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The Ties That Binds
img img The Ties That Binds img Chapter 5 The Offer on the Table
5 Chapters
Chapter 6 The Decision img
Chapter 7 Reluctant Acceptance img
Chapter 8 Unsettling Silence img
Chapter 9 First Impressions img
Chapter 10 The Unseen Pressure img
Chapter 11 The Underlying Motive img
Chapter 12 Reckoning img
Chapter 13 A Game of Shadows img
Chapter 14 Breach img
Chapter 15 The Leak img
Chapter 16 The pressure point img
Chapter 17 Lines Drawn img
Chapter 18 Shattered Foundations img
Chapter 19 Lines in the Sand img
Chapter 20 A Crack in the Empire img
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Chapter 5 The Offer on the Table

"Lost your way already?" Jackson's voice carried from the massive carved oak doors before Savannah had even lifted her hand to knock.

Savannah froze on the marble steps, her fingers tightening around the strap of her worn leather handbag. She had rehearsed a hundred different ways this meeting might begin, her stumbling through some polished introduction, or his secretary ushering her in with icy disdain, but she hadn't prepared for the door to open on his deep baritone and mocking calm.

"You're early," he said, pushing the door wider. He was taller than she remembered, broad shouldered, his tailored shirt clinging to a frame built from discipline, not luck. His expression was unreadable, eyes cool and steady like still water hiding a dangerous depth.

"And you're... predictable," she replied quickly, masking her nerves with sarcasm. "I figured a man like you would have someone else open the door for him."

He arched a brow, studying her as if she were already playing into his hand. "A man like me? You'll have to explain that later. For now, come in."

She stepped inside, her scuffed flats making no sound against the gleaming white marble floor. The sheer expanse of the foyer nearly took her breath away. Crystal chandeliers dripped from ceilings two stories high, golden light glancing off mirrored walls and expensive artwork that probably cost more than her entire mortgage debt. The air smelled faintly of leather, old books, and something sharper, like cedarwood cologne.

"Trying to impress me?" she muttered, her eyes darting to the spiraling staircase and the enormous painting at its base: a storm breaking over the ocean, all gray fury and crashing waves.

"I don't try," Jackson said simply, closing the door with a quiet finality that sent a ripple down her spine. "Impressing people is a side effect."

He walked ahead of her, his long stride forcing her to hurry to keep up. Savannah hated that. She hated being pulled into his rhythm, into his space, into his world where every surface shone with control and order.

They entered a vast study lined with dark shelves, books arranged with ruthless precision. A fire crackled low in the hearth, though the evening wasn't cold enough to need it. Jackson gestured to a leather chair across from his desk.

"Sit," he said.

Savannah stiffened. "You talk to me like I'm one of your employees."

"Would you rather I treat you like a guest? With small talk about the weather?" His mouth tugged at one corner, a half-smile that wasn't warmth, but something sharper. "That would waste both our time."

Her heart beat faster, irritation mingling with unease. She sat anyway, the chair swallowing her up.

Jackson circled his desk and leaned against it, not sitting. He folded his arms, his gaze steady on her face, his silence deliberate. Savannah felt it, the way he used quiet as a weapon, letting the weight of his presence press down until she shifted uncomfortably.

Finally, she broke. "You said you had an offer. Something about saving my house?"

The flames popped in the fireplace, as though punctuating her words.

"Yes," he said at last, his voice calm, controlled. "I'll pay off your debt. The foreclosure notice disappears. Your home remains yours. In return, you'll marry me."

The words landed like a thunderclap. Savannah blinked at him, waiting for the smirk that would tell her he was joking. None came.

"You're insane," she whispered.

"Possibly." His expression didn't shift. "But I don't joke about contracts."

Her laugh was short, disbelieving. "You think you can just throw money at me and I'll, what? Wear your ring, smile at parties, pretend we're some power couple?"

"Not pretend," he corrected softly. "Appear."

"Appear," she echoed bitterly. "And what do I get to appear as? The poor little charity case who couldn't keep her house without your pity?"

Jackson's gaze sharpened, but his voice stayed even. "I don't offer pity, Savannah. I offer terms."

Something in the way he said her name, low, deliberate, made her chest tighten. She looked away quickly, focusing on the fire. "Why me? You could have any woman you want. One who actually fits your... world."

For the first time, a flicker of something, amusement? regret?, touched his eyes. "Because you're not like them. You won't fall at my feet. You won't expect me to play the doting husband. You'll challenge me."

Savannah stared at him, a flush rising unbidden to her cheeks. She hated the way his words made her feel seen.

"This is ridiculous," she said, standing abruptly. "I shouldn't have come."

Jackson didn't move. He let her walk halfway to the door before speaking again, his voice slicing through the space. "The bank gave you until the end of the month. That's twelve days."

Her steps faltered.

He continued, quiet and relentless. "I know the amount you owe. I know about the second mortgage, the unpaid bills stacking in your kitchen drawer. I know your father built that house, and I know you'd rather burn it down than see someone else take it."

Her blood went cold. She turned slowly, her voice low with disbelief. "You've been watching me."

"I've been... aware," he replied, unflinching. "Call it due diligence."

She shook her head, her throat tight. "You don't just know these things. You've had me investigated."

His silence was confirmation enough.

"Why?" Her voice cracked. "Why me, Jackson? Out of all the women in this city, why invade my life?"

The firelight flickered across his face, carving shadows into the hard planes of his jaw. For the first time, something unreadable, something almost vulnerable, slipped into his eyes.

"Because I don't trust anyone else," he said simply.

The room seemed to tilt. Savannah gripped the back of the chair, her knees threatening to give way.

He stepped closer now, closing the space between them with a slow, deliberate ease. His cologne, smoky cedar and spice, wrapped around her, making it hard to breathe.

"You think I'm manipulating you," he murmured. "Maybe I am. But ask yourself this: what choice do you really have?"

Her pulse pounded in her throat, fury and fear warring with something she refused to name. She opened her mouth to retort, to throw his arrogance back in his face,

And he cut her off with five quiet words.

"I need your answer. Now."

The silence that followed was deafening.

where Jackson presses Savannah for her decision.

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