PART 2
The first night inside Blackwell Manor, I barely slept at all. Every sound seemed magnified in the silence of that enormous house, from the distant ticking of antique clocks to the low groan of pipes hidden behind the walls, and each time I closed my eyes, I saw Roman Blackwell standing in that hotel wedding room with his dark expression and impossible calm, looking less like a husband and more like a man accepting ownership of something he had purchased.
The guards remained outside my bedroom all night.
I checked twice.
At three in the morning, unable to bear the pressure building inside my chest any longer, I opened my bedroom door a few inches and saw them standing exactly where they had been before, dressed in black suits beneath the dim hallway lights with their hands folded in front of them and guns visible beneath their jackets. None of them spoke. None of them smiled. But the second the door opened, all four men lifted their eyes toward me at once with the cold alertness of trained predators.
I shut the door immediately and locked it again even though I already suspected locks meant very little in a house like this.
When morning came, I stood beneath the shower until the hot water turned cold, trying to wash away the suffocating feeling pressing against my ribs. It did not help. Nothing about this place felt normal. The mansion was beautiful in the same way a storm over the ocean could be beautiful: breathtaking from a distance but deadly once you were trapped inside it.
At exactly seven o’clock, someone knocked gently on my bedroom door.
A tall older woman entered after I answered. Her silver hair was pinned perfectly into place, and her dark gray dress looked so immaculate that not a single wrinkle disturbed the fabric.
“Good morning, Mrs. Blackwell,” she said politely.
The title startled me.
Mrs. Blackwell.
The words felt strange wrapped around me, as though they belonged to someone else entirely.
“I’m Mrs. Aldrich,” she continued. “Mr. Blackwell asked me to assist you with anything you may require.”
I almost laughed at that.
Anything I may require.
Freedom would have been a nice start.
Instead, I nodded quietly and followed her downstairs through endless marble hallways lined with paintings older than my entire bloodline. The mansion looked less like a home and more like the private palace of someone who had spent years accumulating power faster than humanity.
Roman sat alone at the far end of the dining room table when we entered. Morning light spilled through the towering windows behind him, casting pale gold across the sharp lines of his face while he read something on a tablet beside untouched coffee. He looked perfectly composed, perfectly controlled, as though men like him never truly slept.
He did not stand when I entered.
He only lifted his eyes slowly toward me.
“You’re late,” he said calmly.
I glanced toward the enormous clock near the fireplace.
Seven-oh-three.
My jaw tightened slightly. “I didn’t realize breakfast came with military regulations.”
Something flickered briefly in his dark eyes, though his expression never fully changed.
“In this house,” he replied evenly, “everything runs on time.”
Mrs. Aldrich pulled out a chair for me before quietly disappearing from the room, leaving me alone with the man I had married less than twenty-four hours earlier.
The silence between us settled heavily across the table.
Roman looked terrifying even in stillness. Especially in stillness. Most dangerous men announced themselves loudly through temper or arrogance, but Roman Blackwell possessed the opposite kind of power. The quieter he became, the more the entire room seemed to bend around him.
I reached for my coffee mostly to give my trembling hands something to do.
“You didn’t eat dinner last night,” he said after a moment.
I stared down at the dark liquid. “I wasn’t hungry.”
“That isn’t healthy.”
I looked up sharply.
The concern in his tone irritated me more than cruelty would have.
“You have armed guards outside my bedroom,” I said softly. “Forgive me if my appetite isn’t doing well.”
Roman leaned back slightly in his chair, studying me with an unreadable expression.
“They’re there for your protection.”
“Protection from who?”
His gaze held mine for several seconds before he finally answered.
“People far worse than me.”
The response sent an uncomfortable chill down my spine because something deep inside me believed him instantly.
I hated that.
I hated the certainty in his voice.
I hated the calm way he spoke about danger, as though violence was simply another unavoidable part of the weather.
“What exactly does your family do?” I asked carefully.
Roman folded his hands together on the table. “You already know the answer to that question.”
“I know rumors.”
“And rumors tend to be true.”
The honesty caught me off guard.
I had expected denial. Evasion. Lies wrapped in polished language.
Not this.
Not brutal simplicity.
My throat tightened. “So my father really sold me to a criminal.”
Roman’s eyes darkened slightly at the word sold.
“He traded debt for protection.”
“That sounds prettier than what it actually was.”
For the first time, tension entered his expression.
A very small change.
Barely visible.
But enough for me to notice.
“You believe I forced him?” Roman asked quietly.
“Didn’t you?”
“No.”
The answer came immediately.
Without hesitation.
I stared at him uncertainly, trying to determine whether I believed him.
Roman held my gaze steadily. “Your father approached me himself. He begged for help after borrowing money from men who intended to kill him.”
“And what did you want in return?”
Something unreadable passed through his eyes then, something strangely dark and personal.
“You.”
The single word landed heavily between us.
My pulse stumbled unexpectedly.
Before I could respond, one of the guards entered the room quickly and leaned down beside Roman, whispering something into his ear. Roman’s entire demeanor changed almost instantly. The temperature around him seemed to drop several degrees as his jaw hardened.
“I’ll handle it,” he said coldly.
The guard nodded and disappeared.
Roman stood smoothly from the table.
“I have business to attend to.”
I surprised myself by speaking before I could stop it.
“What kind of business?”
He adjusted the cuff of his black shirt slowly before answering.
“The kind you shouldn’t ask about.”
Then he walked away.
I watched him leave with conflicting emotions twisting inside me. Fear remained strongest, but something else had begun forming beneath it over the past twenty-four hours. Curiosity. Dangerous curiosity. Roman Blackwell frightened me deeply, yet every interaction with him only made him harder to understand.
Cruel men were supposed to enjoy cruelty openly.
Roman never did.
That uncertainty unsettled me more than violence would have.
The following days blurred together strangely. The mansion operated with military precision, filled with silent staff members and armed men who treated Roman with absolute obedience. Expensive cars arrived at all hours. Meetings lasted behind closed office doors deep into the night. Sometimes helicopters landed beyond the estate after midnight while I watched from my bedroom balcony with growing unease.
I remained trapped inside a world I did not understand.
But Roman watched me constantly.
Not openly.
Never obviously.
Yet somehow he always noticed things no one should have noticed.
One evening I paused briefly near a greenhouse filled with white orchids while walking through the garden. The next morning fresh orchids appeared in my room.
Another day I mentioned casually to Mrs. Aldrich that I missed reading new books from the library where I used to work. By sunset, an entire collection of first-edition novels waited beside my fireplace.
Roman himself never mentioned these things.
But I knew.
And somehow that made it worse.
Because kindness from a dangerous man felt infinitely more threatening than hatred.
Three nights later, everything changed.
I woke sometime after midnight to the sound of screaming.
At first I thought I had dreamed it, but then the sound came again, muffled and male and filled with agony somewhere deep beneath the mansion. My entire body stiffened instantly as another horrible cry echoed faintly through the walls.
Fear crawled slowly into my stomach.
I slipped out of bed and crossed toward the door.
The guards outside straightened immediately when they saw me.
“Mrs. Blackwell,” one of them said quickly, “you should return to your room.”
“What was that?”
No one answered.
Then another scream echoed through the hallway.
My blood turned cold.
Without thinking, I moved past them and hurried toward the staircase despite their protests behind me. The sound drew me deeper into the west wing, toward a section of the mansion I had never entered before, until finally I reached a heavy steel door downstairs standing partially open with pale light spilling through the crack.
Voices drifted out from inside.
Roman’s among them.
Calm.
Cold.
Terrifyingly calm.
“You lied to me,” he said.
A man sobbed brokenly. “Please—”
A gunshot exploded.
I froze.
The sound rang through my skull so violently that for one horrible second I forgot how to breathe.
Then silence followed.
Footsteps approached the door.
Panic seized me instantly.
I turned to run, but the steel door swung open before I could move.
Roman stood there.
Blood stained the white cuffs of his shirt.
Behind him, two large men dragged another bleeding man across the concrete floor while the metallic smell of gunpowder and blood flooded into the hallway.
Everything inside me went numb.
Roman stared at me in complete silence.
Then his expression changed.
Not anger.
Something worse.
Fear.
Actual fear.
But not for himself.
For me.
“What are you doing here?” he asked quietly.
I could barely force air into my lungs. “You… you killed him.”
Roman stepped fully into the hallway and shut the steel door behind him before I could see more.
“Yes,” he answered.
No denial.
No apology.
Only truth again.
Always truth.
And somehow that honesty terrified me more than lies ever could.
My knees weakened slightly. “Oh my God…”
“You shouldn’t have seen that.”
“You murdered someone.”
“He betrayed me.”
“That doesn’t justify murder!”
For the first time since meeting him, real anger flashed across Roman’s face.
“In my world,” he said coldly, “it does.”
The force of his voice struck me like ice water.
I stared at him in horror while my chest tightened painfully.
“I want to go home.”
The words left my mouth before I fully realized I was saying them.
Roman went completely still.
Silence stretched heavily between us.
Finally, he spoke.
“No.”
The single word was soft.
Absolute.
“You can’t keep me here.”
“You cannot leave this estate.”
“Why?”
His dark eyes locked onto mine with frightening intensity.
“Because the second you became my wife, you became a target.”
Confusion flickered through my fear. “What does that mean?”
“It means my enemies will use you to destroy me if they get the chance.”
The realization hit me slowly.
All at once, the guards outside my bedroom no longer felt symbolic.
They felt necessary.