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Flash Marriage: My Secret Billionaire Husband

Flash Marriage: My Secret Billionaire Husband

Author: Nieves Gómez
Genre: Modern
To pay for my mother's medical bills and escape my abusive ex-fiancé, I entered a contract marriage with a seemingly ordinary office worker named Julian. But right after we signed the papers, my "normal" husband effortlessly commanded men in black to throw my harassing ex down the stairs, then moved me into a breathtaking Manhattan penthouse. He claimed the luxury apartment was just a corporate tax write-off, and his high-end connections were just employee discounts. I believed his flawless lies, until we were chased by heavily armed assassins in black SUVs on a dark highway. He didn't panic. Instead, he calmly pulled a real Glock from the glove compartment and pressed the heavy weapon into my shaking hands. "I will not let anything happen to you." He shielded me with his own body. Just as the killers closed in, a tactical helicopter and armored vehicles swarmed the woods. Elite operators stepped out, bowing to my husband and respectfully calling him "Sir." I was terrified and completely bewildered. Who exactly was this man I married? Why did a simple finance guy have a private army and a deadly target on his back? Looking at his bleeding shoulder, I didn't run. I chose to face the darkness by his side. And as I slept, my gentle husband stepped onto the balcony, his voice turning into a ruthless blade as he ordered the financial ruin of the billionaire empire that dared to hunt me.
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Chapter 1

Her phone screen lit up, and the name on it made her stomach tighten: Heath. Claire pressed the power button hard, and the screen went dark. The cold and merciless wind howled past the granite steps of New York City Hall-a feeling that fits the occasion.

A black sedan drove up to the roadside, its deep engine roaring through the city's noise. Her heart was pounding. Heath. He must have come here with her. This thought sent a chilling chill through her.

But the one who got out of the car was not Heath.

He was tall and wore a dark, impeccably tailored suit that seemed to absorb the faint light of dawn. His actions carried a calm and dignified aura, making the bustling sidewalks seem like his exclusive stage. He was a stranger, yet he radiated a dangerous silence that made Claire instinctively take half a step back.

He noticed. Of course, he noticed.

His eyes, deep as whiskey, met her gaze across the sidewalk. He stopped precisely three steps away-a distance that felt both safe and deliberate.

"Did you wait a long time?" His voice was deep, a rich baritone, with no trace of urban impatience.

Claire stiffly shook her head. "No. I just arrived. "

Her gaze was drawn to the watch peeking out from beneath his sleeve. It's understated, but the intricate dial and the platinum glow suggest a price tag with too many zeros behind it-which doesn't quite match the image of a man who needs a contract marriage.

He followed her gaze, then calmly pulled down his sleeve to cover the Patek Philippe piece. "This is a pretty good imitation." The corner of his mouth twitched slightly. "Knockoff goods from Canal Street. The timing is astonishing. "

This lie was so blatant, yet so calm, that it almost felt real. Almost.

They walked side by side into the grand and resonant hall, a silent and awkward pair. The air was filled with the smell of old paper and cheap coffee. At the security checkpoint, as he walked by, the metal detector screamed.

"Sir, the watch." A security guard who looked bored murmured as he spoke.

Julian's expression didn't change, but a trace of coldness flashed through his eyes. He unfastened his watch and handed it over. The moment the guard's fingers closed and he felt the weight of the watch, his usual coldness vanished, and his eyes widened in surprise. Julian met his gaze-calm and sharp, carrying a warning of "bear the consequences." The guard's mouth suddenly shut.

Claire had already passed security and turned around. "Is everything okay?"

She didn't see the security guard's reaction, only knew Julian was delayed.

"It's nothing." Julian took back his watch, put it back on his wrist, and followed her.

The hall was a chaotic sea of people. They took a number and waited by a marble pillar. The crowd surged, and a man staggering back suddenly bumped into Claire.

Before she could catch her breath, an arm reached out and wrapped his arm around her shoulder. Julian pulled her tightly against his chest, shielding her from the impact. In that instant, her world was left with only the solid barrier of his body and the sharp, crisp scent of cedarwood-and something else, a cold, metallic smell like rain falling on stone.

Her cheek pressed against the fine wool of his suit. Warmth rose on her cheeks. "Thank you." She muttered softly and pushed him away.

"There are a lot of people." He said only that one sentence, and his hand slipped off her shoulder. His fingers curled slightly, as if still savoring her touch.

A shrill voice came from the speaker, calling out their number: B-47.

They walked toward the window, where a scratched piece of acrylic separated them from a clerk whose eyes were tired and a thick pile of documents was in front of them. "ID." She said without even looking up.

Julian reached for his wallet. When he pulled his wallet out of his chest pocket, Claire caught sight of something: black, incredibly smooth-that was a corner of an American Express Centurion card. He saw her watching, and with a move so fast it didn't seem like an accident, he covered the card with his license and slid it under the glass.

The clerk processed their information, and the seal dropped with a bureaucratic 'thud' of decisiveness. She pushed a piece of paper to them-a marriage application form.

Claire picked up the cheap ballpoint pen tied on the counter. The pen tip hovered above the signature bar. Now is the time. There is no turning back. Her hand trembled slightly. Is she really going to do this? Switching from one cage to another?

"The first payment will arrive next Tuesday." Julian whispered, a voice only she could hear. "For your mother's treatment."

Those words were like a scalpel, stabbing straight into her desperate heart. The image of her mother lying weakly in the hospital bed flashed through her mind. The hesitation disappeared. Her signature scribbled and angrily swiped across the paper.

Julian took the pen from her hand. His signature is the complete opposite of hers-smooth, confident, and completely controlled.

The clerk took the form, checked it once, and then slammed the embossing machine down with a loud "bang." The seal is stamped. Done.

"Alright." The clerk's tired voice carried a hint of mockery. "You can kiss the bride now."

Tension hung in the air. Claire's fingers clenched tightly into fists at her sides. A kiss? That's not part of the deal. The covenant is for financial and legal status, not ...... This one.

Julian leaned in closer. Claire's breath got stuck in her throat. She instinctively backed away, expecting a clumsy and perfunctory kiss. However, his lips brushed her cheek-a feather-light touch that ended before it even began. Warm, incredibly soft, leaving a burning mark on her skin.

She instinctively covered her cheek with her hand, her heart pounding wildly and staggering. He had already stepped back, standing at a safe distance, his dark eyes fixed on her with an elusive expression.

They took their certificates and stepped into the dazzling sunlight. Claire fumbled to take out her phone, her hand still trembling. She took a photo of the document and sent it to her best friend Kolo.

The phone immediately vibrated-an iMessage message.

Kolo: Oh my god. Don't tell me you married that bastard Heath. Followed by a long string of terrified emojis.

Claire's fingers quickly tapped across the screen: No. This is a contract. His name was Julian.

As she typed, Julian's phone vibrated. It was a sound different from ordinary telephones-a deep and persistent humming. He frowned-it was the first time he had ever shown that expression that day.

He answered the call, his body slightly turning away from her. "What is it?" His voice was like a sharp blade.

Claire could only catch fragments of his words, almost whispering. "I don't care what the terms are. The deal was canceled...... No, this is not negotiation. Fire him. Make sure his entire team is escorted out of the building within an hour. I want to cut off their access right now. "

He hung up the phone. That shift was shocking-the cold, merciless commanding tone in his voice faded as quickly as it appeared. He turned back to face her, his expression once again becoming gentle, almost gentle.

"Work?" Claire tries to make her voice sound casual.

"Telemarketer." He lied fluently. "These people are very radical now."

They walked to the subway entrance. "My car is here." Claire is eager to escape the confusing atmosphere his presence brings. "Thank you...... Today. "

"I can give you a ride." He suggested.

"This will hold you back." She said quickly.

"Then let me get you a car."

"No." Her tone was a bit too forceful. Thinking about how she was carefully counting every penny, while he had to pay for Uber, she felt something was off. "The subway is faster. I'm fine. "

The atmosphere between the two grew tense. For a moment, she thought he would persist. But then he lightly-almost imperceptibly-nodded. "Alright. Be careful on the road, Claire. "

He stood at the top of the stairs, forming a black silhouette under the bright sky, watching her descend into the echoing darkness at the station.

The moment her head disappeared from sight, his entire demeanor changed. The mask of refined and refined professionalism melted away, replaced by a cold, absolute aura of power. He turned around. The black sedan that had been parked across the street silently drove away. In its place was a bulletproof Maybach S680, shining like polished obsidian, gliding to the roadside.

An assistant dressed in a sharp suit jumped out of the car, opened the back door, and respectfully bowed his head.

Julian stepped into the car. With a soft "bang" from the heavy door, the world filled with cheap coffee and crowded halls vanished. He was home.

Chapter 2

The subway car rattled and swayed, a rhythmic clatter of steel on steel. Clare sat hunched in the hard plastic seat, the official-looking marriage certificate clutched in her hand. The paper felt flimsy, unreal. Mrs. Clare Pierce. The name was alien on her tongue.

Her phone vibrated violently in her pocket. A voice call from Chloe. Clare fumbled to connect her AirPods, bracing herself.

"CLARE ELIZA CARSON, HAVE YOU COMPLETELY LOST YOUR MIND?"

The shriek was so loud Clare winced, instinctively glancing around. A woman reading a paperback gave her a dirty look.

"Chloe, keep it down," she whispered, cupping her hand over her mouth.

"Did you marry Heath? After everything? I swear to God, Clare, if you went back to that manipulative, gaslighting-"

"It's not Heath," Clare cut in, her voice a strained hiss. "His name is Julian. He's just... a normal guy. An office worker. It's a contract, for Mom's bills."

"A normal guy?" Chloe's voice was dripping with suspicion. "There's no such thing as a 'normal guy' who agrees to a contract marriage in New York City."

Miles away, in the silent, leather-scented cabin of the Maybach, Julian stared at a tablet. The air was frigid. His assistant, a man named Mark, sat tensely in the passenger seat, not daring to breathe too loudly.

On the screen was Clare's file. A comprehensive report detailing every aspect of her life. Julian's gaze was fixed on a section highlighted in red: Harassment by former fiancé, Heath Torres. It listed a dozen incidents-unwanted calls, showing up at her workplace, a restraining order she'd been too afraid and broke to enforce. His jaw tightened, a muscle ticking violently.

"Mark," Julian said, his voice dangerously quiet.

"Sir?"

"Heath Torres. He's been seen outside her apartment building recently?"

Mark swallowed. "Yes, sir. Our surveillance team confirmed he was there three times this week. Loitering in the lobby."

Julian's eyes were chips of ice. "Buy the building."

Mark froze, his hand halfway to adjusting the climate control. "Sir? The entire building? It's a pre-war walk-up in Brooklyn, the property value is-"

Julian lifted his gaze from the tablet. He didn't raise his voice. He didn't have to. The look in his eyes was enough. It was a look that had made seasoned executives crumble.

"Did I ask for a market analysis, Mark?"

"No, sir. I'll get it done." Mark immediately turned and began typing furiously on his own device.

Clare emerged from the subway station into a light, drizzling rain. She hadn't brought an umbrella. Pulling her thin jacket over her head, she broke into a jog, the cold drops plastering her hair to her forehead.

Her apartment building was just as depressing as she'd left it. The "Out of Order" sign was still taped to the elevator door. Of course. With a weary sigh, she began the long, five-flight climb, her legs aching.

She unlocked the door to her apartment and pushed it open. The sight that greeted her made her stomach turn. It was a mess. Not her mess. Heath's. His stupid, limited-edition sneakers were kicked off by the door, a half-empty protein shake was growing mold on the coffee table, and his video game console was still hooked up to her TV. He had refused to take his things when he left, another petty power play.

A surge of rage, hot and cleansing, cut through her exhaustion. That was it. She was done.

She stalked to the hall closet, yanked out a stack of heavy-duty black trash bags, and began to violently shove his possessions inside. First the overpriced sneakers. Then the collection of sports jerseys. She was stuffing a smelly hoodie into a bag when her phone screen lit up on the counter.

A new iMessage. From Lily.

Lily: Clare, sweetie. I know you're probably mad, but Heath is having a really hard time. His asthma flared up again, he's at the hospital. He just keeps asking for you. Please, can you just come see him? For me?

The cloying, manipulative tone made Clare's skin crawl. She could picture Lily typing it, her face a mask of faux concern. Cold laughter bubbled up in Clare's throat. She typed a furious, scathing reply, her thumbs flying.

Go to hell, both of you.

But just before she hit send, she stopped. What was the point? Arguing with them was like wrestling with pigs in mud. You just got dirty, and the pigs enjoyed it. With a decisive tap, she deleted the message. Then she found Lily's contact and pressed "Block this Caller."

A satisfying sense of finality washed over her.

It was short-lived.

A heavy, rhythmic thumping sound started outside her door. The sound of wheels-heavy, rubber wheels-rolling over the worn hallway carpet. Followed by a frantic rattling of her doorknob.

Clang. The door shuddered as a body slammed against it, stopped only by the flimsy security chain.

"Clare! Open this door! I know you're in there!"

Heath.

Clare's blood ran cold. She grabbed the can of pepper spray she kept on her kitchen counter and crept towards the door. Peeking through the crack, she saw his face, contorted with rage. He was in his wheelchair.

"Why didn't you answer Lily's text?" he yelled, his voice echoing in the stairwell. "She's worried sick! He's in the hospital because of you, you cold-hearted bitch!"

Clare laughed, a harsh, brittle sound. "Get the hell away from my door, Heath, or I'm calling the cops."

"Go ahead!" he taunted, his sense of entitlement infuriating. "What are they gonna do? Arrest a guy in a wheelchair for trying to talk to his fiancée?"

Inside the Maybach, parked a block away, Julian watched the scene unfold on a high-definition monitor. The feed was from a micro-camera his team had installed in the hallway smoke detector that morning. He saw Heath's snarling face, heard his vicious words. A murderous calm settled over him. The temperature in the car seemed to drop twenty degrees.

He picked up his phone and dialed Clare's number.

Inside the apartment, the sudden ringing of her phone made Clare jump. It was Julian. A lifeline. Her hand was shaking as she answered.

"Clare?"

"Julian," she breathed, her voice trembling. "My ex... he's outside my door."

"I hear him," Julian said, his tone low and steady, a rock in the storm of her fear. "What's that sound? Is he hitting the door? Put me on speaker, Clare."

She did as he said, holding the phone up to the crack in the door.

Julian's voice filled the small space, no longer gentle. It was glacial. It was laced with a kind of authority that demanded obedience.

"This is your only warning. You are currently engaged in criminal trespassing and harassment. Leave the premises immediately."

Heath was stunned into silence. "Who... who the hell is this?" he stammered.

The reply was delivered with the chilling finality of a death sentence.

"I'm her husband."

Heath froze, his face a mask of disbelief. In that split second of stunned silence, two figures appeared at the top of the stairwell. They were large men in simple black jackets, moving with silent, unnerving efficiency.

Before Heath could react, they were on him. One grabbed the handles of the wheelchair, the other secured his arms.

"What are you doing? Get your hands off me!" he shrieked, his voice cracking with impotent rage.

They didn't say a word. They simply lifted the wheelchair, with him in it, and began carrying him down the stairs. His furious, pathetic shouts faded as they descended, until the only sound left was the quiet hum of the old building's radiator.

Chapter 3

The silence in the hallway was absolute, broken only by the sound of Clare's own ragged breathing. She leaned her forehead against the cool wood of the door, the pepper spray still clutched in her hand.

"Clare? Are you alright?" Julian's voice, back to its calm, steady tone, came through the phone.

"Yes," she whispered, her voice thick with a reliance she hadn't asked for but desperately needed. "Thank you. They just... took him."

He could hear the tremor in her voice. He had to fight the primal urge to have his driver break every traffic law to get to her. "That apartment is no longer safe," he said, his tone firm, leaving no room for argument. "You need to move. Tonight."

"Move? Julian, I can't just-" The cost, the logistics, the sheer impossibility of it all crashed down on her.

"My company provides a fully furnished corporate apartment for senior management," he said, the lie already prepared, smooth and seamless. "It's in Midtown. As my spouse, you're entitled to live there. It's empty, and it's secure."

The offer was a life raft. A way out. She was so tired of fighting. "Okay," she finally conceded. "Okay."

"Good. Don't touch anything. Don't pack. A moving service will be there in thirty minutes. Just wait for them."

After she hung up, Clare slid down to the floor, her back against the door. She looked around the apartment, a space that held three years of her life, most of them miserable. With a sudden burst of energy, she stood up, kicked the last of Heath's trash bags into the hallway, and slammed the door shut.

On the street below, dumped unceremoniously on the wet pavement, Heath fumed. Humiliation burned in his gut. He pulled out his phone, his fingers shaking with rage. He hit record, angled the camera up at his face to catch the rain that looked like tears, and began to speak, his voice choked with fake anguish. The video, accusing Clare of abandoning her disabled fiancé for money, was uploaded to his social media before his friend even arrived to pick him up.

Exactly thirty minutes later, there was a firm, polite knock on Clare's door. She opened it to find a team of four movers. Their leader, a clean-cut man named Mike, introduced himself. They wore crisp, matching uniforms for a company she'd never heard of: "White Glove Relocations." Their professionalism was almost unnerving.

They didn't ask questions. They simply moved through the apartment with quiet efficiency, wrapping her cheap IKEA furniture and worn paperbacks with the same care they would a museum piece, using high-grade packing materials she'd only ever seen on TV.

A prickle of suspicion ran down her spine. On a whim, she pulled out her phone and googled the company. Her breath hitched. They were a premier service for Manhattan's elite. Their minimum charge was five figures.

She immediately dialed Julian. "Julian, this moving company... they're insanely expensive."

He didn't miss a beat. "I had a ton of credit card points saved up," he said, his voice the epitome of casualness. "Got a massive discount. It was either use them on this or a toaster oven. Seemed like a better deal."

The excuse was ludicrous. But his tone was so sincere, so matter-of-fact, that she found her suspicion wavering. Maybe he just had a really, really good credit card.

In less than twenty minutes, her entire life was packed into boxes. Mike handed her a clipboard. "Just need your signature here, ma'am."

Clare signed, then handed him the key to the apartment. It felt like severing the last tie to her old life. A clean, surgical break.

She walked down the five flights of stairs for the last time, carrying only her handbag. A sleek, black Lincoln Navigator was waiting at the curb, its engine purring softly. A driver in a black suit stepped out and opened the rear door for her.

"Miss... uh, Mrs. Pierce?" he asked, stumbling over the new name.

Clare slid onto the plush leather seat, stunned. The interior was spotless. A warm blanket was folded on the seat next to her, and a steaming cup of coffee sat in the holder.

The SUV pulled away from the curb, gliding smoothly into traffic. Clare stared out the window at the familiar, gritty streets of her Brooklyn neighborhood fading behind her. A knot of anxiety tightened in her stomach. What was she getting herself into?

The vehicle drove into the private underground garage of a sleek glass tower on the Upper East Side. The level of security was unlike anything she had ever seen. The driver led her to a private elevator that opened directly into an apartment.

And there he was.

Julian stood waiting for her in the entryway. He'd changed out of his suit and was wearing a simple grey cashmere sweater and dark pants. Without the armor of his corporate attire, he looked younger, softer. More dangerous.

"Welcome home," he said, his voice a low rumble.

He took her handbag, his fingers brushing against hers. A jolt, sharp and electric, shot up her arm. She snatched her hand back as if burned.

A shadow passed through his eyes, but his expression remained pleasant. He stepped aside, gesturing for her to enter.

The apartment was breathtaking. A duplex penthouse, with a two-story wall of glass offering a panoramic, god-like view of Central Park. The space was vast, minimalist, and screamed money. Old money.

Clare walked to the window, feeling dizzy. "Julian," she said, turning to face him, the questions bubbling up again. "This isn't a corporate apartment. This is..."

He was already walking towards her, holding two glasses of red wine. He cut her off before she could finish.

"You wouldn't believe the tax write-off my company gets for this place," he said, shaking his head with a sigh of perfectly pitched frustration. "They use it to justify cutting my year-end bonus in half. It's criminal."

His complaint was so perfectly, recognizably corporate that it disarmed her completely. It was the kind of gripe she'd heard a thousand times from her own managers. She let out a breath she didn't realize she'd been holding and took the glass he offered.

"To new beginnings," he said, clinking his glass against hers.

They sat on a massive white sofa, a football field of expensive upholstery between them.

"Since we're living together," Julian began, his tone becoming business-like, "we should probably establish some ground rules. My mother might want to video call. We need to be prepared."

Clare nodded, relieved to be back on the solid ground of their contract. "Good idea." She looked around for a pen and paper.

Julian leaned across the sofa, his movement sudden and fluid. He closed the distance between them in an instant, his body heat radiating towards her. He plucked the pen from her hand.

His face was inches from hers. His eyes were dark, intense, pulling her in.

"Rule number one," he murmured, his voice dropping to a husky whisper that vibrated through her. "In this house... you don't call me Mr. Pierce."

Clare's throat went dry. She could feel the frantic beat of her own pulse in her ears.

"Julian," she stammered, the name feeling foreign and intimate on her lips.

A slow, satisfied smile spread across his face. "That's better."

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