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CONTRACTED TO HATE

CONTRACTED TO HATE

Author: : Chelsea George
Genre: Romance
Three years. One contract. Zero love. Ruby Andre-White and Joshua White have perfected the art of deception. To the world, they are the golden couple, elegant, powerful, untouchable. A marriage forged between two empires, built to last. But behind closed doors, their reality is far colder. Separate rooms. Separate lives. Separate lovers. And absolutely no intention of becoming the heirs their families demand. But when pressure tightens and whispers of inheritance turn into ultimatums, the fragile distance they've carefully maintained begins to collapse. Forced into proximity, into scrutiny, into a role neither of them ever wanted, Ruby and Joshua find themselves trapped in a dangerous game of pride, resentment, and reluctant intimacy. Because hatred is easy. Indifference is safe. But the more they're pushed together, the more the lines begin to blur. And somewhere between obligation and defiance, between secrets and silent understanding... something unexpected begins to grow. Something neither of them is prepared to face. With enemies circling and loyalties tested, Ruby and Joshua must decide: Will they continue to tear each other apart... Or become the only alliance strong enough to survive what's coming?

Chapter 1 Salad Forks and Sky-High Expectations

Ruby's POV

Three years. Three long, exhausting years into this contract marriage, and the deepest desire in my heart was still to stab my husband with a tiny, silver salad fork. A small fork, of course. I'm not a monster; I just appreciate a well-scaled revenge.

The whole thing was a cumbersome, suffocating costume I was forced to wear every morning. I was twenty-four, married to a man whose face I'd been planning vengeance plots against since our knees were still scuffed from the playground. The worst part? My life was built on the foundation of a business pact I had zero memory of signing. I was likely six years old when the ink dried, too young to know I was being traded like a piece of silk.

And the hatred? Oh, it was the only thing in our marriage that didn't feel like a stage prop. The air between us wasn't "romantic tension"; it was a high-voltage short circuit, a jagged wire humming between two poles. You could probably fry a dozen eggs on the passive-aggressive heat radiating from Josh White at any given moment.

You're asking the obvious question: Why marry him?

Bless your sweet heart. My life has always been a chaotic rollercoaster fueled by my parents' sky-high, suffocating expectations. I was the good, obedient daughter, raised on the ancient, dusty wisdom that children should be mirrors for their parents' pride, and wives should be silent ornaments, pretty, polished, and perfectly still.

I achieved the "married" part. The "submissive" part? That's where I filed for divorce in the secret courtroom of my brain.

My parents, the Andres, were the power couple who essentially owned the skyline of Ork Lanas, their fingers dipped into the pockets of every lucrative continent. They were famous, powerful, and the world assumed my sister and I were the luckiest children on Earth.

Everyone was wrong. The world had expectations. My parents had expectations. Hell, even my mother's garden club had expectations that felt like invisible leashes. The short version? When I was sixteen, I was already a property deed, engaged to the son of the Whites Group of Companies' CEO.

And naturally, he was my nemesis, Joshua White.

He was my biggest childhood bully, a boy who saw my freckles and decided they were a personal insult to his sense of aesthetic superiority. In middle school, his favorite pastime was yanking off my hoodie and announcing to the hallway: "The only contest you can win, Freckle Girl, is the one for Bald Humans."

Don't you just hate him? The universe certainly did, because I later discovered via my mother's spa gossip that Josh was actually the CEO's inconvenient secret, a bastard son.

Sweet karma, meet sweet revenge.

I might have mentioned this juicy little tidbit to my best friends. And maybe they mentioned it to their friends. And maybe the whole school discovered the gilded scandal. I had to change schools after the White family went full nuclear and my dad lost a lucrative deal, but honestly, it was the best money I ever spent. It was worth every penny of the fallout. I figured that was the end of Joshua White.

Spoiler alert: it was only the appetizer.

Fast-forward to my sweet sixteen engagement party. I walked in expecting a generic rich boy I could ignore, but instead, I was greeted by Josh. Freaking. White. The parents dropped the bomb like a heavy curtain: a business pact. We were the corporate seal, the human handshake between two empires. My entire future was officially an asset, traded while I watched from the sidelines.

The twist was, puberty had been kind, like a vengeful fairy godmother. My freckles were still there, but everything else had leveled up. Josh knew I was beautiful. I knew I was beautiful. It changed nothing, though. I still hated his perfect, smug face with the fire of a thousand suns.

Six years later, the parents got their merger. I was twenty-one when I married the man I was still mentally compiling a comprehensive list of flaws for. I became the good girl again, groomed by Christian nannies for wifely submission and by my parents for ruthless domination. I was the Virgin Seal on a business deal. (Except, technically, I wasn't a virgin, but hey, some lies are necessary for survival.)

Josh had his flings plastered all over the blogs. I had mine tucked away discreetly, like secrets in a locked drawer. We both lived separately until the parents decided it was time to "unite the families" with a wedding so lavish it felt like an act of financial aggression.

The kiss was the longest, most disgusting ten seconds of my life. I had to focus on the flower arrangement behind him just to keep the champagne from coming back up. Everyone bought the miracle, the lie that we'd somehow made peace.

________________________________________

Three years later, we were masters of the facade. We occupied a luxury mansion far east of Ork Lanas that was less a home and more a divided map. North Wing: him, his lovers, and his secrets. West Wing: me, my lovers, and my disdain. We had a simple, non-negotiable agreement: stay out of each other's territory and never, ever care.

Everything was fine until the call came.

"I'll be at your house in thirty minutes, dear." Mother's voice, calm, dangerous, like a velvet-wrapped brick.

Thirty minutes. Enough time to panic, but barely enough time to execute the emergency evacuation of Rivers, my current weekend distraction. He grabbed his tailored jacket, delivered a hasty goodbye kiss, and peeled out of the driveway just as Mother's pristine black sedan glided through the gate like a shadow.

She stepped out, radiating judgment and a class so cold the air temperature definitely dropped ten degrees.

"Welcome, Mother," I greeted, pasting on the good-girl smile that felt like rigor mortis setting into my cheeks.

She returned the smile, the one that translated perfectly to: You're about to be miserable. We sat by the pool, her assistant hovering like a silent, expensive vulture.

"Rumors are spreading, my dear Ruby," she said, sipping her chilled juice. Ah, "dear", her favorite weapon. Trouble had officially arrived.

"And we're very unhappy about it," she continued, her voice dangerously calm. "As the heir to a family like ours, you should be worried. Three years, Ruby. Three years, and no heir."

"Mother, "

"I'm still talking."

I shut up. The reflex was decades deep, a ghost in my muscles.

"You will announce your pregnancy at your father's birthday party next month."

I blinked, the world tilting. "Excuse me? What?"

She ignored my gasp. "Dr. Michaels will be here in two weeks to test you. Don't play games. Look at me."

I did.

"Got anything to say?"

"No, Mother."

"Good girl." That damned phrase. It short-circuited every piece of rebellion in my DNA. "Ruby," she added, switching to that sickeningly pious tone. "I understand you and Joshua never got along, but the Bible commands us to forgive and forget. I raised a good Christian girl who obeys God's word."

She weaponized the scriptures like they were clauses in a contract. Then, without missing a beat, she delivered the final blow.

"By the way, how's sex with Joshua?"

"Mother! Are you serious?"

"What? You're a married woman. It's no news that people have sex; that's how babies are conceived. They don't fall from the sky, dear."

I wanted to melt through the expensive Italian tile and drown myself in the pool. She stared at me, her eyes reading the truth on my face.

"So, there's no sex. I see." I said nothing. "In that case," she sighed, standing up with the authority of a judge delivering a life sentence, "I'll be spending the night here. I'll leave tomorrow morning."

And that, my dear audience, is the exact moment my perfect, separate life was officially nuked from orbit

Chapter 2 Strategic Copulation

Dinner was supposed to be a quiet affair. "Supposed" being the operative, tragically incorrect word.

The crystal chandelier hummed with nervous energy, its light splintering against the silver like shards of ice. The air was thick, heavy with the scent of roasted lamb and sheer, suffocating dread.

Mother sat at the head of the table, a perfectly coiffed queen dissecting her dinner with the frightening precision of a surgeon performing an autopsy. Josh sat opposite me, playing the role of the courteous, obedient schoolboy who'd somehow wandered into a minefield.

I was the human buffer between them, pretending that the food, which tasted vaguely of ash and impending doom, was actually enjoyable.

"So," Mother began, dabbing her mouth with a napkin as if preparing to launch a small, tactical missile. "I had an interesting conversation with your father this morning."

The prelude to disaster. I felt the familiar tightening in my chest, a physical manifestation of the Andre family shadow.

Josh leaned forward, serving up his charming, empty smile, the one he usually reserved for stockholders. "That must have been delightful, Mother." He even called her 'Mother.' The man deserved an Oscar for that level of psychological manipulation; the word sounded like silk coming from a snake.

She didn't return the smile. Her face remained a frozen mask of high-society expectations. "We discussed legacy. Continuity. And the fact that in three years of marriage, neither of you have managed to provide one."

My fork stopped halfway to my mouth, suspended in the cold air. Already? She was dropping the Heir Bomb before the dessert had even left the kitchen? I could practically hear my heart screaming, Mayday! Mayday!

Josh looked up slowly, a masterclass in controlled surprise. His hand twitched near his wine glass, a tiny, frantic bird trapped in a cage of manners. Good. The facade wasn't perfect; the machine was rattling.

"Mrs. Andre," he said, his voice smooth, a silken shroud draped over a nervous tremor. "I can assure you Ruby and I are doing our best."

"Your best?" She repeated it like it was the most pathetic joke she'd ever heard. "I'm afraid your best isn't working, Joshua. Dr. Michaels will be visiting in two weeks to run fertility tests. Both of you. After that, we'll proceed with what he calls... strategic copulation."

My soul officially checked out of my body.

Strategic what? Did she just turn the most intimate human act into a mandatory HR directive?

"Mother," I managed, my voice dangerously polite and thin as a sheet of ice. "That's... entirely private."

She turned to me, her eyes cold enough to flash-freeze a supernova. "Privacy is for people who can afford to fail, dear. You cannot."

Josh cleared his throat, probably choking on the dry remains of his composure. "Surely, there are other ways to handle this, ma'am. Perhaps, "

She cut him off with a look that promised financial ruin and social exile. "Joshua, are you suggesting that you will not perform your marital duty?"

Oh, this was excellent theater. I wanted to laugh hysterically and vomit simultaneously. He recovered instantly, pasting that fake, plastic smile back on his face. "Not at all. I only meant that we should perhaps... not rush the process."

Rush? Three weeks to a pregnancy announcement was less a rush and more a high-speed collision with a wall of maternal demands.

Mother leaned back, folding her napkin precisely, like a general preparing a surrender ritual. "You will not rush it. You will do it properly. I expect positive results before your father's birthday."

Positive results. Like we were developing a new strain of profitable bacteria in a lab, not making a human being with a soul.

I forced a smile, the only defense mechanism I had left against the crushing weight of her will. "Yes, Mother."

"Good. I'll have Dr. Michaels coordinate your visits."

Josh's mask finally cracked, a visible fault line appearing in his granite jaw. His grip on his glass turned white-knuckled, the stem looking like it might snap under the pressure of his silent fury.

"Yes, ma'am," he ground out through his teeth.

The silence returned, broken only by the microscopic clinking of Mother's spoon against porcelain. It felt like a countdown clock ticking toward zero. When she finally stood, it was like a black cloud of expensive perfume finally lifting.

"Dinner was pleasant," she lied, the words falling like stones.

"You're both dismissed," she added, exiting the room with the regal authority of a despot.

Dismissed? It's our house, you corporate dictator!

The moment the door clicked shut behind her, the air pressure in the room finally normalized.

Josh exhaled, a long, slow sound of escaping steam. "Well," he muttered, his voice raspy. "That was... informative."

"Informative?" I scoffed, dropping my fork onto the plate with a sharp clang. "We're about to be lab rats for a man who times conception like a quarterly earnings call."

He looked at me, his expression finally shedding the politeness to reveal the raw irritation beneath. "Could be worse."

"Oh, really? Enlighten me."

"She could have insisted on live-streaming the strategic copulation."

I stared at him, stunned. Then, despite my best efforts to remain furious, I barked out a laugh. It was sharp, hysterical, and totally inappropriate for two prisoners facing the same life sentence.

God, I hated that he could still reach past my defenses and make me laugh. But the moment passed quickly, replaced by a wave of cold dread.

"Don't be ridiculous, Josh," I said, the humor vanishing like smoke. "We're not... we are not having sex."

His fork clanged against the ceramic, the sound echoing in the hollow room. "Look, I hate this just as much as you do. But she's not messing around. She'll dismantle everything we have."

"Then find a loophole! You're the brilliant strategic analyst!" I snapped, my hands dancing in the air as I paced the small space between our chairs. "I'd rather die than have sex with you."

He gave a dry, bitter laugh that didn't reach his eyes. "You think I'm thrilled about this arrangement? You realize the level of financial ruin we face if we fail her, right? It's not just a baby; it's a collateral requirement."

"Oh, I do." I leaned back, forcing a posture of bored elegance to hide the way my heart was hammering against my ribs. "And for the record, Josh, I'm not thrilled either."

"Good." His voice softened, just a fraction, the weary sound of two enemies realizing they were sharing the same foxhole. "We can be un-thrilled together."

We froze, staring at each other across the expanse of the table. Two adversaries linked by a common nightmare, bound by golden chains we hadn't asked for.

He tilted his glass, the red wine catching the light like a pool of blood. "Guess we'll be seeing a lot of each other soon."

"In your darkest dreams," I muttered, though the bite was missing from my tone.

The ensuing silence was a heavy, fragile truce built on mutual horror and the shared knowledge that we were utterly screwed. And I had the insane, brief thought: Did I just feel a flicker of pity for him?

Therapy. I definitely needed therapy. Or perhaps a very large barrel of bleach to scrub this entire day from my memory.

Chapter 3 Playing Chess with Sharks

That word landed in the opulent, wood-paneled boardroom like a wet fish, a bad punchline at an executive funeral.

The room went instantly silent, save for the nervous rustle of papers that sounded like dry leaves in a graveyard. I sat there, a professional smile glued to my face, though I was one millimeter away from using my Montblanc pen as a projectile weapon.

"Mr. Clarke," I said, my voice sweet enough to induce a diabetic coma. "Could you repeat that for the benefit of those who might be hallucinating?"

Mr. Clarke, the Head of Marketing, swallowed so hard I heard the sound echo against the mahogany. "The, uh, launch date has been moved. The team believes another six weeks would help us fine-tune, "

"Six weeks?" I arched a perfectly sculpted eyebrow, the movement as sharp as a blade. "Fine-tune the part where we actually sell the product? We've been 'fine-tuning' since the last fiscal quarter. At this point, we might as well just send the suppliers a personalized Christmas card and call it a year."

A few junior execs choked back a laugh that sounded more like a sob. The rest stared at the table, praying for the floor to open up and swallow them whole.

Across the room sat Joshua White, calm, arms folded, an infuriating sculpture of corporate perfection. His silence wasn't neutral; it was deliberate, a heavy weight in the room. He was enjoying my public discomfort, the arrogant bastard. I could practically see the gears of his smug mind turning.

"Ruby," he finally interjected. His voice was smooth, low, and annoyingly reasonable, the sound of a cello in a room full of glass breaking. "Let's not eat the board alive. Clarke's right; another few weeks might be necessary for quality control."

And there it was. The shift.

Suddenly, every eye in the room migrated to him, the golden boy, the family's illegitimate miracle who had somehow become the center of their gravity. I could pull the fire alarm and they'd still wait for Josh to nod before they dared to breathe.

"Oh, of course," I said, leaning back dramatically until the leather chair groaned. "If Joshua White says it's fine, then it must be corporate scripture. Forgive my lack of faith."

His eyes flicked toward mine, a quick, sharp glance like the flash of a hunter's knife. "You've got a way of making professional advice sound like a declaration of war."

"That's because it usually is," I retorted, the words snapping like a whip. "Especially when it comes dressed as diplomacy."

He offered a tight, professional smile that didn't reach his eyes.

"Noted."

We stared each other down, the same old current of electricity humming between us, but today the hate felt more organized, more weaponized. It had a structure now.

Then Uncle Raymond waltzed in, smelling of a terrible cologne and even worse intentions. He clapped his hands with an enthusiasm that felt as fake as a plastic plant.

"Ah, good, everyone's here!" he boomed, sliding into a seat like he'd just been coronated king of the room. "Don't mind me, please continue."

Everyone minded him. Raymond White, Joshua's uncle, practically radiated political maneuvering. He smiled like a man who enjoyed stabbing people with very expensive, personalized knives and then apologizing for the mess.

"Uncle Raymond," I said coolly. "You're late."

"And you're early, my dear niece-in-law," he grinned, not even bothering to look at me. His focus was already glued to Josh like a magnet. "Joshua, my boy, brilliant work on the restructuring proposal. I've been hearing whispers, the board's impressed."

Of course they were.

Josh gave a modest nod, the picture of humility. "Thank you, sir."

Restructuring? My eyes narrowed into slits. No one had mentioned a word of this to me. That's how this gilded cage operated: backroom deals and pretty lies wrapped in non-disclosure agreements.

"Restructuring?" I asked, keeping my tone as level as a horizon.

"When was this discussed?"

Raymond beamed, delighted to play the role of the executioner.

"Oh, it's still in its infancy. But young Joshua here suggested consolidating the launch under one executive branch. Smoother communication, less red tape."

"Which branch?" I asked, already knowing exactly where the blade was going to land.

Raymond leaned back, savoring the moment like a fine wine.

"Marketing and Strategy, merged under his oversight. Temporarily, of course."

And there it was. The ambush. The real reason for the postponement.

I glanced at Josh. He remained perfectly still. No gloating smirk, no triumphant gleam, just that steady, unreadable face that screamed: I saw this coming, and you didn't.

"Well," I said, my voice as light and hollow as spun sugar.

"How... strategic of you both."

"Temporary," Josh repeated, finally meeting my gaze. "Until the launch. The board believes it will streamline the process."

"The board? Or you?"

He blinked, slow and deliberate. "Does it matter?"

"It does when decisions are made behind closed doors," I countered, the ice in my voice thickening. "Unless transparency isn't part of your shiny new structure."

A tense cough sounded near the door. The board members were shifting in their seats, suddenly fascinated by their blank notepads.

Raymond chuckled, a dry, grating sound. "Now, now. Let's not make this personal, Ruby."

"Oh, but it's always personal, isn't it, Sir?" I asked sweetly. "Business just gives us better lighting for the fight."

Raymond's smile tightened into a thin, grim line. "You should try being more like your mother."

That was supposed to sting. It didn't. Not anymore. I'd transcended petty insults years ago.

Then, Richard White walked in, as if summoned by the mere mention of corporate tyranny. The entire room straightened as if pulled by invisible strings.

"Good morning," he said, his voice carrying the immense weight that only billions of dollars and decades of ruthless reputation can buy. "I hope we're making progress."

He spotted me. "Miss André," he said with that faint, terrifying smile.

"It's Mrs. White now, I believe," Raymond chipped in, eager to claim ownership of my title.

"Ah, thanks for the correction," Richard responded, his voice as cold as the morgue. He turned back to me. "You look well. Your father couldn't join us?"

"No, sir. He sends his sincere regards."

"Ah," he nodded. "Pity. He's a man who understands timing, something our youth tends to forget." A perfect little jab, dressed up in paternal wisdom.

I smiled back politely, though it felt like my face might crack. "We try to learn from our elders, sir. Even when their timing involves surprise announcements."

Josh stayed silent. He didn't need to defend himself; the entire room was already acting as his shield.

Richard looked between the two of us, his gaze analytical. "I trust you two can manage the merger preparations together. The board's confidence depends on it."

Merger. My smile wavered for a split second. "Merger preparations?"

Josh's gaze met mine, steady and freezing. "Yes. WGC is moving forward with Vanguard. It's been on the table for months."

Months. And this was the first I'd heard of it. I was being ghosted in my own company.

"Both of you," Richard continued, "will oversee the transition team. Public relations, finance, media, all through you. I expect full coordination."

The translation was clear: Play nice, or I'll use your public failure to wipe the floor.

I nodded slowly, the movement robotic. "Of course, sir. Anything for WGC."

"Good," he finished. "Joshua will brief you on the structure. I have another meeting." He turned to Raymond. "Keep me updated."

The door closed, leaving behind a silence heavier than lead.

Raymond rose, his smile far too wide for the room. "Well, that went beautifully. Joshua, I'll have the documents forwarded to your office. Ruby..." He paused at the door, glancing back. "Try not to take this too personally."

I gave him a razor-sharp look. "I never do."

When he was gone, the room emptied quickly. Josh walked up to me, the hum of the air conditioning mocking the awkward silence.

He spoke first. "Next time, pick your battles wisely."

I let out a quiet, sarcastic laugh. "You already do that for me, don't you?"

He watched me, unreadable and infuriating. "You think I planned this?"

"I think you enjoyed it."

"Maybe I did," he conceded, allowing a ghost of a smirk to surface on his lips. "You fight better when you're cornered."

My heart ticked, hard and fast. He was right. That was the worst part.

He stood, gathering his files into a neat stack. "Don't worry, Mrs. White. You'll still have your say. Just... through me."

That was the moment I realized the game had changed. He wasn't playing defense anymore. He was playing to win, and he'd just learned how to use the family rules to bind my hands.

I smiled, even though my chest felt tight with pure, unadulterated rage. "Careful, Joshua. When you pull strings, make sure you're not the one wearing the puppet suit."

He stopped at the door, looking back over his shoulder. "Funny. I was about to say the exact same thing."

The door clicked shut, the sound final and cold.

I sat there, staring at his empty chair, tasting the metallic tang of betrayal on my tongue.

Fine. If this is a war, then I'll fight it in four-inch heels. And I will make damn sure he's the one who bleeds first.

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