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Velvet chains of winter

Velvet chains of winter

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img 68 Chapters
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About

Elara Snowe's world is a gilded cage. Trapped under the control of her manipulative stepmother and jealous stepsister, she dreams of freedom and safety-though she doesn't know it can come from an unexpected place. Kael Arden Blackwood, a brilliant but emotionally distant CEO, has mastered the art of keeping people at arm's length... until a chance encounter with Elara changes everything. She is fragile yet fiercely kind, naive yet resilient-and he finds himself drawn to her in ways he has never allowed. As their lives intertwine, Elara must navigate a world of lies, manipulation, and hidden threats, while Kael must confront a heart he thought was frozen. With danger close, secrets unraveling, and the slow burn of forbidden attraction between them, the question becomes not if they will fall for each other, but if love can survive the storms around them. Velvet Chains of Winter is a 92-chapter journey of protection, desire, and the transformative power of trust.

Chapter 1 THE COLLISION THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

Rain turned the city into a mirror of broken light.

Neon signs blurred against the wet pavement, car headlights stretching into trembling lines as Elara Vale stood at the edge of the crosswalk, waiting for the pedestrian light to change. Her fingers tightened around the thin strap of her handbag, knuckles pale from the cold and from habit. The evening air seeped through her coat-too thin, too old, never enough.

She was used to that.

Used to things never being enough.

Around her, the city moved without noticing her existence. People hurried past, umbrellas clashing, voices sharp with impatience. Someone brushed her shoulder without apology. Another laughed into a phone call, careless and loud.

Elara lowered her gaze.

Being invisible was safer.

Her stepmother's voice echoed in her mind, precise and cruelly calm.

"You'll take the documents to Blackwood Tower tonight. No excuses. If anything goes wrong, don't bother coming back."

Elara swallowed hard.

She didn't know why the delivery had to be done so late, or why it had to be her. Maribel Vale never explained herself. She issued commands, and Elara followed. That was the unspoken rule of the house she had lived in since she was sixteen.

Her father's house, though it had never truly been her home.

The pedestrian light flickered green.

Elara stepped forward, heart pounding-not from excitement, but from the familiar anxiety that accompanied every task she was given. She kept her head down, watching the wet ground, careful not to slip.

That was when it happened.

She collided with something solid.

The impact sent a sharp jolt through her body. Her breath left her lungs in a startled gasp as she stumbled backward, her bag slipping from her shoulder. Papers flew into the air, white sheets immediately darkening as rain splashed across them.

"I-I'm so sorry," she blurted out, panic rising instantly. She dropped to her knees, scrambling to gather the documents before the rain could ruin them completely. "I wasn't looking, I didn't mean to-"

A shadow fell over her.

She froze.

A pair of polished black shoes stood inches from her trembling hands. They were immaculate-expensive, untouched by rain or haste. Slowly, as if bracing herself for reprimand or ridicule, Elara lifted her head.

The man standing before her looked nothing like the hurried crowd around them.

He was tall-so tall that she had to tilt her head back to meet his gaze. Broad shoulders filled out a tailored black coat that looked custom-made to command attention. Rain slid down the fabric without clinging, as though even the weather respected him enough to keep its distance.

His face was striking, but not in a warm way. Sharp cheekbones, a strong jaw, lips set in a neutral line that suggested control rather than kindness. Dark hair fell neatly across his forehead, untouched by disorder.

But it was his eyes that rooted her in place.

Cold. Deep. Observant.

Eyes that saw everything.

"I'm really sorry," she said again, her voice quieter now, instinctively shrinking under the weight of his presence. "I'll clean the papers, I promise."

He didn't move.

Didn't speak.

The silence pressed down on her, thick and suffocating. Elara hurried to gather the last of the documents, her fingers numb from cold and fear.

"Stop."

The word was quiet, spoken without anger or volume-yet it halted her instantly.

She stilled, her hands hovering over the wet pages.

The man crouched down, movements controlled and unhurried. He picked up one of the documents she had missed, eyes flicking briefly over the heading.

BLACKWOOD CONSOLIDATED - CONFIDENTIAL

Something shifted in his expression.

Not surprise. Recognition.

His gaze returned to her face.

"You were bringing these here," he said.

It wasn't a question.

"Yes, sir," Elara replied automatically, her throat tightening. "I was told to deliver them tonight."

"Who sent you?"

She hesitated.

Just a second too long.

The man straightened, towering over her once more. Rain traced a path down his jawline, but he didn't seem to notice it.

"Stand up," he said.

Her body obeyed before her mind could argue. She rose unsteadily to her feet, clutching the remaining papers to her chest like a shield.

Up close, his presence was overwhelming. Not aggressive-worse. Calm. Controlled. Like a man who didn't need to raise his voice because the world already listened when he spoke.

He looked at her properly now.

Not just her face-but the worn coat, the scuffed shoes, the way she held herself as if bracing for impact. As if life had taught her that even standing still could invite punishment.

"You're shaking," he observed.

"I'm fine," she lied, too quickly.

His eyes narrowed slightly, not in suspicion but in something colder. Analytical.

"You're cold," he corrected. "And frightened."

Her lips parted, but no words came.

He glanced at the soaked documents in her hands. Then back at her face.

"Follow me."

Her heart leapt painfully. "I-what?"

He had already turned away, moving with decisive certainty.

Panic surged through her. "Sir, please, I really need to deliver these. My stepmother-"

He stopped.

Slowly, he turned back.

"Your stepmother?" he repeated.

Elara cursed herself internally. She hadn't meant to say it. The words had slipped out, fueled by fear rather than sense.

"Yes," she said softly. "She asked me to-"

"What's her name?"

Something in his tone made her stomach tighten.

"Maribel Vale."

The air shifted.

The man's face remained composed, but something dark and dangerous settled behind his eyes.

"Of course it is," he murmured, more to himself than to her.

Elara didn't understand the meaning behind his words, but unease crept along her spine.

He stepped closer and took the documents from her hands. Their fingers brushed briefly-hers cold and trembling, his warm and steady. The contact sent an unfamiliar jolt through her chest, sharp and unsettling.

"You'll come inside," he said. "You look like you're about to collapse."

"I really can't," she whispered. "If I'm late-"

"That wasn't a request."

The lobby of Blackwood Tower was nothing like anywhere Elara had ever been.

Marble floors gleamed beneath soft golden lighting. The air smelled faintly of clean stone and money. People moved through the space with quiet efficiency, conversations hushed, footsteps measured.

As the man walked in, something strange happened.

People noticed.

Conversations stopped. Heads turned. Employees straightened instinctively, stepping aside without being asked.

No one questioned him.

No one stopped him.

Elara followed a step behind, acutely aware of the water dripping from her coat onto the pristine floor. She wrapped her arms around herself, wishing she could disappear into the shadows.

The elevator doors slid open.

Inside, silence wrapped around them like a held breath.

The man didn't look at her as the elevator rose, numbers climbing steadily. Elara watched the reflection of her own face in the mirrored walls-pale, tense, out of place.

"You don't work for Maribel Vale," he said suddenly.

Her eyes widened. "I-I live with her."

He glanced at her briefly. "Not the same thing."

The doors opened onto a private executive floor.

He gestured toward a seating area outside a glass-walled office. "Sit."

She obeyed again, sitting on the edge of the chair as though afraid to claim too much space.

A woman appeared moments later-elegant, poised, her expression carefully neutral.

"Mr. Blackwood?"

"Tea," he said. "And a towel."

The assistant's gaze flicked briefly to Elara, surprise flashing before professionalism returned. "Yes, sir."

When they were alone again, he leaned against his desk, arms crossed.

"Why are you afraid of going home?" he asked.

The question struck deeper than she expected.

"I'm not," she replied automatically.

He didn't challenge her. Didn't accuse her of lying.

Instead, he said calmly, "You were sent here alone, in the rain, with confidential documents. You apologized when you were the one knocked down. And when you mentioned your stepmother, your pulse spiked."

Her fingers tightened in her lap. "Please don't tell her I was late."

"I won't."

She looked up sharply, disbelief flickering across her face.

"I won't," he repeated. "But I will ask you something in return."

Her heart hammered painfully. "What?"

"Tell me the truth."

Silence stretched between them.

No one had ever asked her that before.

Finally, her voice came out barely above a whisper. "She doesn't like me."

His gaze softened-just slightly.

"That," he said quietly, "is an understatement."

When the assistant returned, Elara accepted the tea with shaking hands.

The man watched her carefully.

Kael Arden Blackwood had built an empire on control, precision, and distance. He did not involve himself in personal matters. He did not rescue strangers.

But as he observed the way Elara Vale held her cup as though it might be taken from her at any moment, something settled deep within him.

Quiet.

Dangerous.

Irrevocable.

Maribel Vale had crossed a line.

And Elara Vale-whether she realized it or not-had just stepped into his world.

Under his protection.

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