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Home > Romance > Trapped By The Billionaire's Vicious Vows
Trapped By The Billionaire's Vicious Vows

Trapped By The Billionaire's Vicious Vows

Author: : Jenn Curlin
Genre: Romance
I married the billionaire CEO, Julian Harrison, thinking it was the start of a beautiful life. But on our wedding night, he threw an ironclad contract on the table, forcing me to stay in this fake marriage for three years. He believed I manipulated his sick grandmother to claw my way into high society, and threatened to ruin my parents if I refused. When his true love, Gena, returned, she deliberately threw herself down a flight of stairs and framed me. Julian held her bleeding body and looked at me with pure hatred. "You better pray she's okay." He didn't give me a chance to explain. He shut down my design studio, destroyed my career, and unleashed a massive internet hate campaign against me. My phone was flooded with death threats, my parents' address was exposed, and I became a public monster. Fleeing the cyberbullying in a taxi, the driver recognized me and drove recklessly, crashing us right into the path of a speeding semi-truck. As glass rained down and my blood pooled, the last thing I remembered was the tender look Julian gave Gena. I died a hated, pathetic placeholder, taking the blame for a crime I didn't commit. Opening my eyes again, the cold silk of the Vera Wang dress felt heavy against my skin. The heavy oak door clicked open. I was back on my wedding night.

Chapter 1

The silk of the Vera Wang dress felt like ice against her skin.

Kianna sat on the edge of the king-sized bed, smoothing the lace skirt for the tenth time. The penthouse was silent, a glass sanctuary above the glittering Manhattan skyline.

Tonight, this city was hers.

She touched the ring on her finger-the one Julian had slid there hours ago. His storm-gray eyes had held hers during the ceremony. Intense. Unreadable. But present. He had looked at her like she mattered.

She had married Julian Harrison.

The thought sent a shiver through her. She was no longer just a small-town designer from Ohio. She was someone's wife. His wife.

Candles flickered on the nightstand. Champagne chilled in an ice bucket. It was the wedding night she had dreamed about.

Now he just had to come to her.

One hour passed. Then two. The candles burned lower. The champagne grew warm.

She refused to let doubt creep in. He was a busy man. A CEO. This was normal. He would come.

Three hours.

When the door finally clicked open, her heart exploded.

He was here.

She leaped to her feet, relief and joy flooding through her. A smile broke across her face-wide, unguarded, full of hope.

"Julian-"

He didn't look at her.

He walked past her like she was furniture, loosening his tie with a violent tug. The smell of whiskey rolled off him.

"Julian? Is everything okay?"

He reached the coffee table and threw a manila envelope onto it. The slap echoed through the silent room.

"Sign it."

Two words. Flat. Cold.

Her smile crumbled. "Sign what? It's our wedding night-"

"It's over." He finally turned, and his eyes-those eyes that had held hers during the ceremony-were devoid of warmth. Only contempt. "This farce is over."

She took a step back. "Farce?"

"You didn't actually think this was real, did you?"

The words hit her like a blade. She felt them in her chest, her stomach. "We got married. You said vows. I'm your wife."

"You're nothing." He stepped closer. "You manipulated my grandmother. Fed her your small-town sob story until she forced this ridiculous union on me. You saw an opportunity and you took it. A nobody designer clawing her way into New York society."

"That's a lie." Her voice shook, but her eyes burned. "Evelyn was kind to me. The only person in your family who ever was."

"Don't say her name." His voice dropped. "Sign. The papers."

She looked at the envelope. Divorce Agreement.

On her wedding night. While she still wore her wedding dress.

"No."

A flicker of surprise crossed his face. "Excuse me?"

"I said no." She met his eyes, refusing to flinch. "You let me stand at that altar and believe in something. I won't be thrown out like garbage on my wedding night."

Silence.

Then he smiled. It was the coldest thing she had ever seen.

"Your parents," he said quietly. "Dayton, Ohio. Your father's pension. Your mother's savings." He leaned in, his breath hot against her ear. "It would be a tragedy if something happened to all of that."

Her blood turned to ice.

Not a metaphor. Real cold-spreading from her fingertips to her heart, like someone had injected ice water into her veins.

"You wouldn't."

Her voice sounded like it came from somewhere far away.

He bent closer, his lips nearly brushing her ear, his voice soft as a lover's murmur. "Try me."

She looked into his eyes and saw the truth. There was no hesitation there. No guilt. Just a cold gray void.

He would destroy her parents. Without blinking.

The candles had all burned out without her noticing. Only the cold light of Manhattan filtered through the windows, turning her wedding dress a ghostly white.

The dream was dead.

She took the pen. Her fingers trembled so violently she could barely grip it-not from fear.

From fury.

She found the signature line. Kianna Brennan.

A tear splashed onto the paper, blurring the ink. Then another.

She didn't wipe them away.

He snatched the document the second she lifted the pen. Folded it. For a fraction of a second, his jaw tightened-something flickering in his eyes that was gone before she could name it. Guilt? Regret? Or just disgust at the messiness of it all?

Then the mask was back. Cold. Impenetrable.

He pressed a button on the wall.

"Alfred. The master bedroom. Now."

Within a minute, the butler and two maids appeared. Julian was already walking toward the door.

"Search her luggage. Make sure she takes nothing that belongs to this family." He paused, his hand on the doorframe, still not looking at her. His voice dropped-just slightly. "Then get her out."

The door clicked shut behind him. A quiet sound. Final.

Kianna stood frozen as strangers dumped her belongings onto the floor. Her sketchbooks. Her clothes. Her underwear. Pawed through while the butler watched with dead eyes.

She didn't move. Didn't speak. Just stood there in her wedding dress as her life was torn apart.

But beneath the grief, something else was taking root.

Cold. Hard. Fury.

Julian Harrison thought he had broken her.

He was wrong.

Chapter 2

The first thing Kianna did when she reached her Brooklyn studio was pull out her grandmother's old legal pad.

She hadn't slept. She hadn't eaten. She had driven straight from the penthouse garage as dawn broke over the city, her wedding dress crumpled in the passenger seat like a discarded dream.

The studio smelled of charcoal and coffee. Her sanctuary. But today it felt different. Smaller. Like the walls had crept closer overnight.

She sat at her drafting table, pen in hand, and closed her eyes.

The document. She could still see it-every line, every clause, every word of the impossibly small print at the bottom. The image was burned into her mind like a brand. She had signed it through tears, barely reading, her hand shaking too hard to focus.

But her eyes had still seen.

Her grandmother had called it a gift. A photographic memory. Kianna had never thought of it as anything more than a party trick.

Today, it was the only weapon she had left.

She began to write.

When she finished, she stared at the page. Her handwriting was shaky, but the text was there-complete. On the surface, it had looked like a standard property waiver. Routine paperwork. Just sign here, and here. He had made it sound so perfunctory. But the fine print told a different story. A lock-in clause that bound her to the marriage for three years. Penalties so severe they would not only bankrupt her, but also hold her liable for any perceived reputational damage to the Harrison Group.

What she had thought was a divorce agreement was something far worse-an addendum that made the divorce agreement impossible.

She picked up her phone and called the best divorce lawyer in Manhattan.

Two hours later, she was sitting in a glass-walled conference room overlooking the Statue of Liberty. Mr. Smith, a man with kind eyes and a five-thousand-dollar suit, read her handwritten transcription with growing concern.

"Ms. Brennan," he said finally, setting down the pad. "This is an addendum to your prenuptial agreement."

"I know what it is now. I want to know if I can fight it."

Mr. Smith was silent for a long moment. "The prenup itself is a separate document you signed before the wedding, which I assume you reviewed with your own counsel?"

Kianna nodded. She had. Evelyn had insisted on it, telling her it was just a formality to protect Julian's assets. "Every Harrison bride signs one, dear. It means nothing." She had trusted Evelyn. She had trusted all of them.

"This addendum activates and reinforces a lock-in clause," Mr. Smith continued. "For three years, neither party can file for divorce without incurring catastrophic penalties-penalties that cascade down to your immediate family."

The room tilted.

"He made it sound like he was divorcing me," she said, her voice hollow. "On our wedding night. He handed me a paper, told me it was over, and I signed. I thought I was signing my freedom."

"What you signed," Mr. Smith said quietly, "was the opposite. This document ensures you cannot leave him, even if he wants to leave you."

She stared at him. "Why would he want that?"

Mr. Smith leaned back, his expression thoughtful. "Because a public divorce right now would destabilize the Harrison Group's stock. And a wife who walks away freely can talk to the press, write a memoir, sell company secrets. But a wife locked into a contract with a financial gun to her head?" He shook his head. "She stays silent. She behaves. She's a liability that's been neutralized."

Kianna felt the blood drain from her face. She wasn't just trapped.

She was a hostage.

She walked out of the office in a daze. Wall Street roared around her, indifferent.

Her phone buzzed. Julian.

She answered with ice in her voice. "You planned this from the start. You made me think I was signing a divorce, and all along-"

"I made you sign exactly what I needed you to sign." His voice was smooth, almost amused. "Did you enjoy your consultation with Mr. Smith?"

"Go to hell."

"Three years, Kianna. You will play the part of Mrs. Julian Harrison, and you will play it convincingly. Or I will dismantle your life piece by piece. Starting with that charming little studio of yours."

The line went dead.

She stood on the crowded sidewalk, the dial tone buzzing in her ear. The city she had dreamed of conquering suddenly felt like a cage.

Then she straightened her spine. Wiped her eyes. And started walking.

If Julian Harrison wanted a war, she would give him one.

Chapter 3

The air in Kianna's Brooklyn studio usually smelled of charcoal, fresh-cut wood, and brewing coffee. It was her sanctuary. Today, it felt like a cage. She stared at a blank drafting board, her mind a chaotic storm of legal clauses and Julian's cold, mocking voice.

Her phone lit up. A text from Julian. No greeting, no preamble. Just a command.

"Harrison Estate, the Hamptons. 7 PM. Family dinner. Don't be late."

A muscle in her jaw twitched. He was pulling her strings. She had no choice but to comply. For now.

She grabbed her keys. The drive out to Long Island was long, the city traffic giving way to manicured suburbs and finally the sprawling estates of the ultra-rich. Her Honda looked like a dinghy in a sea of yachts as she turned onto the private road leading to the Harrison manor.

The house was a monument to generational wealth, a sprawling stone edifice overlooking the Atlantic. A valet took her keys, his expression carefully neutral. She took a deep breath, straightened her simple black dress, and pushed open the massive front doors.

The foyer was cavernous, dripping with crystal chandeliers and ancestral portraits. She had barely taken three steps inside when a voice cut through the low hum of conversation.

"Well, well. Look what the cat dragged in."

Julian's cousin, Alea Harrison, stood before her, a flute of champagne in her hand. Her designer dress probably cost more than Kianna's car. Her smile was pure venom.

"Alea."

Alea circled her, eyes raking over Kianna's dress with open disdain. "Still trying so hard, aren't you? You can put a sparrow in a designer cage, but it's still just a sparrow." She leaned in, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "You should know, Julian doesn't do love. He does obligation. And his heart has been obligated to someone else for a very, very long time."

Kianna's heart gave a painful lurch. She kept her face a mask of indifference. "I'm not interested in your family gossip."

"Oh, this isn't gossip, darling." Alea purred, enjoying herself. "It's a fact. You're just a placeholder. A temporary solution to a permanent problem." She took a delicate sip of her champagne. "Enjoy the dinner."

Alea swept away, leaving Kianna standing in the foyer, her fists clenched. A placeholder. The word burrowed into her chest like a splinter.

She turned to find the powder room, needing a moment to compose herself. As she rounded a corner into a dimly lit hallway, a hand shot out and grabbed her wrist.

Julian.

He pulled her hard into a recessed alcove hidden behind a heavy tapestry. He slammed her back against the cold stone wall, his body caging hers.

"What was that with Alea?" he demanded, his voice a low growl.

"Ask your charming cousin yourself," Kianna shot back, trying to ignore the heat of his body so close to hers.

"Listen to me." His fingers dug into her arms. "My grandmother is here. As far as she knows, we are deeply in love. You will smile. You will make pleasant conversation. You will look at me like I am the center of your universe. Do you understand?"

She met his furious gaze with one of her own. "And if I don't?"

His eyes narrowed. "The lease on your studio is up for renewal next month. The building was recently acquired by a subsidiary of the Harrison Group. It would be a shame if the new owners decided to double the rent."

The threat hung in the air, suffocating her. He had her cornered from every possible angle.

Suddenly, a soft, familiar voice drifted down the hall. "Julian? Kianna, dear? Is that you?"

Evelyn.

Julian's entire demeanor shifted in an instant. The fury vanished, replaced by a mask of warm affection. He released her arms, his hand sliding to her waist, pulling her flush against him. The move was so fluid, so practiced, it made Kianna's stomach turn.

She tried to pull away, but his arm was a band of steel.

Evelyn appeared at the end of the hall, seated in her wheelchair, a gentle smile on her face. "There you are, you two. Hiding in the shadows."

"Just stealing a moment with my beautiful wife, Grandma," Julian said, his voice impossibly smooth. He looked down at Kianna, his eyes glittering with a warning. Play along.

And then, to seal the performance, he lowered his head.

Kianna had a split second to react, to turn away, but she was frozen. His lips crashed down on hers. It wasn't a kiss. It was an invasion. A punishment. A brutal assertion of ownership. The scent of him-expensive cologne and whiskey-filled her senses, choking her.

For one traitorous heartbeat, her body responded to the heat of him, the solid press of his chest, the way his hand splayed across her lower back. She had dreamed of his lips on hers since the moment she saw him at the altar. The dream tasted like ashes now.

Rage, pure and primal, surged through her.

In the shadows of the alcove, where Evelyn couldn't see the details, Kianna bit down. Hard.

Julian let out a muffled grunt of pain and jerked back. His eyes were blazing. A tiny bead of blood welled up on his lower lip.

He smiled down at her, a perfect, loving smile for the benefit of his grandmother. "We'll be right there, Grandma," he said.

As Evelyn's wheelchair disappeared around the corner, his smile vanished. He released Kianna as if she were on fire, taking a step back. He touched his thumb to his lip, smearing the drop of blood.

Kianna wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, her lips tingling from the impact. She met his murderous glare without flinching.

Then she turned and walked toward the dining room, her head held high, leaving him alone in the shadows with the taste of his own blood.

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