Chapter 8 The contract
Adrian’s office was a fortress of shadows. The tall windows let in little light, their heavy curtains drawn to keep the world outside at bay. The air was cold, sharp with the scent of polished leather and faint cigar smoke, a space designed to intimidate anyone who stepped inside. Zara stood in the center of it, her pulse hammering in her ears. The silence stretched, thick and oppressive, pressing against her chest.
Her legs ached from the weight of exhaustion. The gala had drained her, every smile forced, every glance burning. And then there had been his mother ruthless, merciless who had humiliated her before in the morning Zara’s pride still smarted like an open wound. She had wanted, foolishly, for Adrian to defend her, to take her side. But of course, he hadn’t. Because he didn’t see a thing and even if he had seen it he wouldn’t have taken her side .
Now, facing him across the wide expanse of his mahogany desk, she felt stripped bare. He hadn’t even offered her a seat. The message was clear: she was here to listen, not to belong.
A flick of his wrist broke the silence. A document slid across the desk, its edges perfectly aligned, as though even the paper had to obey his order. Zara’s eyes flicked down. Not an apology. Not even an explanation. A contract.
“We need rules, Zara.” Adrian’s voice was calm, too calm the kind that carried more weight than any shout. It was a warning wrapped in civility, a blade hidden beneath velvet.
Her lips parted, but the words stuck in her throat. He continued before she could speak.
“Last night, you proved unpredictable.” He leaned back in his chair, eyes narrowing. “And unpredictability is a risk I cannot afford. I lost half my deals in one night. Half. Do you understand what that means for my name, my business, my empire?” His voice hardened, the words striking like blows. “I will not risk losing it all because I married a frivolity replacement. A mistake. Someone I was never meant to marry in the first place.”
The word frivolity landed like poison on her skin. She had always lived carefully, had always put others before herself, even sacrificing her own happiness to keep her father’s world from unraveling. And yet here she was, reduced to nothing more than a careless stand-in.
Her fingers curled into fists at her side, nails biting into her palms. The room seemed colder, his disdain freezing her from the inside out. Anger burned within her, sharp and clean, but she swallowed it down. Outbursts would only feed his narrative, and she would not give him that satisfaction.
Adrian’s eyes remained locked on her, unflinching, unreadable. “Let me make myself clear with the terms.”
His voice dropped, low and merciless, as he outlined her cage:
She would receive a fixed allowance, monitored carefully, every coin traced back to her. Any attempt to go beyond it would invite consequences.
She was to attend social functions, but as decoration only silent, graceful, ornamental. No opinions. No interference in his business.
And most damning of all, private contact was forbidden. Unless required publicly, they would remain strangers under one roof. She was to address him only as Mr. Voss or Sir.
Each clause tightened around her like a noose, stripping her of freedom, of dignity, of breath. But beneath the suffocating rules, something shifted inside Zara. The clarity was sudden, burning away her despair like a spark in the dark.
She could survive this. She would survive this. But she would not become a shadow, not even in his prison. If he thought she would crumble, he was mistaken.
Her hand didn’t tremble as she reached for the pen. The silence between them deepened as she scrawled her name across the paper. Adrian watched, satisfied, certain he had won. But before she pushed the contract back to him, she paused.
With deliberate care, she added a line at the bottom. A clause of her own.
Her voice was steady when she spoke. “I will remain Zara Alaric. I will not become someone else’s shadow. Not yours. Not anyone’s.”
The scratch of her pen against the paper was louder than his breathing, louder than the pounding of her heart. She slid the contract back across the desk, meeting his eyes with a calmness she didn’t feel.
Adrian scanned it, his mouth curling into a smirk. “That’s more like it,” he said softly, mockery laced through every syllable. “I like that you’ve started to understand your place. That you mean nothing to me. That this marriage is nothing but lies.”
The words should have cut deep, should have broken something inside her. But she had been broken but His words were the same everyday and everyday His words were nothing new, only another lash across scars that had long since hardened.
She stared back, her expression carefully blank, her silence louder than any argument.
For the first time, Adrian’s gaze faltered, just slightly. He rose from behind his desk, the movement deliberate, measured. His height cast her in shadow as he came around to her side. He picked up the pen, ready to sign. But as he reached for the file, his hand brushed against hers.
The contact was fleeting, accidental but it crackled in the air like static. Zara’s body stiffened, every nerve alight. His hand lingered a fraction too long, as though testing something neither of them wanted to name.
The rule he had written, the one forbidding any contact was broken before the ink had even dried.
Her reaction was instant, instinctive. She shoved his hand away, the disgust plain in her movement, like pushing away a venomous creature. Her skin crawled where his fingers had touched, and she wiped it against her dress as though scrubbing away a stain.
Adrian’s laugh split the silence, sharp and cruel. He tilted his head, watching her with a predator’s amusement. “I see you’re already taking the rules seriously,” he drawled. “Good. If you want to survive in this house, that’s the only way. Otherwise, you’ll bring nothing but trouble to yourself.”
His voice was mocking, but beneath it, something darker lingered. Something dangerous.
Zara held his gaze, refusing to flinch, refusing to give him the satisfaction of fear.
The contract lay between them, heavy with ink and venom. It was no longer just a document, it was a weapon, a chain, a declaration of war.
Adrian felt a surge of power. Control was his again, restored, polished, unshakable.
Zara felt a flicker of defiance. Small, but fierce. She would endure. She would not vanish into silence.
What they had signed was not a marriage, not a partnership. It was a legal agreement of mutual contempt, a pact written in hate.
And yet, beneath the hatred, something else began to coil in the shadows between them something sharper, more dangerous than love. Something that looked a lot like respect.