The Bought Bride Who Refused To Belong To A New York Billionaire Don-Teptep

Roman Blackwell whispered the sentence into Elena Whitmore’s ear while six hundred people applauded them.

“Smile for the cameras, Mrs. Blackwell. From this moment on, you belong to me. But don’t mistake my name for love. I bought this marriage, not your heart.”

The ballroom did not hear him.

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That was the cruelty of it.

The room heard violins.

The room heard applause.

The room heard the clean pop of champagne and the soft, expensive laughter of people who knew exactly when to pretend they had not seen a woman disappear inside a family arrangement.

Elena heard the truth.

The chandelier light was hot on her shoulders, and the silk lining of her gown scratched faintly at her ribs every time she breathed.

Her gloves felt too tight.

Her smile felt pinned on.

Roman’s hand rested at her waist with a pressure so controlled that no photographer would have called it rough, but every nerve in Elena’s body understood the message.

He was not holding her.

He was displaying possession.

Elena had grown up around powerful men, so she knew the difference.

Her father had done business with them.

Her mother had hosted them.

They had sat in Whitmore dining rooms, lowered their voices over brandy, and spoken about debt, ports, campaigns, favors, and family loyalty as if those words were not just different kinds of currency.

The Whitmores of Connecticut had always looked polished from a distance.

Old money did that.

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