The moment they went public, everything changed. Not between them, but around them. Celeste had always been used to noise. Rumors. Flashbulbs. Whispered judgment behind manicured smiles. But this time, the noise wasn’t just about her—m, it was about them. Every headline dissected Damien’s loyalty, every photo was a battlefield, every public appearance a test. Her phone buzzed constantly. Publicists wanting statements. Directors questioning availability. Brands eager to pivot or pull out. But the loudest voice in the chaos was Damien’s. “I going to be your manager,” he said, bluntly, over breakfast one morning. Celeste paused mid-bite. “You already run a media empire.” “And now I am personally taking you on as my client. Not because I want control, but because you deserve someone who w

