faces in stiff formalwear, all watching her with cold curiosity, as if wondering what kind of girl marries a man she’s never seen.

And then—him.

Her eyes landed on the man waiting at the altar. He didn’t blink. Didn’t look away. He was tall, sharply dressed in black, and carved from ice. His features were aristocratic: strong jawline, high cheekbones, hair neatly combed back, but there was no warmth. Just precision. Control. Rage barely restrained.

Damian.

Her groom.

Her stomach turned. She had half-expected him to be older, maybe a stoic business tycoon in his late forties, like some of the men her grandmother once socialized with.

But this man? He looked like he walked straight off the pages of a scandal magazine—powerful, arrogant, and angry. So very angry.

He wasn’t confused.

He wasn’t nervous.

He knew who she was.

And for some reason, he hated her.

Aria’s feet faltered, just for a moment. The world tilted sideways. She could hear Zara’s voice from the night before echoing in her head.

“You said yes to a wedding and didn’t even ask who the groom was? Aria! That’s insane. You’re not some helpless little debutante in a Victorian novel—”

“Zara, please—”

“Don’t please me. This is a lifetime decision. A legal binding contract. What if he’s a monster? What if he’s a psycho with a vendetta—?”

“I already said yes.”

Zara had gone silent then, the kind of silence that only came from heartbreak.

“I just want you to be okay,” she’d whispered eventually. “Don’t let this destroy you.”

Now Aria swallowed hard and forced herself forward. The music began to swell—low, haunting notes that felt more like a dirge than a celebration.

Damian didn’t reach for her hand.

He didn’t move at all.

His expression didn’t flicker when she reached his side, didn’t shift when she turned to face him. Not a twitch. Not even a breath.

He looked at her like a ghost.

And in a way, maybe she was. The ghost of a girl who once believed in romance, in dreams, in possibility. That girl was gone.

There was only duty now.

Only survival.

The priest began to speak, but Aria didn’t register the words. Her pulse drummed in her ears, and her fingers felt cold.

Still, she lifted her chin.

She wouldn’t be weak. Not in front of this man.

He might loathe her. He might believe whatever lie he carried inside him. But she wasn’t here to be pitied or punished. She was here to save her family. Fulfill Her grandmother's wish. And save Herself.

And nothing—not even the fury burning in his eyes—would break or stop her.

Damian stared at her hard. She didn’t even flinch.

He had expected her to.

He had expected shaking hands, quivering lips, maybe even tears. Guilt. At the very least, fear.

But Aria Monroe stood beside him like she had every right to be there. Regal. Controlled. Cloaked in her innocence like it was armor.

And it disgusted him.

He knew exactly who she was the moment she stepped into the chapel.

She hadn’t seen him, but he had seen her—months ago, in the photos that ruined everything.

Aria Monroe. Floral artist. The woman whose presence at that cursed gala sealed Elena’s fate. The girl smiling, laughing, caught in a photo just over Elena’s shoulder as the headlines screamed SHAME and SCANDAL.

Elena had been a rising star—engaged to a politician, adored by the media. Until someone leaked her secrets.

Until the world found out about the everything.

Until she tried to take her life.

And Aria had been there.

Careless. Complicit.

Laughing.

Damian’s hands curled into fists behind his back.

When his grandfather proposed this marriage alliance to save the crumbling dynasty, Damian had resisted. Until he heard her name. Until he saw her face in the file. Until he realized this could be the perfect retribution.

Marry her. Control her. Bleed her emotionally dry the way Elena had bled.

Make her pay.

The priest’s voice faded into the background as Damian glanced sideways at her.

She was smaller than he imagined. Fragile-looking. But she held herself like a queen. That bothered him.

Does she really not remember? Or is she just that skilled at playing innocent?

As the priest declared them husband and wife, he leaned in slightly, his lips brushing the air beside her ear.

“Aria Monroe, my wife.” he murmured.

He saw her shoulder stiffen. Just a little. Saw her nails press into the bouquet. But still—no tears. No flinch.

Fine.

Let the game begin.

“Let’s see how you handle being the villain this time.” he murmured to himself. And then he kissed her.

Chapter 3

The drive from the chapel to Damian’s estate was steeped in silence so loud it rang in her ears.

Outside the tinted car windows, the New York cityscape bled into suburbia and then into something else entirely—massive iron gates, manicured gardens, and a mansion that looked like it belonged to an empire, not a single man.

The estate was located in the upper East side, Manhattan.

It reminded Aria of those ancient palaces in European films—elegant, expensive, cold.

Like the man who owned it.

Damian hadn’t spoken a word since the ceremony. Not during the brief reception. Not during the drive. Not even as the staff greeted them at the entrance with tight smiles and murmured congratulations that sounded more like condolences.

He simply walked ahead of her, his steps sharp, his back stiff beneath the fine cut of his designer suit.

Aria followed.

This was her life now.

Inside, the house was cathedral-like: all white marble, chrome fixtures, and echoing silence. There were no family photos. No warmth. No clutter. Only space and tension and a cold that sank into her bones.

“Welcome to the house,” he said finally, his voice low and clipped. “You’ll be given access to the main floor, your designated spaces, and the shared areas. Do not enter any room that is locked. And never ever enter my office.”

His tone wasn’t cruel. It was worse than that. It was void of emotion. Like she wasn’t a bride or a person—but a deal. A transaction sealed in vows.

“I understand,” she said quietly.

He turned to look at her then, just for a moment.

That sharp gaze again. Always studying. Always measuring.

“The staff know your name. They’ll attend to you. If you need anything, speak to the house manager. Meals are scheduled. I won’t be home most evenings for dinner.”

“Do we—do we share a room?”

A brief pause.

“Yes. You are my wife.” His clipped. “Tho I find it easier to keep track of the people I don’t know or trust .”

Heat climbed her neck. “You don’t even know me.”

“I know enough.”

He turned and walked up the stairs without waiting for her reply.

The bedroom was stunning in a cold, luxurious sort of way. White marble floors, an enormous fireplace, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the private lake, and a bed that looked like it belonged in a five-star hotel suite. There were two walk-in closets. A chaise lounge. Silk curtains. And a single vase of white lilies on the nightstand.

Her favorite flower.

She blinked.

A coincidence.

Definitely a coincidence.

Damian wouldn't have known what she liked.

She sat on the edge of the bed, staring at her reflection in the mirror. The veil was gone, but her face still looked ghostly pale. Her lipstick had faded. Her curls were falling.

This was supposed to be her wedding night.

Zara would’ve thrown a fit if she saw this room. She’d march in, call Damian a stone-hearted mannequin, and demand chocolates and candles and jazz music.

Aria gave a humorless laugh. None of that was happening here.

This wasn’t a fairytale.

This was survival.

The next morning passed in a haze of introductions. The house manager, Ms. Hayes, was polite but not warm. The housekeeper, Marta, offered a tight-lipped smile when she brought fresh towels. The chef barely glanced at her.

Aria wandered the estate with a kind of quiet curiosity, trying to make sense of her surroundings. There was an indoor garden. A wine cellar. A sunroom she already loved.

But most of the doors were locked.

Not just locked—forbidden.

One hallway in particular caught her attention. It was darker than the rest, tucked behind a column-lined corridor past the west wing. The floorboards creaked differently there, like they remembered footsteps long since vanished.

She paused.

There it was.

A pale cream door, carved with a rose motif. And a small brass plate at the center:

ELENA

Her heart tripped.

Who was Elena?

She raised her hand slowly, not even thinking—just… curious. She wasn’t trying to invade. Just having a little peek.

But before her fingers even brushed the doorknob—

“What are you doing?”

She jerked back like she’d been burned.

Damian.

He stood at the end of the hallway, arms crossed, expression thunderous.

“I—I didn’t go in,” she said quickly. “I just saw the name—”

“I told you not to touch locked doors,” he snapped, his voice hard now, slicing through the quiet. “Especially this one.”

She flinched.

“I wasn’t trying to—”

“I don’t care what you were trying to do,” he bit out. “That room is off-limits. Do not speak of it ever again. Don’t go near it.”

“Okay, okay. I get it. But—who is Elena?” she asked, the name heavy on her tongue, cold in her chest. “Is she—was she your—”

He took one step closer.

“Stay. Away. From that room,” he said, low and dangerous.

And then he turned on his heel and vanished, leaving her in a hallway that suddenly felt colder than winter.

Aria fled.

She didn’t cry, not at first. She just ran back to the bedroom, slamming the door shut behind her, her pulse trembling through her veins.

The way he looked at her—like she was a trespasser in her own home.

She wasn’t a criminal. Trying to have a little peak couldn't have hurt anyone.

But there was something in that room. Something he didn’t want her to know. Someone.

Elena.

The name pressed like ice against her spine.

Was she an ex? A lost lover? A secret wife?

Or was she the reason behind all this—the marriage, the hatred, the unspoken storm she was trapped in?

Aria pressed her hands to her face and sat down at the edge of the bed.

She had walked into a house made of ice.

And something told her… the fire was coming.

She couldn’t sleep that night.

Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the name on the door.

Elena.

Elena.

And Damian’s voice—cold, warning, final.

But even more frightening than the mystery… was the way her heart reacted to his fury.

She wasn’t just terrified.

She was damn angry.

Angry at being silenced. Angry at being treated like a prisoner.

And that anger… was starting to wake something dangerous inside her.

Chapter 4

The morning sun filtered through the gauzy curtains, casting golden light across the breakfast table set for two. Silverware glinted, the scent of fresh coffee lingered in the air, and Aria sat quietly, buttering a croissant as if she hadn’t stepped into a cold war disguised as a marriage.

Damian sat across from her, unreadable behind his espresso cup. His dark suit was crisp, his tie immaculate, his hair a little tousled from the rush of the morning—but his eyes weren’t on his phone or the newspaper.

They were on her.

Lingering. Assessing.

She wore a soft blush blouse tucked into high-waisted linen trousers, her long hair loosely tied at the nape of her neck. No makeup, except for a soft rose lip balm. Her skin glowed with a kind of quiet defiance, and there was a graceful elegance in her stillness.

Her beauty wasn’t the loud kind. It whispered.

Soft curves. Intelligent eyes. A mouth that looked like it was made to argue and kiss in equal measure. She made him feel what he didn't want to.

Damian clenched his jaw.

Beautiful. Too beautiful.

He cleared his throat and reached for the sleek black folder placed beside his plate.

“We need to talk about boundaries,” he said without looking at her.

Aria raised an eyebrow, slicing into her fruit.

“Oh good. I was hoping we’d get to the exciting part of this marriage, eventually.”

He didn’t smile. Of course he didn’t.

“First,” he said, flipping the folder open, “you will not enter my study, or any locked room. I believe I made that clear yesterday, but let this serve as a written reinforcement.”

She dipped her spoon into her yogurt. “Why am I not surprised.”

His eyes flicked up. Briefly. The smallest twitch at the corner of his mouth.

He continued. “You will not touch, move, or interfere with any of my personal belongings. You will not answer my calls. You will not pry into my affairs—professional or personal.”

“Do I get to make rules too, or is this dictatorship-style?”

“You’re free to exist within your designated areas. Think of it as... cohabitating with a stranger under mutual terms.”

“Charming.” She dabbed at her mouth with the linen napkin. “Well then, here are mine.”

He stilled.

“You didn't think I had conditions of my own?” She huffed. “I’m going back to work,” she said, voice calm but firm. “My floral shop needs me. I’m not going to sit around this mansion like a porcelain doll collecting dust. I run a business, and I won’t let it collapse because I married a man who thinks flowers are beneath him.”

He arched a brow. “You think I don’t respect flowers?”

“I know you don’t respect anything you don’t control,” she countered smoothly.

Silence stretched.

Then he leaned back, studying her.

“You’re...not what I expected.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment.”

“Don’t,” he said. “It wasn’t one.”

She stood, brushing crumbs from her blouse.

“I’ll be leaving in thirty minutes. I assume you assigned a driver to me?”

“Ms. Hayes will inform him.”

“Perfect. I’ll be back late.”

He tilted his head. “You assume I care?”

“No,” she said sweetly, “but if you come home and I’m not in bed, I wouldn’t want you thinking I broke another rule.”

Then she turned and walked out of the dining room, hips swaying just enough to let him know she wasn’t afraid of him anymore.

And maybe… she never had been.

The shop was a balm.

The scent of roses, peonies, and fresh-cut greenery wrapped around her like an old friend. She greeted her staff, updated inventory, made arrangements for an afternoon wedding delivery, and smiled for the first time in two days.

Here, she was Aria—the creative, soft-spoken woman with calluses on her fingers and ideas blooming in her brain. Not the bride of a billionaire iceberg.

Zara called around noon.

“So,” Zara drawled, “how’s married life with Lord Glacius?”

“Lord glacius?” Aria laughed. “C’mon, you can do better than that.”

“That's the only name I could come up with.” Zara said dramatically

“Its Like sharing a bed with an ice sculpture,” Aria said, arranging a bouquet of wild lavender and garden roses.

Zara cackled. “Have you stabbed him with a salad fork yet?”

“Tempting, but no. Though I did stun him with my brilliance over breakfast. I think he taught that I was quiet and dumb. He laid out a manifesto like I was a national security risk, and I told him I was going back to work.”

“Bold. I love it. Does he know how hot you are when you’re in CEO mode?”

“I don’t think he notices anything but control,” Aria muttered, eyeing the clock. “Anyway. I’m surviving. Mostly.”

They chatted for a while before she hung up, a soft smile tugging at her lips.

Zara always made her feel braver.

She stayed until the last customer left.

The drive home was quiet. The mansion loomed under the moonlight, grand and cold as ever. The housekeeper had left her a covered dinner on the table—a grilled chicken salad and sparkling water. Damian wasn’t home.

No surprise.

She ate in silence. Showered. Changed into her soft cotton sleepwear—an off-the-shoulder top and shorts—and curled into bed with a worn poetry book.

Her body was tired.

Her heart, more so.

Eventually, sleep claimed her.

At Midnight.

The front door clicked open.

Damian stepped inside, the soft thud of his shoes echoing in the marble foyer. He’d had meetings that bled into late dinners. He hadn’t thought of her.

That’s what he told himself.

But now, standing outside the bedroom door, hand on the knob… he hesitated.

He stepped inside quietly.

The room smelled faintly of lavender and honey. The lights were off, except for the dim bedside lamp she’d left on. And there she was.

Curled on her side. Long hair spread across the pillow. One arm tucked beneath her cheek. Her lips slightly parted in sleep.

He stood there for a long moment, looking at her.

Noticing things he shouldn’t.

The way her breath rose and fell. The faint line between her brows. The curve of her bare shoulder under the sheets.

She looked... peaceful.

Vulnerable.

Human.

Not the manipulative woman he believed her to be.

Not the one who ruined his sister.

He exhaled slowly, dragging a hand through his hair.

“Don’t fall for her,” he muttered under his breath, voice quiet and rough. “You can’t.”

But even as he crossed the room and sank into the armchair across from the bed…

He knew.

He already was.

Outside the room, in the shadowed hallway, Ms. Hayes watched the door with narrowed eyes.

And in her hand… was a phone with a photo of Elena and a girl beside her.

Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter
Minishorts Logo
Enjoy full short drama episodes, No waiting, watch now!
MiniShorts Youtube
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
About us
support@minishorts.com
©2026 MiniShorts All Rights Reserved. CHASINGTOP HK LIMITED