The price of Survival
Amara’s POV
The rain in Northwood didn’t just fall; it punished. It lashed against the cracked window of "Silas’s Tailor Shop," a rhythmic, mocking sound that matched the thudding of my heart.
"Please," I whispered, my voice cracking as I stared at the man standing across the cutting table. "Just two more weeks. My father is still in recovery. If you take the sewing machines, he’ll have nothing to come back to."
The man, a debt collector named Miller with breath that smelled of stale cigarettes and cheap coffee, didn't even look up from his clipboard. He kicked the leg of the vintage Singer machine—the one my grandfather had used, the one that had put me through design school.
"Two weeks turned into two months, Amara," Miller grunted. "The bank doesn't care about your father’s heart surgery. They care about the six figures he owes on this mortgage. As of five o’clock today, the inventory is ours."
"Six figures?" I gasped, the air leaving my lungs. "That’s impossible. The loan was for fifty thousand."
Miller finally looked at me, a flash of pity in his eyes that felt worse than his anger. "Interest, kid. Your old man signed a predatory contract when the medical bills started piling up. You’re drowning, and this shop is the anchor pulling you under."
He signaled to the two burly men waiting at the door. They moved in, their heavy boots thudding on the hardwood floor.
"No! Stop!" I lunged forward, grabbing the arm of the first man as he reached for the industrial steam iron.
He pushed me back—not hard, but enough to make me stumble. I hit the floor, my palms stinging as they scraped against the pins and stray threads scattered on the rug. I watched, paralyzed, as they began to strip the shop bare. My life, my father’s legacy, was being dismantled in crates.
Ten minutes later, I was standing on the sidewalk in the pouring rain, clutching a single cardboard box. Inside was my sketchbook, a set of shears, and a framed photo of my father smiling in front of this very window.
The "Closed" sign didn't just mean for the night. It meant forever.
The Call That Changed Everything
I walked for an hour, my clothes soaked through, my mind a blur of desperation. I couldn't go to the hospital. How could I look at my father, pale and fragile in that ICU bed, and tell him his dream was gone? How would I pay for his medication next month?
My phone buzzed in my pocket. A blocked number.
"Hello?" I answered, my voice trembling.
"Miss Amara Vance?" The voice was clipped, professional, and devoid of any warmth.
"Yes. Who is this?"
"My name is Marcus Thorne. I represent the legal interests of Wolfe Industries. I believe you recently applied for a junior designer position at our firm?"
I leaned against a cold brick wall, trying to breathe. "I—I did. Three months ago. I never heard back."
"The position has been filled," Thorne said. I felt a fresh wave of defeat, but he continued. "However, Mr. Adrian Wolfe has a different... proposal for you. One that would resolve your father's debts in their entirety by tomorrow morning."
I froze. Everyone knew the name Adrian Wolfe. The "Ice King" of the tech and real estate world. A man whose face was on every business magazine and whose heart was rumored to be made of the same steel as his skyscrapers.
"I don't understand," I said. "Why me? I've never even met him."
"Mr. Wolfe requires a specific type of arrangement. One that requires a person with no social ties and a high level of... motivation. You are currently $180,000 in debt, Miss Vance. I would call that motivated."
The rain felt colder. "What kind of proposal?"
"A marriage contract. One year. In exchange, your father’s medical bills are cleared, the shop is returned to him, and you receive a monthly stipend of fifty thousand dollars."
I let out a hysterical laugh. "You want me to sell myself? To a stranger?"
"I want you to save your father's life," Thorne countered coldly. "A car is waiting for you at the corner of 5th and Main. You have ten minutes to decide if you want to be a martyr or a savior."
The line went dead.
Meeting the Beast
The car was a black Rolls-Royce that looked like a predator lurking in the shadows. I got in, my wet hair dripping onto the pristine leather seats. I felt like a stray cat brought into a palace.
The driver didn't speak. He drove me to the top of the hill, to the Wolfe Estate—a monolith of glass and black stone overlooking the city.
I was led into a massive library. The walls were lined with books that looked like they hadn't been touched in a century. At the far end, behind a mahogany desk, sat a man.
Adrian Wolfe.
The photos didn't do him justice. They captured the sharp jawline and the dark, brooding brow, but they couldn't capture the sheer weight of his presence. His eyes were the color of a winter sea—beautiful, but capable of drowning you.
He didn't stand when I entered. He didn't even look up from the document he was reading.
"You’re late," he said. His voice was a deep, resonant growl that sent a shiver down my spine.
"The rain—"
"I don't care about the weather, Amara. I care about punctuality and silence." He finally looked up. His gaze swept over me, from my soaked sneakers to my tangled hair. There was no lust in his eyes. There wasn't even interest. Just a cold, clinical evaluation. "You look like a mess."
"I just lost my home," I snapped, a spark of my old fire returning. "Forgive me if I didn't stop for a manicure on the way to my 'sale.'"
A flicker of something—amusement?—passed through his eyes before they turned back to ice.
"Sit. Read the contract. You have five minutes."
He slid a thick folder across the desk. I sat, my hands shaking as I flipped through the pages.
Article 1: The marriage shall last 365 days.
Article 2: No physical intimacy without mutual consent (though public displays of affection are mandatory).
Article 3: No emotional attachment.
Article 4: Under no circumstances shall a pregnancy occur.
I paused at Article 4. My heart gave a strange little tug. "No pregnancy?"
"I am under pressure from my board and my mother to produce an heir and settle down," Adrian said, standing up. He walked to the window, his back to me. He was tall, his tailored suit fitting his broad shoulders perfectly. "The marriage satisfies the 'settling down' requirement. But I have no intention of bringing a child into a world of business deals and fake smiles. This is a transaction, Amara. Nothing more."
"And if I sign this?" I asked. "The shop? My father's heart medication?"
"The deed to the shop will be in your hand by dawn. Your father will be moved to a private suite with the best surgeons in the country tonight." He turned around, his expression unreadable. "But in exchange, you belong to the Wolfe name for a year. You will play the doting wife. You will endure the press. And you will never, ever fall in love with me."
I looked at the pen on the desk. It was gold, heavy, and felt like a weapon.
I thought of Miller kicking the sewing machine. I thought of my father’s pale face under the oxygen mask.
I didn't love Adrian Wolfe. I didn't even like him. He was arrogant, cold, and treated people like line items on a balance sheet. But he was offering me a lifeline, even if it was made of barbed wire.
"I have one condition," I said, my voice steadying.
Adrian arched a dark eyebrow. "You’re in no position to bargain."
"I want to keep my job. Not as your wife, but as a designer. I won't be a bird in a gilded cage."
Adrian watched me for a long moment. He stepped closer, entering my personal space. The scent of sandalwood and expensive whiskey enveloped me. He leaned down, his face inches from mine.
"Fine," he whispered. "Work. Design your little dresses. But remember, Amara—when the cameras are on, you are mine. When we are behind closed doors, you are a ghost."
I picked up the pen.
"I've always been good at disappearing," I lied.
I signed my name on the dotted line.
I didn't know then that this contract wasn't just a business deal. It was the start of a war. A war for my heart, a war against the secrets of the Wolfe family, and a war I would eventually lose when I realized that the "Ice King" had a fire in him that would eventually burn my world to the ground.
As I put the pen down, Adrian’s phone buzzed. He glanced at it, then at me.
"Welcome to the family, Amara. Try not to regret it too quickly."
He walked out of the room without a second glance, leaving me alone in the dark library, a billionaire’s bride with a hollow heart and a secret hope that I could survive the year.
I had no idea that in nine months, I wouldn'
t be worried about the contract. I would be running for my life, carrying the one thing he told me I could never have.
His child.