Bound By The Ruthless Tycoon's Contract

Six months earlier. New York City.

The office was quiet, the only sound the faint hum of the traffic thirty floors below. Blair sat behind her massive mahogany desk, her posture flawless, her face an unreadable mask. She held a tablet, her finger swiping across the screen with mechanical precision.

Paige Fletcher stood a few feet away, shifting her weight from one foot to the other. The assistant's face was pale, her hands clutching a folder so tightly her knuckles were white.

The screen displayed a social media post. It had gone live exactly ten minutes ago. It was a statement from Alexis Ashley.

Blair's eyes scanned the text. The first half was standard PR fluff-denying the rumors about him and Kiana Glover, calling her a "good friend." But the second half of the statement was a bomb.

To avoid hurting innocent people, I must confess that my civilian girlfriend and I have already parted ways amicably.

"Blair..." Paige's voice was barely a whisper. "The PR department had no idea. He posted it himself."

Blair's finger paused on the words "civilian girlfriend." A tiny, almost imperceptible smirk tugged at the corner of her mouth. It wasn't a smile of amusement. It was a smile of cold, hard cynicism.

"The hashtag is trending number one," Paige added, her voice trembling. "Every major outlet is picking it up."

Blair tapped the power button. The screen went black. She leaned back in her leather chair, her expression completely unchanged. She didn't look hurt. She didn't look surprised. She looked like she was reviewing a quarterly earnings report that had missed the mark.

Paige stared at her, bewildered. The whole industry knew Blair and Alexis were together. It was the worst kind of public humiliation, yet her boss was sitting there like a statue.

Amicably? Blair thought. We never started, so how could we end? It was just a misunderstanding I allowed because it made him easier to control.

Her mind drifted back three years. A smoky jazz bar in Brooklyn. Rain streaming down the windows. A young waiter, wearing a stained apron, being screamed at by a drunk executive for dropping a glass of Macallan.

Blair had seen the fire in the young man's eyes. The sheer, unadulterated ambition. She had paid off the drunk, slid her card across the sticky table, and said, "Want to be an actor?"

She had built him from the ground up. Elocution coaches, gym trainers, stylists. She had called in every favor, even groveling to her Aunt Joella, to get him the audition that launched his career. The world assumed they were lovers. She let them. It kept him on a leash and generated buzz.

Now, the dog thought it had grown teeth. It thought it could bite the hand that fed it and run off with a richer owner.

Blair opened her eyes. There was no heartbreak in them. Only ice.

"Tell PR we are not commenting," Blair said, her voice flat.

Paige blinked. "No comment? But that basically confirms he dumped you. Your reputation-"

"My reputation is not defined by a man's social media post," Blair cut her off, her tone sharp enough to cut glass. "Let him make noise. The louder, the better."

Paige felt a chill run down her spine looking at the side of Blair's face. It was terrifyingly cold.

A soft vibration broke the silence. Blair picked up her personal phone from the desk. The message was from an encrypted number. The sender: Butler McIntyre.

Your little dog seems to have forgotten his training.

Blair stared at the text. A wave of cold washed over her. He knew. He knew about the "relationship." He knew about the breakup the minute it happened. He was always watching.

She deleted the message instantly, her thumb pressing the trash icon with force. She stood up, the legs of her chair scraping against the floor, and walked over to the floor-to-ceiling window. Manhattan stretched out below her, a grid of lights and power.

Alexis, you think you broke my heart? she thought, her reflection in the glass looking back at her with steely eyes. No. You just ruined a very expensive tool.

She turned back to her desk. She picked up a silver framed photo-her and Alexis at a film festival, smiling intimately for the cameras. Without a change in her expression, she flipped the frame face-down on the desk. The glass made a dull thud.

The memory of the New York office, cold and sterile, clung to her for a moment longer. But the phantom chill was instantly erased by the heavy, cedar-scented heat of the Los Angeles hotel room and the suffocating weight of the man above her. The ghost of Alexis's cheap ambition was no match for the dominant, intoxicating reality of Butler's presence. She kept her eyes closed, her mind as cold and dead as the diamonds around her neck.

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