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Flash Marriage To The Possessive Billionaire

Flash Marriage To The Possessive Billionaire

Author: : Zaccaria Linn
Genre: Modern
Serena was pulled out of a filthy Appalachian trailer park by the wealthy Sinclair family, expected to be their perfectly obedient daughter. But to secure a pharmaceutical supply chain, her adoptive father demanded she sign a marriage contract with a known predator in the Manhattan social scene. When she flatly refused, the family she had tried to please for twenty years instantly turned on her. "You are nothing without us!" her father roared, threatening to freeze her accounts and throw her back on the streets. Her adoptive mother looked at her with pure disgust, praising her perfect sister before screaming at Serena to get out and never come back. Stripped of her jewelry and kicked out into the freezing night, she was treated like a disposable stray dog. To make matters worse, a vindictive socialite immediately hired four syndicate thugs to break her legs in a dark alley. They all thought she was just a helpless, penniless orphan who would eventually crawl back and beg for their mercy. They had no idea she was actually the elusive master pharmacist Elara, a genius with a massive underground bounty on her head. And they certainly didn't know she was already secretly, legally married to Lucas Sterling-the most ruthless and powerful billionaire in New York. As the thugs lunged at her, a black Maybach violently blocked the alley, and her fiercely protective husband stepped out into the shadows. Tearing her adoptive mother's hush-money check into tiny shreds, Serena looked at the man who had just offered her his entire estate. She wasn't leaving this city; she was going to stay right here and watch the Sinclair family completely fall apart.

Chapter 1

"Sign it, Serena. Now."

Her father, William Sinclair, did not simply speak-he hurled the words. They hit the heavy mahogany desk like a physical blow.

Serena stood just inside the study doors. The hinges had barely stopped squeaking. She kept her spine perfectly straight. Her eyes locked onto the thick stack of papers her father had just slammed down.

"Hank White." William tapped the top page. "The White family is willing to overlook your... background. This marriage secures the supply chain for Sinclair Pharmaceuticals."

Her stomach churned violently. The name Hank White tasted like bile in her throat. He was a known predator in the Manhattan social scene. Twenty minutes ago, she had received her mother's terse phone call ordering her to leave her downtown apartment immediately and return home-only to face this.

Heh. When they didn't need her, they couldn't stand her stepping foot in the house. But the moment there was profit to be made, they summoned her back from the apartment she'd scraped to afford.

A scornful laugh echoed inside Serena's heart.

Six months. It had been six months since she returned to this so-called "family." She had been kidnapped as a child, taken from this very house, and had finally returned to the Sinclair name full of hope. But that hope shattered the moment she realized her parents didn't see her as a lost daughter-only as a damaged asset to be traded away.

"No." The word left her lips flat and cold.

William's face flushed a dark, dangerous red. He shot up from his leather chair. Spittle flew from his lips as he shouted across the room.

"You ungrateful little brat! We pulled you out of that filthy trailer park in Appalachia. We gave you the Sinclair name. You are nothing without us!"

He threw the trailer park at her like a curse, deliberately ignoring that she had been dumped there by the very kidnapping they had failed to prevent. Serena let out a dry, hollow laugh. The sound scraped against the oppressive silence of the study.

"You gave me a price tag," she said, her voice steady. "This isn't family. This is a transaction."

The study doors opened wider. Her mother, Eleanor Sinclair, walked in. The heavy scent of her expensive floral perfume instantly made the air in the room feel thinner. Eleanor looked at Serena with pure disgust.

"Why can't you be more like your sister?" Eleanor sneered. "Stella brings honor to this house. You bring nothing but stubbornness and shame."

Stella Sinclair-the flawless, porcelain-doll sister who had perfected the art of the innocent smile. In the six months since Serena's return, Stella played the sweet, supportive sister whenever their parents were watching, while privately ensuring Serena felt like an unwelcome intruder. Stella guarded her position fiercely, making sure she remained the sole, unthreatened center of their parents' affection.

Serena looked at the two people who shared her blood. Any lingering hope she had kept buried in her chest shattered completely. Her eyes went dead.

"This is your last warning," William growled, stepping around the desk. "You sign this contract, or I freeze your trust fund. I will cut you off entirely. You will be back on the streets by morning."

Serena did not blink. She reached up to her neck. Her fingers unclasped the heavy pearl necklace Eleanor had forced her to wear for family dinners.

She tossed it onto the mahogany desk. The pearls hit the wood with a sharp, final clatter.

"Keep it," Serena said. "I am done with the Sinclair name."

She turned around.

"Get out!" Eleanor shrieked behind her. "Get out and never come back!"

Serena walked out. Her strides were long and purposeful. The hallway was lined with maids who quickly averted their eyes, but Serena did not slow down.

She pushed open the heavy front doors of the estate. The crisp autumn wind of New York hit her face. It instantly blew away the suffocating smell of Eleanor's perfume.

Her heels crunched against the fallen leaves on the driveway. She walked until she reached the main road.

She pulled out her phone. The screen cast a pale blue light over her face. She opened a ride-sharing app and requested a car.

A yellow cab pulled up to the curb a few minutes later. Serena opened the back door and slid onto the worn leather seat.

"Downtown," she told the driver. "The Onyx Lounge."

The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror, nodded, and merged into the heavy evening traffic.

Serena leaned her head against the cold window. The neon lights of the city blurred into streaks of color. Her muscles finally began to uncoil.

Her encrypted secondary phone vibrated against her hip. She pulled it out, opening a specific, heavily secured application. A message popped up, its contents running through three rapid decryption cycles before finally displaying a massive bounty seeking the whereabouts of the master pharmacist known as Elara.

Her breath hitched. She swiped the notification away instantly. She closed her eyes and forced her heart rate to slow down.

The cab jerked to a halt. A wall of brake lights stretched down the avenue. Horns blared from every direction.

Serena opened her eyes. She tossed a twenty-dollar bill over the front seat.

"Keep the change," she said, pushing the door open.

She walked the last block. She moved through the crowded sidewalk with fluid precision, easily dodging a stumbling drunk man who veered into her path.

The Onyx Lounge had a plain black awning. Two massive bouncers stood by the velvet rope. They looked at her simple coat with obvious disdain.

Serena reached into her bag. She pulled out a solid black metal card-a token given to her by Gregory Foster, the owner, who had personally guaranteed her absolute safety within his territory-and handed it over.

The bouncer's expression shifted from boredom to instant panic. He bowed his head and quickly unhooked the rope.

Serena took her card back. She pushed through the soundproof double doors.

The bass of the electronic music hit her chest like a hammer. The air was thick with the smell of alcohol and expensive cologne.

She navigated the edge of the dance floor. Flashing strobe lights cut through the darkness. She scanned the room for the bar, looking for a quiet corner to disappear into.

Her gaze swept upward toward the glass railing of the second-floor VIP section.

She froze.

Standing there, looking down at the crowd, was a tall man with broad shoulders.

Her heart skipped a violent beat.

It was Lucas Sterling.

Her legally bound, secret husband, unknown to anyone.

Chapter 2

Serena dropped her chin instantly. She used a group of dancing college students as a human shield and broke eye contact with the second floor.

She moved quickly toward the darkest corner of the ground-floor bar. Her breathing grew shallow. A thin layer of cold sweat broke out on her palms.

A bartender slid a napkin toward her. She pointed to a bottle of bourbon on the shelf. She needed the burn to steady her nerves.

She pressed her back against the cool wood of the bar counter. She scanned the crowd left and right. Nobody was coming down the stairs.

The bartender handed her the glass. She took a sip. The liquid burned a trail down her throat.

The burn dragged her mind back to a fogged-up hotel suite one month ago.

That night, her parents had summoned her to another suffocating family dinner. Stella had orchestrated a flawless performance of victimhood, and Eleanor had spent the entire meal cataloguing Serena's failures. Serena had fled the estate and found a dive bar in Brooklyn, where she had poured cheap whiskey down her throat until the edges of the world blurred. She had stumbled back to her hotel-the temporary residence the Sinclairs had grudgingly paid for-barely able to stand.

She had swiped her key card at the wrong door. The lock had clicked open anyway.

The details of what followed remained a blur of heat and desperation. She remembered a man's hands steadying her, a voice low and commanding asking if she was sure. She remembered answering not with words but with a kiss that tasted like whiskey and loneliness. She had woken the next morning tangled in expensive sheets, her head pounding, the imprint of a stranger's body still warm beside her.

She had braced herself for humiliation. She had expected him to leave a stack of bills on the nightstand and disappear.

Instead, Lucas Sterling had set a cup of black coffee on the bedside table and slid a document across the sheets. He had been fully dressed, his face carved from stone, as if the night before had been a business negotiation rather than an act of reckless passion.

"You need a family that won't use you," he had said, his voice flat and absolute. "I need a wife with a clean background to secure my voting rights over the Sterling family trust. The terms are straightforward."

Serena had stared at the marriage contract through a haze of hangover and disbelief. Any other woman might have laughed, demanded explanations, thrown the papers back in his face.

But Serena had signed without hesitation.

The contract clearly stated they were to live separate lives. They were not to acknowledge each other in public. A non-disclosure agreement bound every aspect of their arrangement. It was a business transaction. Nothing more.

She had stumbled out of that hotel room a married woman and had not fully processed the decision since. It still felt like a fever dream she had not yet woken from.

A wild burst of strobe lights flashed across the room. The sudden brightness stung her eyes and pulled her back to the present.

Up on the VIP balcony, Lucas swirled the ice in his glass. His dark eyes were locked onto the slender figure hiding in the shadows of the bar downstairs.

Carter Reynolds, his executive assistant, followed his boss's gaze. Carter nearly dropped his drink.

"Is that... the Mrs.?" Carter whispered.

"Why is my wife alone in a place like this at midnight?" Lucas asked. His voice was dangerously low.

Carter wiped a bead of sweat from his forehead. He pulled out his tablet and rapidly tapped the screen. His fingers were shaking.

"Sir, intel from the Sinclair estate just came in," Carter said rapidly. "William Sinclair tried to force her into a marriage contract with Hank White tonight. She refused and left."

The glass in Lucas's hand cracked. The sharp sound made the nearby socialites flinch and step away.

The temperature around Lucas plummeted. He slammed the broken glass onto the table. Then he pulled out his phone. His thumb moved across the screen in a single, decisive swipe. A message shot through an encrypted channel.

Down at the bar, Serena's secondary phone vibrated once against her hip-a short, sharp pulse she had learned to recognize. She glanced down, shielding the screen with her palm.

The text read: "You still have a home to come back to."

Serena's breath caught. Her heart slammed against her ribs. She did not have to guess who had sent it-only one person in the world knew both her identity and the exact moment she would need to hear those words. She lifted her head just enough to see the VIP balcony. Lucas was still standing by the railing, a dark silhouette against the lights. He made no move to descend.

She shrank back instinctively, pressing herself deeper into the shadows of the corner booth. Her fingers tightened around the glass. The bourbon trembled against the rim.

Upstairs, Lucas slid his phone back into his pocket. He did not go down. The terms of their agreement held him in place-but nothing prevented him from watching. He leaned his shoulder against a pillar, his gaze never leaving Serena's corner. Carter, sensing the shift, murmured into a discreet earpiece, instructing the club's plainclothes security to keep an eye on the bar area without intervening.

Serena set her empty glass down. She needed to leave before the weight of Lucas's distant stare made her do something stupid. She pulled out some cash, placed it on the counter, and turned toward the exit.

She didn't make it three steps.

A drunk man swayed into her path. His eyes were glassy, his grin sloppy. "Hey there, pretty thing. You look like you could use some company." His hand reached for her arm.

Serena's body reacted before her mind did. She shifted her center of gravity, fingers curling into the precise position to seize his wrist and snap the joint backward. Her gaze turned to ice.

On the VIP balcony, Lucas's knuckles went white around the railing. He straightened, every muscle coiled. Beside him, Carter whispered, "Sir, should I send someone-"

"No," Lucas said, his voice a low growl. "She can handle it." His eyes remained fixed on the scene below, a silent promise that if the drunk lasted more than two seconds, no force on earth would keep him on this balcony.

But before Serena could strike, a bar security guard-one of Gregory Foster's men-materialized from the crowd. He grabbed the drunk by the collar and hauled him backward. "You're done, buddy," the guard grunted, dragging the man away. The drunk's protests faded into the thumping bass.

Serena exhaled slowly. She lowered her hands. The guard gave her a brief nod and vanished into the crowd.

And then a shrill, piercing laugh cut through the music.

Chapter 3

Serena turned her head. Samantha Sharp stood a few feet away, holding a martini glass. She wore a tight red dress and a vicious smile.

"Well, well," Samantha drawled loudly. "Look who it is. Does the trailer park girl think she belongs in a place like this?"

Serena stared at her. Her expression was completely blank. She looked at Samantha the way one might look at a stain on the floor.

From the VIP balcony, Lucas watched Samantha Sharp stop a few feet away from Serena. His jaw tightened. He did not move, but his fingers drummed once against the railing-a slow, deliberate beat.

Samantha took Serena's silence as fear. She stepped closer, her heels clicking sharply.

"Word travels fast, Serena. Kicked out of the Sinclair house tonight like a stray dog. You have nothing."

A group of Samantha's friends giggled behind her. Other club patrons turned their heads, forming a tight circle around them to watch the drama.

Serena's lips curved into a slow, freezing smile.

"I heard the whispers at Mr. Sterling's last business luncheon," Serena said. Her voice was perfectly level. "Your father's stock is tanking, and he is desperately leveraging his offshore accounts just to make payroll. No one wants to work with him."

Samantha's smile vanished. Her eyes widened in absolute horror.

Serena took one step forward. "If you want your family to avoid bankruptcy court tomorrow morning, I suggest you walk away right now."

The humiliation hit Samantha hard. Her face turned purple with rage. With a furious shriek, she lunged forward and hurled the contents of her martini glass straight at Serena's face.

Serena didn't step back. She dropped her center of gravity and pivoted on her heel, gliding past Samantha's extended arm in one fluid motion. As she passed, she hooked her ankle cleanly behind Samantha's leading foot. The move was subtle, almost invisible-a whisper of contact that went unnoticed by everyone in the crowd.

But Samantha's momentum was already committed forward. Her heel caught against Serena's ankle, and her body pitched wildly off balance. She let out a startled yelp. Her arms flailed. The martini glass, still clutched in her hand, swung backward. The sticky liquid sloshed over the rim and drenched the front of her own expensive red dress.

She stumbled two clumsy steps before catching herself on a nearby table, chest heaving, martini dripping from her chin onto the ruined fabric.

A collective gasp rippled through the crowd, followed by a wave of poorly stifled snickers. Someone behind Serena let out an audible snort.

Samantha stared down at herself, mouth agape. Her soaked dress clung to her skin, the stain spreading in ugly, irregular patches. "You-" she sputtered, her voice cracking. "You tripped me!"

Serena raised an eyebrow, her expression a perfect mask of innocence. "You lunged at me with a drink and tripped over your own heels. Perhaps next time you should choose more practical footwear for starting fights."

Laughter rippled through the onlookers. Even one of Samantha's own friends pressed a hand over her mouth, shoulders shaking.

Samantha's face cycled through shades of crimson and white. Her hands trembled with rage. With a wordless, guttural scream, she snatched a full champagne flute from the table she'd crashed into and raised it high, ready to smash it over Serena's head.

Before Serena could move, a large hand shot out from the crowd and clamped around Samantha's wrist mid-swing. The champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered on the floor.

Gregory Foster, the owner of the club, stood between them. His face was thunderous.

"You do not cause a scene in my club," Gregory barked. He released Samantha's wrist with a shove, making her stumble backward again. "Look at yourself. You attacked twice. You lost twice. You're done."

Samantha wiped frantically at her soaked dress, her chest heaving. "She tripped me! She ruined my dress! She insulted my family!"

Gregory gave her a look so cold she physically shrank back. "I watched you throw a drink at a woman who was standing still. Everything that happened after that, you brought on yourself." He turned to Serena. His eyes softened, hiding a deep layer of respect. "Are you hurt?"

Serena relaxed her shoulders. She shook her head.

In the dark, Lucas watched Gregory lean in close to his wife. A violent surge of jealousy twisted in his gut, but it was mixed with something else-a grudging admiration. That ankle hook had been clean. Professional, even. His wife was full of surprises.

"My father will hear about this, Gregory!" Samantha yelled, her voice now a tearful, desperate shriek. Her mascara had begun to run, leaving dark streaks down her cheeks.

Gregory snapped his fingers. Three massive bouncers stepped forward. "Put Miss Sharp and her friends on the permanent blacklist. Throw them out."

Samantha shrieked as the bouncers grabbed her arms. She kicked and thrashed, still dripping wet, her ruined dress clinging to her like a second skin. The crowd parted, several people openly laughing and raising their phones to record her humiliating exit. Her friends trailed behind, faces burning with secondhand embarrassment.

Gregory leaned closer to Serena. "There is a back exit through the employee hallway. It will be quieter for you."

Serena nodded. She needed to leave before Lucas decided to step out of the shadows.

She did not look back. She followed Gregory toward the heavy metal door marked 'Staff Only'.

Lucas watched her disappear down the hall. A faint, dangerous smirk tugged at the corner of his lips. Then he pulled out his phone and typed a message to Carter. Before he could hit send, Carter's voice crackled urgently through his earpiece. "Sir, security feeds show four known Syndicate thugs slipping into the back alley right behind her."

Lucas's blood ran cold. "Bring the Maybach to the rear exit. Block the alley. Now!" he ordered, already breaking into a dead sprint toward the stairs.

Serena walked down the dim hallway. Gregory opened the heavy steel door at the end. The smell of rotting garbage and damp concrete rushed in.

"Thank you," Serena said, stepping out into the alley.

The steel door slammed shut behind her. The alley was pitch black. The only sound was her heels clicking on the wet pavement.

A low, nasty whistle echoed from behind a dumpster.

Four large shadows stepped out, blocking the only exit to the street.

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