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Home > Billionaires > Flash Marriage To My Ruthless Professor
Flash Marriage To My Ruthless Professor

Flash Marriage To My Ruthless Professor

Author: : Ting Er Xiao Ling
Genre: Billionaires
I signed a prenuptial agreement with a cold-blooded Wall Street predator just to unlock my trust fund and fight my greedy stepmother. We were nothing more than legal roommates bound by a strict three-year contract. But to survive the corporate war at my family's company, I skipped my mandatory university finance class and paid a guy to answer the roll call for me. The stand-in was immediately caught and kicked out by the notoriously ruthless new professor. That night at dinner, I complained to my contract husband about the professor. "He's an unreasonable, arrogant dictator who gets off on torturing his students," I complained bitterly. My husband just calmly cut my steak and listened as I bragged about how I was going to fake-cry and manipulate the professor the next morning. I even rushed to the faculty office the next day and performed a desperate, tearful apology to an elderly man I assumed was the tyrant. I thought I had perfectly balanced my corporate war and my academic life. I thought I had fooled everyone. But when I confidently sat in the front row of the massive lecture hall, the heavy wooden doors pushed open. The terrifying new professor walked onto the podium and aggressively wrote his name on the chalkboard: Elliot Dillard. It was my contract husband. He looked down at me with cold, merciless authority, knowing every single lie I had told, and slowly called my name.

Chapter 1 1

Allison sat on the cold wooden bench inside the New York City Hall marriage bureau.

"It had been exactly forty-eight hours since Martin introduced this man to me at the Oak Club," she thought, her mind racing. "And now, here we are, sitting on this freezing bench, preparing to sign a document that will dictate the rest of my life."

She stared at the silver face of her watch.

The second hand ticked forward. It was a sharp, rhythmic slicing sound that matched the heavy pounding in her temples.

Martin Croft, her family's longtime attorney, sat heavily next to her. The wooden bench groaned under his weight.

He handed her a thick stack of papers.

"This is the final version of the prenuptial agreement, Allison," Martin said. His voice was low, strictly professional.

The document was fifty pages long. The paper was crisp and heavy.

Allison took it. Her fingers traced the sharp edges of the pages.

She flipped directly to the asset isolation clauses. She read every single word.

Her eyes scanned the dense legal jargon, searching for any loopholes that Cheryl or Judd could exploit. There were none. The wall around her inheritance was ironclad.

A sound echoed from the far end of the long, marble hallway.

It was the steady, rhythmic clicking of leather dress shoes against the hard floor.

The footsteps were heavy. Deliberate. They commanded the space.

Allison looked up from the papers.

Elliot Dillard walked into view.

He wore a custom-tailored charcoal gray suit that fit his broad shoulders perfectly. His face was completely expressionless.

The corridor was crowded with happy couples holding cheap bouquets, but Elliot's eyes cut straight through the chaos.

His gaze locked onto Allison with terrifying precision.

He walked over and sat down on the bench directly across from her.

The moment he sat, the air pressure in the small waiting area seemed to drop. He brought with him the cold, suffocating aura of a Wall Street predator.

Martin cleared his throat. The sound was loud in the tense silence.

"I will now review the core terms regarding the trust fund audit," Martin said, opening his briefcase.

He read the stipulations aloud. The words fell like heavy stones between them.

"The marriage must last for a minimum of three years," Martin stated. "During this time, neither party will interfere in the other's private life."

Elliot kept his dark eyes fixed on Allison. He didn't blink.

"Any breach of contract by either party will result in a massive financial penalty," Martin continued, his finger tapping the page. "And the automatic forfeiture of all related trust fund rights."

Elliot reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket.

He pulled out a sleek, black Montblanc fountain pen. The gold trim caught the harsh fluorescent light of the hallway.

He didn't hesitate for a single second.

He flipped to the last page and signed his name on the groom's line. His signature was sharp, aggressive, and completely illegible.

He pushed the thick document across the small wooden table toward Allison.

He tapped the tip of the pen against the paper twice.

Tap. Tap.

Allison took a deep breath. The air burned her lungs.

She reached out and took the pen from his fingers. The metal barrel was still warm from his body heat.

She stared at the blank line waiting for her name.

An image flashed in her mind. It was her stepmother, Cheryl.

She saw Cheryl's greedy, triumphant smile on the day her father's altered will was read. Her stomach twisted into a tight, painful knot.

Allison gripped the pen. Her knuckles turned stark white.

She pressed the nib to the paper and signed her name.

The legal binding was complete. A ten-million-dollar transaction disguised as a romance.

A loud burst of static came from the overhead speaker.

"Number forty-two," the city clerk's voice echoed through the room.

Allison and Elliot stood up at the exact same time.

They walked to the front counter. The glass partition was smudged with fingerprints.

They handed over their driver's licenses, birth certificates, and the massive stack of financial disclosure forms.

The clerk, a tired-looking woman with thick glasses, mechanically flipped through the paperwork.

"Are you both entering into this union entirely of your own free will?" the clerk asked without looking up.

"Yes," Allison said.

"Yes," Elliot echoed.

Their voices were perfectly synchronized and completely devoid of any human emotion.

The clerk picked up a heavy metal stamp.

She brought it down hard on the final page. The loud thwack signaled that they were officially, legally husband and wife.

"According to New York State procedure, you may now exchange rings and kiss," the clerk said, finally looking up at them with a bored expression.

Allison's spine instantly turned to steel. Her entire body went rigid.

Elliot turned to face her. He leaned down slightly.

He raised his left hand and placed it on her waist. It was a gentlemanly gesture, barely touching her, but she felt the heat of his palm through her dress.

He leaned closer.

His scent invaded her personal space. It was a sharp, intoxicating mix of winter mint and bitter black coffee.

Elliot lowered his head.

His lips brushed against the corner of her mouth.

The contact was freezing cold. It was a highly deceptive touch, perfectly executed to satisfy the clerk's visual requirement, but it held absolutely zero warmth.

The second the requirement was met, they pulled apart.

They immediately stepped back, establishing a wide, safe social distance between them.

Elliot reached up and adjusted his silk tie.

"I have a board meeting to attend," he said. His voice was flat, dismissing her entirely.

He turned and walked away, his heavy footsteps echoing down the marble hall.

Allison stood alone at the counter.

Suddenly, her phone vibrated violently inside her leather tote bag.

She pulled it out. The screen lit up with a high-priority alert from her financial monitoring app.

It was a warning notification. Judd was attempting to transfer liquid assets out of the family trust fund right now.

Allison gripped the phone. Her jaw tightened until her teeth ached. She shoved the phone back into her bag, grabbed the freshly stamped marriage certificate, and headed straight for the exit.

Chapter 2 2

Allison pushed through the heavy revolving glass doors of the Lee Group's Manhattan headquarters.

She brought a rush of freezing December air into the lobby with her.

She marched straight toward the elevator banks.

A burly security guard stepped into her path, holding up a thick hand.

"Excuse me, miss. I need to see your executive appointment record," the guard said, blocking her way.

Allison stopped. She looked him dead in the eye.

"My name is Allison Lee," she said, her voice dripping with ice. "I am the first-in-line heir to the Edmond Lee estate."

The receptionist behind the massive marble desk heard her.

The woman's face paled. She immediately picked up the phone and dialed the direct internal line to the top-floor executive suite.

A minute later, the private executive elevator chimed. The polished steel doors slid open.

Judd walked out.

He was wearing an incredibly expensive Tom Ford suit, but the tailoring was wrong. It bunched at his shoulders, making him look like a child playing dress-up in a dead man's clothes.

Cheryl followed closely behind him.

Her sharp red stiletto heels clicked aggressively against the marble floor. Her eyes locked onto Allison, filled with deep contempt and heavy suspicion.

Judd stopped a few feet away. He crossed his arms and let out a loud, arrogant laugh.

"You're wasting your time, Allison," Judd sneered. "You've already been permanently kicked out by the family trust committee. You have nothing."

Cheryl stepped forward. She wore a fake, sympathetic smile that made Allison's stomach churn.

Cheryl reached into her designer handbag and pulled out a piece of paper.

She held it out to Allison. It was a check for fifty thousand dollars.

"Take this, sweetie," Cheryl said, her tone dripping with poison. "Consider it charity. Go buy yourself something nice and leave the adults to run the business."

Allison didn't even look at the check.

She reached into her tote bag and pulled out a thick, folded document. It bore the heavy, raised steel seal of the New York City Hall.

She slammed the photocopy of her marriage certificate down onto the receptionist's marble desk.

The slap of the paper echoed loudly across the quiet lobby.

Judd's eyes darted to the document.

He read the names. He read the effective date stamped clearly at the top. It was dated this very morning.

The color instantly drained from Judd's face. His skin turned the color of old ash. He stumbled backward, his heel catching on the marble floor.

Cheryl snatched the document off the desk.

She held it close to her face. Her eyes darted back and forth across the page. She read it three times, desperately searching for any sign of forgery.

Allison took a step forward. Her voice rang out, loud and clear.

"According to the hidden clause in my father's will addendum," Allison recited perfectly from memory, "upon my legal marriage, fifty percent of the trust's liquid assets are immediately unlocked and placed under my direct control."

Wall Street executives and junior analysts walking through the lobby stopped in their tracks.

They turned their heads, openly watching this brutal display of corporate family warfare.

Judd clenched his fists. The veins in his neck bulged.

"You're lying!" Judd shouted, pointing a shaking finger at her. "You just found some homeless bum on the street and paid him to fake a marriage for the money!"

The heavy glass doors of the lobby pushed open again.

Martin Croft walked in. He carried a massive leather briefcase stuffed with asset division demands.

Martin walked straight to the marble desk.

"I assure you, Mr. Lee," Martin said, his voice carrying the heavy weight of legal authority. "According to the agreement, Mr. Elliot Dillard's comprehensive financial background check will be submitted to the trust committee within seventy-two hours of the marriage. We have absolute confidence he will exceed all standards. Right now, however, what you need to sign is the preliminary fund release agreement based strictly on the factual occurrence of the marriage."

Cheryl let out a sharp gasp of pure rage.

She gripped the fifty-thousand-dollar check in her hands and ripped it into tiny, jagged pieces. She threw the scraps onto the floor.

Allison stepped right into Judd's personal space.

"Sign the release forms," Allison demanded, her voice low and lethal. "Release my half of the liquid funds. Right now."

Judd backed away, sweating profusely.

"No," Judd stammered. "I need the legal department to run a full background check on this guy. It will take at least a month."

Allison didn't blink. She reached into her pocket and pulled out her phone.

"Fine," Allison said. "Then I will call the Securities and Exchange Commission right now. I will report the highly irregular fund transfers you attempted to make twenty minutes ago."

Cheryl's eyes widened in sheer panic.

She lunged forward and grabbed Judd's wrist. Her perfectly manicured nails dug into his skin. She shot him a terrifying look, silently ordering him to surrender before he ruined everything.

Judd swallowed hard. His chest heaved.

He humiliatingly reached out and took the Montblanc pen that Martin offered him.

His hand shook as he signed the fund release agreement. He pressed down so hard that the metal nib nearly tore straight through the thick paper.

Allison reached out and smoothly pulled the document out from under his hand.

She flicked the edge of the paper with her fingernail, knocking off an invisible speck of dust. She offered him a cold, victorious smile.

"This is just half the money, Judd," Allison warned, her eyes turning dark. "I am coming for absolute controlling power of this company. Count on it."

Judd glared at her back, his eyes burning with pure hatred. He swore under his breath that he would dig up every single dirty secret about her cheap new husband.

Allison turned on her heel and walked out of the building.

She stepped onto the sidewalk and took a deep breath of the freezing, liberating Manhattan air. Her lungs expanded with the taste of victory.

Suddenly, her phone started ringing violently in her hand.

She looked at the screen. It was her college roommate, Zoe.

Allison swiped to answer. Zoe's voice blasted through the speaker, screaming about a disgusting new problem involving Trevor. Allison's grip on the phone tightened, her momentary peace shattered.

Chapter 3 3

Allison sat in the back of a yellow cab as it sped uptown.

The cab jerked to a stop outside the iron gates of Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus.

Allison paid the fare, shoved her wallet into her bag, and pushed the heavy car door open.

The moment her boots hit the pavement, she saw him.

Trevor, her ex-boyfriend, was leaning against the brick wall near the dormitory entrance. He was smoking a cigarette.

Trevor spotted her. He immediately dropped the cigarette onto the concrete and crushed it under his expensive sneaker.

He plastered a sickeningly deep, affectionate look onto his face and walked quickly toward her.

"Allie, baby," Trevor said, reaching his hand out.

He tried to grab her fingers.

Allison felt a wave of pure physical nausea hit her stomach. She twisted her torso sharply to the side, completely dodging his touch.

"Don't touch me," she snapped.

Trevor let his hand fall, looking hurt. "Allie, please. What happened with Kenzie was a mistake. It was just a frat party. I was drunk. It meant nothing."

Allison let out a harsh, humorless laugh.

"A mistake?" Allison asked, her voice rising. "You paid for the room at The Plaza Hotel using my secondary credit card, Trevor. That's a very expensive mistake."

Trevor's face stiffened. The fake affection vanished, replaced by a defensive scowl.

"Well, maybe if you weren't so obsessed with your family's company, I wouldn't have looked elsewhere!" Trevor shot back, stepping closer to intimidate her. "You completely ignored my emotional needs!"

The sheer audacity of his victim-blaming made the blood roar in Allison's ears.

Her eyes turned as cold as the December wind.

She pulled her left hand out of her heavy wool coat pocket.

She held it up right in front of his face, extending her ring finger.

The plain platinum wedding band caught the dull afternoon sunlight.

Trevor stared at the ring. His brow furrowed.

"What is that?" Trevor scoffed. "Did you buy a prop ring to save face? You're pathetic."

Allison looked at him with absolute deadpan calm.

"I got legally married this morning," Allison announced. Her voice didn't shake. It was a statement of absolute fact.

Trevor threw his head back and laughed loudly.

"That is the most ridiculous lie I have ever heard in my life," Trevor mocked, wiping a fake tear from his eye.

The heavy wooden doors of the dormitory suddenly banged open.

Zoe stormed out.

She was holding a massive plastic cup of iced coffee with a double shot of espresso. The ice cubes rattled loudly as she marched down the steps.

Without breaking stride, Zoe swung her arm forward.

She aggressively hurled the entire cup of freezing coffee directly onto Trevor's limited-edition sneakers.

The dark brown liquid splashed violently over the white leather and soaked into his expensive socks.

Trevor let out a high-pitched scream. He jumped backward, frantically shaking his wet feet.

"Are you crazy?!" Trevor screamed at Zoe, his face turning purple with rage.

Zoe didn't back down. She turned to the growing crowd of students walking past the gates.

"Hey everyone!" Zoe yelled at the top of her lungs. "This guy is a cheating loser who uses his girlfriend's money to pay for his hotel rooms!"

Several business school students stopped in their tracks. They pointed at Trevor's ruined shoes and immediately pulled out their phones to record the scene.

Trevor's face burned with extreme humiliation. He looked around wildly at the cameras pointed at him.

He glared at Allison, his eyes full of venom.

"You are going to regret dumping me, Allison," Trevor threatened, his voice shaking with anger.

Allison didn't say a word. She calmly pulled out her phone and started dialing the campus security emergency number.

Trevor saw the numbers on her screen. He cursed loudly, turned around, and sprinted away down the sidewalk. His wet shoes made pathetic squeaking sounds with every step.

Zoe grabbed Allison's left arm.

She pulled Allison's hand up to her face, her eyes wide with shock as she inspected the very real, very heavy platinum band.

"Holy crap," Zoe whispered.

Allison pulled her hand back and swiped her student ID card at the door scanner. The light flashed green.

They walked into the lobby and stepped into the cramped, slow-moving elevator.

The doors slid shut, sealing them inside.

"Who is the poor bastard that agreed to this?" Zoe demanded, her eyes practically sparkling with gossip.

"He's just some guy in the finance sector," Allison said vaguely, staring at the floor numbers ticking upward. "My lawyer introduced us. It's strictly to solve my property inheritance issue."

The elevator dinged and stopped at their floor.

They stepped out and walked down the long hallway lined with ugly blue carpet.

Zoe suddenly changed the subject, her energy shifting rapidly.

"Oh my god, did you hear the news that blew up the department today?" Zoe asked, waving her hands excitedly.

"No," Allison said, her mind already drifting back to the corporate audit she needed to run tomorrow morning.

"We got a new Advanced Finance professor," Zoe gushed. "Everyone says he looks like a Hollywood actor, but he is completely ruthless. A total ice king."

Allison nodded absentmindedly. She didn't care about academic gossip.

"The crazy part is," Zoe emphasized, leaning in close, "his last name is Dillard. And someone saw a wedding ring on his finger today."

Allison's hand froze on the brass doorknob of their room.

The surname hit a very specific, very sensitive nerve in her brain.

Dillard.

Her husband's name was Elliot Dillard.

But she quickly pushed the thought away. Dillard was a common name in New York. She had personally reviewed Elliot's background files before signing the prenuptial agreement. His resume was a relentless timeline of investment banking, hedge funds, and private equity. There was absolutely zero mention of any academic experience. It was an unsettling coincidence, but she simply didn't have the time or the mental bandwidth right now to stress over a million-to-one statistical anomaly.

She turned the knob and pushed the door open, completely unaware of the trap she was walking into.

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