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A Dangerous Contract With My Ex

A Dangerous Contract With My Ex

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10 Chapters
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After three years of swallowing humiliation to pay off massive debts, Azura finally got her law license reinstated. She thought she could rebuild her life after her family's scandalous downfall. But on her first day back, her trusted mentor betrayed her. He signed an ironclad contract that forced her to work for her ruthless ex-husband, Killian Sinclair-the very man who had orchestrated her father's arrest and coldly discarded her. Killian trapped her with a twenty-million-dollar penalty, forcing her back under his control just to humiliate her. When she started secretly compiling evidence to appeal her father's case, an arsonist set her apartment on fire. Trapped in the inferno, she was carried out by a mysterious stranger. Waking up in a VIP hospital suite, she thought she had narrowly escaped death. But when a false cardiac arrest alarm went off for her room, a man burst through her door in pure terror, his back bleeding from freshly torn burn wounds. It was Killian. Seeing she was unharmed, his panic instantly hardened into a mask of cold cruelty. "Good. You're not dead yet." Azura stared at his bleeding back in shock. Why would the monster who mercilessly destroyed her family risk his own life in the flames to save hers? Realizing there were deeper secrets hidden beneath his hatred, Azura stopped running. She accepted his case, determined to use his money, his name, and his power to uncover the real truth behind her family's ruin.

Contents

A Dangerous Contract With My Ex Chapter 1

The heavy oak door of the hearing room remained shut. Azura Reed stood in the sterile hallway of the New York State Bar Association, her breath caught somewhere in her throat. The air conditioning was set too high, raising goosebumps on her arms beneath her blazer, but her palms were slick with sweat. Three years of fighting, of scraping by, of swallowing humiliation, all came down to the silence behind that door.

"Look, it's her. Azura Reed." The whisper slithered from a few feet away, sharp and venomous. A pair of young associates, fresh out of law school and radiating the unearned confidence she once had, eyed her with a mixture of pity and contempt.

"I can't believe she has the nerve to show her face here," the other one murmured, not bothering to lower her voice. "After that whole scandal with her family. And what Killian Sinclair did to her..."

The name, Killian, landed like a physical blow. A fist of ice clenched in her stomach. Her mind unwillingly flashed back three years. The headlines screaming Reed Industries CEO Arrested for Securities Fraud. Her father's face, ashen and defeated, as federal agents led him away in handcuffs. Her mother's silent, streaming tears. And Killian, her husband, standing in their cavernous Upper East Side apartment, his handsome face a mask of cold indifference as he slid the divorce papers across the marble table. No explanation. No remorse. Just an ending.

Azura squeezed her eyes shut, forcing the images away. Her fingernails dug into the soft flesh of her palm, the small, sharp pain a welcome anchor to the present. She couldn't fall apart here. Not now. She had spent three years dismantling the woman she was-the naive, hopelessly in love girl who had believed her marriage was a fairy tale-and rebuilding herself into something harder, something that could survive. That marriage wasn't a fairy tale; it was the single greatest mistake of her life.

The lock on the oak door clicked. Azura's heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird. The chairman of the disciplinary committee, a stern-faced man named Mr. Davies, stepped out. His expression was unreadable, his eyes lingering on her for a moment that stretched into an eternity.

"Ms. Reed," he began, his voice a low rumble that echoed in the quiet hall.

Azura held her breath.

"The committee has reviewed the new evidence you submitted, along with your record over the past three years," he said, his gaze unwavering. "We have decided, by a unanimous vote, to reinstate your license to practice law in the state of New York. Effective immediately."

For a second, the words didn't register. Then, the tension that had held her spine rigid for a thousand days dissolved. Her knees felt weak. A wave of dizziness washed over her, and she had to grip the wall for support. Tears pricked the back of her eyes, hot and threatening, but she refused to let them fall.

"Thank you, Mr. Davies," she managed to say, her voice raspy but professional. "I appreciate the committee's faith in me."

He gave a curt nod and walked away. She stood there for another minute, just breathing. In. Out. The whispers from the associates had stopped. She walked past them without a glance, her head held high, and pushed through the glass doors of the building. The New York sun was blinding, but the city air felt cold against her skin. This wasn't a victory. It was just the first step onto the battlefield.

She pulled out her phone, her fingers slightly trembling as she typed a message to Caleb Hayes, her old law professor and now the senior partner of their tiny, struggling firm.

I got it. I'm back.

Her phone rang almost instantly. "Azura! I knew you could do it!" Caleb's voice was a boom of relief and excitement. "Listen, you need to get back to the office. Right now."

"Caleb, I just-"

"No, you don't understand. A client just walked in. A big one. The kind of client that could save this firm, Azura. The kind of client we've been dreaming of."

A knot of unease tightened in her gut. Their firm, Hayes & Reed, was a boutique operation in a small Brooklyn brownstone, specializing in intellectual property for artists and startups. They didn't do "big." "What kind of client?" she asked, her voice cautious. "You know our policy. We don't get in bed with major corporations."

"This one is different! The retainer they're offering... it's astronomical. Just get here. Please. You're the only one who can close this." His voice was pleading, desperate.

Azura sighed, the exhaustion of the day settling deep into her bones. "Fine. I'm on my way."

She took the subway back to Brooklyn, the train rattling through the dark tunnels. With every stop, her sense of dread grew. It was too good to be true. Good things didn't just happen to her anymore.

She arrived at their small office, the scent of old paper and brewing coffee a familiar comfort. She ducked into the tiny restroom first, splashing cold water on her face and reapplying a layer of composure along with her lipstick. She smoothed down her blazer, took a deep breath, and walked into Caleb's office.

A man stood with his back to her, looking out the window at the brownstones across the street. He was tall, his frame filling the space, and the sharp, precise cut of his custom suit spoke of immense wealth and power. The breadth of his shoulders, the confident set of his stance-it all radiated an oppressive, suffocating authority. Her heart skipped a beat, a primal sense of recognition she couldn't explain.

She cleared her throat. "Mr. Hayes? I'm Azura Reed. I was told you were waiting for me."

The man didn't move for a few seconds. The silence stretched, thick with unspoken tension. Then, he spoke, his voice a low, cold baritone that sent a tremor of ice through her veins. A voice that had haunted her nightmares for three years.

"Hello, Azura. It's been a long time."

He turned around slowly.

The world stopped. The air in her lungs turned to stone. The face was the same-impossibly handsome, brutally cold, with eyes the color of a winter storm. The face of the man who had built her up and then shattered her into a million pieces.

Killian Sinclair.

The words he'd spoken on their last day together echoed in her ears, as sharp and cruel now as they were then. I never want to see you again. A bitter, hysterical laugh threatened to bubble up from her chest.

Her body froze. The blood in her veins felt like slush. Her fingernails, once again, found the soft skin of her palm, digging in until it hurt, the pain the only thing keeping her upright.

Caleb stood awkwardly to the side, his face pale and beaded with sweat, his eyes darting between Killian's predatory stillness and her own shell-shocked horror.

"Mr. Sinclair," Azura forced the words out, her voice a dry, cracking whisper. "I think there's been a misunderstanding."

A slow, mocking smile curved Killian's lips. His eyes raked over her, cold and assessing. "Oh, I don't think so," he said softly. "I think things are just getting started."

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