Chapter One : The Collision

1168 Words
The numbers on the hospital bill blurred as Aria Collins stared at the paper, her fingers trembling around its edges. Another five thousand dollars. Another thirty days bought for her mother’s fragile heartbeat. She swallowed hard, her throat raw, as if the very air had turned against her. She folded the bill and shoved it into her purse with the others. A mountain of debt was growing in there, receipts stacked on receipts, each one a reminder of how fast her world was crumbling. She had juggled every job she could find—waitressing nights at Miller’s Diner, tutoring freshman during the day, and taking on shifts at a tiny bookstore when she could. Yet every dollar she scraped together evaporated against hospital fees. She walked the crowded street, clutching her thin jacket tighter against the biting wind. Neon signs flickered over bodegas and pawn shops, mocking her with their promises of cash loans and quick fixes. She had already been down that road. The loan sharks didn’t care about her mother’s failing lungs or the fact that she hadn’t slept a full night in months. They only cared about the money. A honk jolted her from her thoughts, and she barely stepped back before a black SUV swerved past. The driver cursed, his words lost in the chaos of New York traffic. Aria shook her head and kept walking, forcing her legs forward even though exhaustion made them heavy. She couldn’t afford to stop. Stopping meant thinking, and thinking meant drowning. By the time she reached Miller’s Diner, her arms ached and her eyelids weighed like lead. She plastered on the smile she had perfected for customers, the one that didn’t reach her eyes, and pushed open the door. The familiar scent of grease and coffee wrapped around her like a tired hug. “Aria, you’re late,” barked her manager, a balding man with a perpetual scowl. “Sorry, traffic,” she lied, tying her apron quickly. Her hair slipped from its ponytail, and she pushed it back, forcing her spine straight. Another shift, another few dollars closer to a future she could barely see anymore. But as she scribbled down orders and balanced trays, her mind kept drifting to the hospital room where her mother lay. Machines breathed for her when her body couldn’t. Aria’s chest tightened. She had promised her mom she would take care of her. She couldn’t—wouldn’t—fail. She didn’t believe in fairy tales, but sometimes, in the quietest hours of the night, she found herself praying for a miracle. She just never imagined the miracle would come wearing a thousand-dollar suit and a stare sharp enough to cut glass. From the top floor of Knight Enterprises, New York glittered beneath Alexander Knight like a conquered kingdom. He stood in front of the vast windows of his office, one hand tucked into his pocket, the other wrapped around a tumbler of scotch. The city stretched endlessly, skyscrapers piercing the sky, yellow cabs weaving like ants far below. To most men, the view was intoxicating. To Alexander, it was simply his domain. He was thirty-one and had built an empire that bent to his will. Tech mogul, ruthless negotiator, billionaire bachelor—the media called him many things, but his employees knew better. Behind closed doors, he was “the Ice King.” Cold. Unyielding. Calculating. He thrived on control. Numbers, contracts, mergers—these were his weapons. Emotions were weaknesses, love an illusion for fools. And yet tonight, control felt like sand slipping through his fingers. The will sat open on his desk, the words mocking him no matter how many times he read them. To inherit full control of Knight Enterprises, my son must marry—and remain married for at least one year. His father’s voice echoed in his mind, stern and unyielding. “A leader without a family is a man without roots. Marry, Alexander, or everything you’ve built will belong to the board.” Alexander’s jaw tightened. He had spent his life proving he didn’t need anyone, least of all a wife chosen out of obligation. He had loved once—if it could be called love—and the betrayal that followed had burned the last of his illusions. Never again. But the company was his blood, his legacy. He wouldn’t hand it over because of one manipulative clause. If marriage was what it took, then marriage was what he would arrange. Not love. Not romance. Just a contract. The thought should have disgusted him. Instead, it felt… efficient. Controlled. Safe. The sound of heels clicking on marble interrupted his thoughts. Veronica Hayes swept into his office like she owned it, designer dress hugging every curve, smile sharp as a blade. His ex-fiancée. The woman who had once called him unfeeling before shattering his trust with her lies. “Still sulking over Daddy’s will?” she purred, leaning against his desk. Alexander’s eyes narrowed. “Get out.” She smirked. “You’ll need a wife, Xander. And we both know the only woman who fits that role is me.” He set his glass down with deliberate care. “You were never a wife. Only a lesson.” Her smile faltered, but before she could reply, his phone buzzed. His assistant’s voice came through the intercom. “Sir, the charity gala begins in thirty minutes. The car is ready.” Alexander straightened his tie, ignoring Veronica’s glare. If his father wanted a bride, he would find one. But not her. Never her. Marriage was business, nothing more. And somewhere in this city, he would find the perfect woman to sign his contract and stay out of his heart. Hours later, Aria stood outside the grand hotel, her waitress uniform replaced by the borrowed black dress Rachel had insisted she wear. She wasn’t supposed to be here. The gala was for New York’s elite, a glittering parade of gowns and jewels, while she was just a girl with bills and bruised dreams. But the catering company had needed extra hands, and desperation didn’t leave room for pride. She adjusted the tray of champagne flutes, her palms sweaty as she followed the other servers into the ballroom. Chandeliers dripped gold light onto polished marble, and the hum of laughter and music filled the air. Aria kept her eyes down, praying she could make it through the night without spilling anything. But fate, cruel as ever, had other plans. Turning too quickly, her tray collided with a man’s chest. Champagne splashed across his suit jacket, staining the fabric. Gasps rippled around her as she froze, horror rushing through her veins. The man turned, slow and deliberate, his gaze dropping to her. Steel-gray eyes locked on hers. Eyes cold, piercing—eyes that saw too much. Alexander Knight. Aria’s breath caught. She had no idea that in one reckless second, she had collided not just with a man, but with the storm that would change her life forever.
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