CHAPTER ONE: The Offer
The first thing Amara noticed about the building wasn’t its height.
It was the silence.
Not the peaceful kind. Not the kind that calms you after a long day. This silence was polished—engineered. It pressed in from every glass wall and marble floor, swallowing footsteps and muting voices until everything felt distant, controlled.
Like nothing messy was allowed to exist here.
Amara adjusted the strap of her worn leather bag as she stepped into the lobby, her shoes clicking just a little too loudly against the pristine floor. She was immediately aware of everything—her simple dress, the slight fray at the edge of her sleeve, the fact that everyone else looked like they belonged here.
She didn’t.
“Can I help you?” the receptionist asked, her voice smooth but sharp enough to remind Amara that she was being evaluated.
“I… I have an appointment,” Amara said, trying to steady her voice. “With Mr. Vance.”
The receptionist’s expression flickered—just briefly—but Amara caught it.
Interest.
Maybe even curiosity.
“Name?”
“Amara Okoye.”
The woman typed something, then nodded. “He’s expecting you. Take the elevator to the top floor.”
Of course he was.
Top floor.
Amara swallowed and turned toward the elevators, her reflection staring back at her in the mirrored doors. For a second, she hesitated.
What am I doing here?
But then she thought of her siblings.
Of unpaid school fees.
Of the landlord’s voice last week, low and threatening.
And she stepped inside.
Noah Vance didn’t stand when she entered.
He barely even looked up at first.
He was seated behind a wide desk that seemed more like a statement than a piece of furniture—dark wood, sharp edges, nothing unnecessary. Papers were neatly arranged in front of him, though he wasn’t reading them. His attention shifted to her slowly, deliberately, like he was deciding how much of himself he wanted to reveal.
Amara had seen pictures of him before.
Everyone had.
But pictures didn’t capture presence.
They didn’t show the weight of someone used to control.
“You’re late,” he said.
Amara blinked. “I’m… actually ten minutes early.”
A pause.
Then, to her surprise, the corner of his mouth lifted slightly.
“Good,” he said. “That means you value time.”
She wasn’t sure if that was approval or a test.
“Sit.”
She did.
The chair across from him was softer than she expected, but it didn’t relax her. If anything, it made her more aware of how tense she was.
Noah leaned back, studying her openly now.
Not in a crude way.
In a calculated one.
“You’re a law student,” he said.
“Yes.”
“Final year?”
“Yes.”
“You support your siblings.”
Amara stiffened slightly. “I didn’t realize this was an investigation.”
“It’s not,” he said calmly. “It’s due diligence.”
She held his gaze. “Then you already know everything you need.”
Another pause.
This time, longer.
And something shifted.
“Not everything,” Noah said. “I don’t know if you’re the kind of person who understands contracts.”
Amara leaned forward slightly, her nerves sharpening into something else—something steadier.
“I understand them well enough not to sign something I don’t agree with.”
That did it.
This time, his smile was real.
Small.
But real.
“Good,” he said. “Then we won’t waste each other’s time.”
He reached into a drawer and pulled out a document, sliding it across the desk toward her.
Amara hesitated before picking it up.
“What is this?”
“A proposal.”
She let out a quiet breath. “That sounds vague.”
“It’s meant to be.”
Amara opened the document.
The first line made her heart stop.
Marriage Contract.
She looked up slowly. “This is a joke.”
“It’s not.”
She almost laughed—but something in his expression stopped her.
“You’re serious.”
“Yes.”
Amara set the paper down carefully. “You’re asking me to marry you.”
“I’m asking you to enter a legally binding agreement that will benefit both of us.”
“That’s not how marriage works.”
“It is in this case.”
Silence filled the room again, but this time it wasn’t controlled.
It was heavy.
Unpredictable.
“Why me?” she asked.
Noah didn’t hesitate.
“Because you’re exactly what I need.”
“That doesn’t answer the question.”
“It does,” he said. “You’re intelligent. You’re not connected to my world. You have no history of scandal. And most importantly—”
He paused, his eyes locking onto hers.
“You need something.”
Amara’s jaw tightened.
“I’m not for sale.”
“No,” he said calmly. “But your time is. Your effort is. Your cooperation is.”
He tapped the contract lightly.
“And I’m willing to pay for all three.”
She hated how steady he sounded.
How certain.
“How much?” she asked before she could stop herself.
And there it was.
The moment everything changed.
Noah didn’t react outwardly, but something in his posture shifted—just slightly.
“Enough to solve your problems,” he said.
“That’s not a number.”
“Look at page three.”
Amara flipped the pages quickly, her eyes scanning—
And then stopping.
Her breath caught.
The number was more than she had ever seen in her life.
More than enough.
It was freedom.
School fees.
Rent.
Stability.
A future.
She closed the document slowly.
“This isn’t real.”
“It is.”
“There has to be a catch.”
“Of course there is,” Noah said. “It’s a contract.”
Amara let out a dry laugh. “At least you’re honest.”
“I don’t see the benefit in lying.”
“That’s ironic,” she muttered.
His eyes narrowed slightly. “Meaning?”
“Marriage based on appearance? That sounds like a lie to me.”
“It’s an arrangement,” he corrected. “There’s a difference.”
Amara shook her head.
“This is insane.”
“Is it?” he asked. “Or is it practical?”
She didn’t answer.
Because the truth was—
It was both.
“What exactly would I have to do?” she asked finally.
Noah’s expression sharpened.
“Public appearances. Events. Media interactions. You’ll be presented as my wife.”
“And privately?”
“Separate lives.”
She studied him carefully.
“No expectations?”
“None.”
“No… complications?”
“No.”
“And when it ends?”
“After one year, we will divorce. Cleanly. Quietly.”
Amara leaned back, her mind racing.
One year.
Just one year.
“I want to read everything,” she said.
“You should.”
“And I’ll need a lawyer to review it.”
“Already arranged.”
She blinked. “You assumed I’d say yes?”
“I assumed you’d consider it.”
“And if I say no?”
Noah didn’t hesitate.
“Then I find someone else.”
That stung more than she expected.
Not because she cared.
But because it reminded her of something uncomfortable—
She wasn’t special.
She was convenient.
Amara stood slowly, picking up the contract.
“I’ll think about it.”
Noah nodded once.
“Don’t take too long.”
She turned toward the door, her heart pounding in her chest.
“Amara.”
She paused.
“Yes?”
“When you make your decision,” he said quietly, “make it based on what you need—not what you think is right.”
She didn’t respond.
Because for the first time in a long time—
She didn’t know the difference.