Flash Marriage To The Cold CEO

Flash Marriage To The Cold CEO

Xia Luowei

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To save her mother from her abusive stepfather, Jocelyn was forced to sign her life away and marry Houston Matthews, a ruthless and terrifyingly wealthy CEO. But shortly after moving into his sterile penthouse and playing the perfect, doting wife for his grandfather, she made a devastating mistake: she cooked him a plate of homemade dumplings. Instead of a thank you, Houston stared at the food with contracted pupils and pale cheeks, reacting with an inexplicable, cold fury as if she had served him pure poison. Things escalated when his meddling grandfather forced them into the same bedroom and slipped a powerful aphrodisiac into their nightly milk. Driven by a drugged, feverish haze, Houston pinned her to the bed, tearing through her inhibitions in a storm of desperate possession, but by morning, he reverted to an impassive stranger in a crisp suit, looking at her bruised body with nothing but regret. Jocelyn trembled with hot, acidic shame, completely unable to understand why a simple plate of dumplings triggered such violent trauma in this billionaire, nor how he could use her so thoroughly in the dark only to discard her like a cheap transaction in the daylight. The last shred of her naive hope shattered, and she picked up the priceless emerald matriarch bracelet his grandfather had given her, placing it onto the table with a sharp, final clink. "Our agreement did not include this."

Flash Marriage To The Cold CEO Chapter 1

The cheap ballpoint pen felt slick with sweat in Jocelyn Fletcher's hand. Its tip hovered over the signature line on the marriage certificate, a tiny black point of ink threatening to fall and seal her fate. Her hand trembled, not violently, but with a fine, persistent tremor that started in her chest and radiated out to her fingertips.

Across the sterile table, Houston Matthews had already signed. His name was a slash of sharp, aggressive black ink, as impeccable and cold as the man himself. He wore a custom-tailored dark gray suit, but no tie. The top button of his crisp white shirt was undone, revealing a sliver of tanned skin. He looked less like a groom and more like a CEO closing a hostile takeover. Which, Jocelyn supposed, this was.

He hadn't looked at her once. His gaze was fixed somewhere over her shoulder, impatient.

"Miss Fletcher?"

The voice of the clerk, Ms. Davis, was flat and bored. It sliced through the tense silence of the City Hall office, making Jocelyn flinch. The air was thick with the smell of old paper and stale coffee.

Jocelyn's vision blurred for a second. The white paper of the certificate dissolved, replaced by the image of her stepfather, Vince Webb, his face twisted in a drunken rage. She saw her mother, Sharon, with a fresh purple bruise blooming around her eye. The memory made her stomach clench into a tight, painful knot.

As if on cue, her phone vibrated in the pocket of her thin jacket. She didn't need to look. She knew who it was. The screen lit up against the fabric, a silent, menacing pulse.

She pulled it out with her free hand. The screen glowed with a new message from Vince.

"Think your mom wants to live? Be a good girl. Rick is already on his way."

The words were a punch to the gut. All the air left her lungs in a silent gasp. Rick. The name alone sent a wave of ice through her veins. He was Vince's enforcer, a man who enjoyed his work far too much. The last thread of her hesitation snapped.

She took a shaky breath, squeezed her eyes shut, and brought the pen down. The scratch of the tip on the paper was the only sound in the room. She signed 'Jocelyn Fletcher' quickly, the letters tight and cramped, as if trying to shrink away from the finality of the act.

The moment it was done, a profound exhaustion washed over her. It felt like every ounce of strength had been drained from her body, leaving an empty shell. A pair of invisible shackles had just clicked shut around her wrists.

Houston finally looked at her. His eyes, the color of a stormy sea, held no emotion. No satisfaction, no pity. Nothing. He simply gave a curt nod to Ms. Davis.

The clerk stamped the document with a heavy, satisfying thud. The sound echoed in the quiet room.

"Congratulations," Ms. Davis said, her tone utterly devoid of warmth. "You are now legally married."

Jocelyn stared at the red folder containing their marriage certificate. It was a mockery. There was no love here, no promise of a shared future. It was a bill of sale. She had just sold her life.

Houston stood up, the movement fluid and powerful. He adjusted the platinum cufflinks on his shirt, a small, precise gesture of control.

"My lawyer will handle your stepfather's debts," he said. It was the first full sentence he had spoken directly to her all day. His voice was a low baritone, smooth but completely without temperature. He could have been discussing the weather.

Jocelyn's lips parted. She wanted to ask about her mother, about the threat, but the words wouldn't come out. Fear had glued her tongue to the roof of her mouth.

He seemed to read her mind. His gaze was unnervingly perceptive. "As for your mother," he added, his voice dropping slightly, "that will require your cooperation on another matter."

Her heart, which had been hammering against her ribs, seemed to stop. "What matter?" she managed to whisper, her voice raspy.

"First, we're going to see my grandfather," Houston said, his tone leaving no room for argument. "You are going to make him believe we are a blissfully happy, deeply in love, newly married couple."

A hysterical laugh almost bubbled up in Jocelyn's throat. It was absurd. They had known each other for less than twenty-four hours. How were they supposed to fake being in love?

His phone rang, a discreet, expensive chime. He answered it, turning slightly away from her. His voice softened, just a fraction, losing its razor edge.

"Grandpa," he said. "Yes, it's done."

A pause. Jocelyn strained to hear, catching a single word that made her blood run cold: "hospital."

Houston listened for another moment, then said, "We're on our way now."

He hung up and turned back to her, his expression once again an unreadable mask. "My grandfather is at the hospital. He wants to meet his new granddaughter-in-law. Now."

Every instinct screamed at her to refuse, to run. But she was trapped. Her mother's safety was the cage.

She nodded, her chin trembling. "I have to know my mom is safe," she said, surprised by the firmness in her own voice. It was her only condition, her only piece of leverage in this terrifying new reality.

A flicker of something-surprise? respect?-passed through Houston's eyes before it was gone. It was the first hint of a reaction she had gotten from him.

"You will," he promised, the words a cold comfort. "Play your part well, and your mother will be safer than you can imagine."

They walked out of City Hall into the blinding afternoon sun. Jocelyn felt dizzy, disoriented. The noise of New York City traffic washed over her, a chaotic symphony that matched the turmoil in her head.

A black Bentley glided to a stop at the curb, silent as a phantom. A uniformed driver got out and opened the rear passenger door with a deferential bow.

Jocelyn stared at the car. It was the first tangible evidence of the world she had just married into. A world of immense, unimaginable wealth. She knew nothing about this man, not really. Only that his name was Matthews.

Before getting into the car, she glanced back at the imposing stone facade of City Hall. It looked like a tomb. Her old life was buried in there.

The heavy car door closed with a soft thud, shutting out the city's noise. It shut out her past, too.

She settled into the plush leather seat, as far from Houston as she could get. The silence in the car was heavier than the silence in the office had been.

Then her phone vibrated again. Another text from Vince.

"You little bitch. You think you can run? Rick will make you regret you were ever born."

The color drained from Jocelyn's face. Her hand clenched around the phone, her knuckles turning white. The brief, fragile sense of security shattered into a million pieces.

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Flash Marriage To The Cold CEO Flash Marriage To The Cold CEO Xia Luowei Romance
“To save her mother from her abusive stepfather, Jocelyn was forced to sign her life away and marry Houston Matthews, a ruthless and terrifyingly wealthy CEO. But shortly after moving into his sterile penthouse and playing the perfect, doting wife for his grandfather, she made a devastating mistake: she cooked him a plate of homemade dumplings. Instead of a thank you, Houston stared at the food with contracted pupils and pale cheeks, reacting with an inexplicable, cold fury as if she had served him pure poison. Things escalated when his meddling grandfather forced them into the same bedroom and slipped a powerful aphrodisiac into their nightly milk. Driven by a drugged, feverish haze, Houston pinned her to the bed, tearing through her inhibitions in a storm of desperate possession, but by morning, he reverted to an impassive stranger in a crisp suit, looking at her bruised body with nothing but regret. Jocelyn trembled with hot, acidic shame, completely unable to understand why a simple plate of dumplings triggered such violent trauma in this billionaire, nor how he could use her so thoroughly in the dark only to discard her like a cheap transaction in the daylight. The last shred of her naive hope shattered, and she picked up the priceless emerald matriarch bracelet his grandfather had given her, placing it onto the table with a sharp, final clink. "Our agreement did not include this."”
1

Chapter 1

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2

Chapter 2

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3

Chapter 3

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4

Chapter 4

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5

Chapter 5

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6

Chapter 6

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7

Chapter 7

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Chapter 8

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Chapter 9

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10

Chapter 10

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