The morning started quietly, deceptively, like the calm before a storm. Sunlight fell lazily across the silk curtains of my bedroom, painting golden streaks across the polished wood floor. But the warmth did nothing to ease the tension knotting my chest.
My phone vibrated violently on the nightstand, its screen lighting up with a single, urgent message:
"She’s gone. Your cousin ran. Father collapsed. Hospital. Call immediately."
I swallowed the sharp lump rising in my throat, though my body remained eerily calm. Panic, I had learned, did not suit me. Not when the stakes were this high.
My cousin had abandoned her own wedding. My father—already frail—had collapsed under the weight of disappointment and stress. And somehow, the responsibility of fixing this disaster had landed squarely on my shoulders.
I rose from the bed, my movements measured and precise. The adrenaline surged in my veins, but I did not tremble. Fear, I realized, was a luxury I could not afford. My mind, sharp and calculating, began to map the steps ahead. Today, I would act. Today, I would protect my family—even if it meant stepping into a war I had never chosen.
By the time I reached the hospital, chaos had already taken root. Nurses and doctors moved with brisk efficiency, their hurried footsteps echoing off the sterile walls. My mother hovered at my father’s bedside, her hands trembling over his arms, her voice sharp yet trembling with worry. My father lay pale and frail, his chest rising and falling unevenly as the monitor beside him beeped rhythmically, betraying his unease.
“Aria,” my mother said, her voice tight, almost breaking despite her efforts at control, “you must go. The company… the wedding… everything rests on you now.”
I nodded, swallowing hard. My throat felt tight, but my mind was razor-sharp. I had always been the daughter who acted rather than panicked, the one who observed silently and struck only when necessary. And today, that silent strength would be tested like never before.
The bridal suite smelled faintly of lilies and tension. My cousin’s gown hung over a chair like a specter of failure, reminding me of the chaos I was stepping into. I slid into it without hesitation, feeling the silk tighten around my shoulders—a tangible reminder of the role I was about to assume.
I stared into the mirror, studying my reflection. My features were soft, wide eyes framed by long lashes, lips naturally full, hair arranged in careful waves. On the surface, I could pass for delicate and fragile. But beneath the calm exterior, I was something else entirely—a mind that calculated, a heart that endured, a woman quietly powerful.
I lifted my chin, squared my shoulders, and whispered to myself, almost like a vow:
I will not be the victim. I will not break. I will not falter.
The limousine carried me through the city streets, the rain beginning as a light drizzle before turning into sharp, stinging drops against the window. I pressed my palm against the cold glass and allowed my thoughts to wander to him—the man who had orchestrated this marriage, the man I was about to wed under contract.
Cruse De Luca.
Years of observing his business dealings and public demeanor had taught me everything I needed to know: cold, calculated, unyielding. He did not love. He did not forgive. He married for strategy, for leverage, for revenge. And today, I would become a part of his plan.
I closed my eyes, imagining him waiting at the cathedral doors, his gray eyes scanning the guests with predatory precision. I allowed myself a faint smirk. If he thought he would dominate this arrangement completely, he had not met me yet.
The cathedral doors opened, and the whispers began immediately. Gasps of surprise, murmurs of disbelief—the guests’ eyes darted between me and Cruse, measuring, judging, reading the tension in the air.
I ignored them. I had no time for speculation or judgment. My focus was singular: survive this ceremony intact, retain my composure, and protect my family.
Cruse’s gaze found me as I walked down the aisle. Gray, unyielding, meticulous. It was the gaze of a man accustomed to controlling everything in his life, and yet… there was something faint, almost imperceptible flickering beneath it. Curiosity? Recognition? It was impossible to tell.
I walked with my shoulders back, chin high, every step measured and deliberate. I was a lioness entering enemy territory, silent, calculated, unbroken.
When I reached the altar, he slid the folded contract toward me. My fingers brushed the smooth paper as I unfolded it. The terms were cold and precise:
• No attachment.
• No love.
• No children.
• Temporary.
• Strategic.
• Beneficial only to business.
Each line cut like a knife, but I did not flinch. I looked up at him, his gray eyes sharp and assessing.
“Do not mistake this marriage for affection,” he said, voice low and controlled, almost a warning.
I held his gaze, unwavering. “I understand,” I replied, calm but firm.
And with those words, our silent battle began.
The priest’s voice floated above the tension, formal and detached. Cruse’s vow was measured, almost mechanical:
“I, Cruse De Luca, take you, Aria Morret, as my lawful wife, under this contract, for strategy and mutual benefit.”
I mirrored his tone, hiding the fire that burned beneath. “I do.”
It was not love. Not yet. But it was a promise to endure, to survive, and to stake my claim in a war disguised as marriage.
The ceremony ended, the guests murmuring, cameras clicking, yet I remained untouched by their curiosity. I was already calculating, already observing, already preparing.
Once we were outside, the rain washing the streets in a silver sheen, I took a slow breath, letting the cold droplets kiss my face. My mind replayed the day’s events, the contract, the dangerous gray gaze of Cruse De Luca.
I whispered to myself, almost inaudibly:
I will not be the pawn. I will not be weak. I will not be defined by a man who seeks to control me.
And deep inside, I knew—this marriage was only the beginning. The storm had just begun. And I would meet it with teeth bared, shoulders back, and a heart that refused to break.
I was Aria Morret. I was quietly powerful. And I would not turn back.