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My father stole my mother's legacy and forced me into an engagement with Arley Simmons to secure a financial lifeline for his company. I became a mere bargaining chip, a tragic heiress sold to the highest bidder. Now, Arley was back from his year-long "business trip." But his mistress, my former best friend Kenia, texted me a photo flaunting a multi-million dollar sapphire necklace he had just bought her. "I heard Arley's back tomorrow. So happy for you both." It was a blatant declaration of war. Yet, the Simmons family didn't care about my humiliation. They demanded I play the doting fiancée to secure a crucial partnership with the elusive billionaire, Algernon McCarthy. They forced me to move into Arley's penthouse, and his mother ordered us to produce an heir immediately to silence the scandal. Arley even came home drunk, trying to force himself on me to do his "duty." They all thought I was just their puppet. They expected me to swallow the pain, hide in the shadows, and let my silent misery curdle while they built their empire on my broken life. But the old Hope was dead. I terminated the contract with the secret escort I had hired for the past year, ready to clean house and burn the Simmons family to the ground. What I didn't know was that the escort I had just thrown away like trash was the very billionaire god my enemies were desperately praying to.
Hope Perry watched him from the bed, her phone cool and heavy in her hand.
Drake Malloy stepped out of the master bathroom, a low-slung white towel clinging to his hips. Water dripped from his dark hair onto the defined lines of his shoulders and chest. He ran a hand through his hair, the movement casual, easy. The air in the penthouse bedroom was still thick with the scent of them, a warm, intimate haze that she was about to shatter.
She swiped her thumb across the screen, the motion smooth and practiced. The Swiss bank app opened, its sterile blue and white interface a stark contrast to the rumpled silk sheets around her.
Drake paused, his hand stilling in his hair. He noticed the phone, the focused set of her jaw. His deep blue eyes, usually warm, held a flicker of question.
Hope didn't look up. Her finger hovered over the keypad. She typed in a number. Seven figures. It was obscene, far more than the generous monthly fee they had agreed upon a year ago. It was the last of the trust her mother had left her, a final bastion of independence. She was using it now not just to end a contract, but to buy back a piece of her own soul.
She took a shallow breath, the kind you take before delivering bad news in a boardroom.
"This is the last one, Drake."
Her voice was calm, level. It didn't belong in this bedroom.
"Our contract is terminated."
He didn't move, but something in the room shifted. The warmth evaporated. His body, which had been relaxed moments ago, went rigid. A single drop of water traced a path down his abdomen and hung there, suspended in the sudden, frozen silence.
He walked toward the bed. Each step was deliberate, silent on the plush carpet. The feeling of him being a paid companion, someone she controlled, vanished. Now, he was just a man, a large and powerful one, and he was closing in.
"Why?" The word was low, a rumble that vibrated in the air between them.
She finally forced herself to meet his gaze. There was no sentiment in her eyes, only the flat, detached assessment of a transaction being closed.
"My fiancé is coming back."
She let the word "fiancé" hang in the air, a deliberate, calculated barb. She wanted to see it land. To see him react.
He did. A slow, mocking smile touched his lips, but it didn't reach his eyes. Those were turning into chips of ice. He leaned over her, planting his hands on the mattress on either side of her hips, caging her in. The scent of clean soap and damp skin filled her senses, overwhelming her. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird.
"So that's all this was?" His voice was dangerously soft now. "For the past year, I was just a substitute?"
"You always knew it was a transaction," she said, her own voice sounding thin to her ears. She fought to keep it steady.
She looked down at her phone, at the glowing "Confirm Transfer" button. It was her escape. Her power. She pressed it.
A soft ding echoed in the tense silence.
It was done.
Almost simultaneously, a phone on the nightstand vibrated. His. The bank notification.
Drake pushed himself up, straightening to his full height. The heat in his eyes was gone, replaced by a cold, bottomless void. He didn't argue anymore. He didn't ask another question.
He simply turned and began to dress. The movements were fluid, economical, each piece of expensive, tailored clothing sliding into place, rebuilding the impeccable facade of the man she had hired. There was a terrible, contained violence in his grace.
Hope let out a breath she didn't realize she'd been holding. But the relief was tainted with a sharp edge of unease.
Dressed in a crisp black shirt and trousers, he looked like a stranger again. He turned to her, the perfect, polished escort. He gave a slight, formal bow.
"Thank you for a year of your generosity, Ms. Perry."
Then he walked out. The door closed with a soft, final click that sounded like a gunshot in the quiet room.
The moment she was alone, the strength drained out of her. Her carefully constructed composure crumbled into dust. She fell back against the pillows, the phone slipping from her fingers. The vast, empty penthouse suddenly felt like a tomb.
Her mind reeled back, a year ago. The day her father, Harrison Perry, had handed control of Perry Group, her mother's legacy, to his new wife. The day he'd sat her down and told her she would be marrying Arley Simmons, the heir to the Simmons fortune, to secure a financial lifeline for the company he had just stolen.
She had become a commodity. A bargaining chip in a game she hadn't asked to play. The New York elite whispered about the poor, tragic Hope Perry, sold off to the highest bidder.
Hiring Drake had been her one act of rebellion. Her one secret. In a life that was no longer her own, he was the only thing she could control, a pleasure she could purchase and discard at will. A way to feel something, anything, other than the cold, suffocating despair.
Now Arley was coming home from his year-long "business trip" in Asia. It was time to clean house. Time to put on the mask of the doting fiancée and begin her real work.
The war was about to start. And there could be no loose ends.
Miles away, Drake Malloy slid into the back of a nondescript, armored sedan. The interior was silent, insulated from the city's noise.
He reached up and pinched the edge of his contact lens, pulling it out. The deep blue of his iris was gone, revealing an unnervingly pale, ice-blue gaze. The change was subtle but absolute. The entire energy around him shifted, from the polished charm of a companion to the lethal stillness of a predator.
He took out a second phone, a sleek, encrypted device. He dialed a number.
"Yes, sir?" The voice on the other end was immediate, respectful.
He stared out at the glittering skyline of Manhattan, his city. His fingers tapped a soft, rhythmic beat against the bulletproof glass.
"Activate Protocol A," he commanded, his voice stripped of any warmth. It was the voice of a man used to absolute obedience. "I want everything on Hope Perry. From birth. And on her 'fiancé,' Arley Simmons. Everything."
"Right away, Mr. McCarthy."
He ended the call. A humorless smile touched his lips.
"A substitute," he murmured to his reflection in the dark glass.
The game wasn't over. It had just begun.
The Phantom CEO's Runaway Contract Lover
Ola Wilde
Billionaires
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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