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Everything But Love  Novel Cover

Everything But Love

Desperate to settle her brother's medical debts, bartender Ellie Morrison accepts a cold proposal from Alexander Hartley, a powerful CEO bound by a marriage of convenience. The deal is simple: she becomes his secret mistress in exchange for financial security, provided they never fall in love. Yet, as their hidden world deepens, Ellie uncovers Alex's inner loneliness. Now, they must choose between their rigid contract and a passion that could ruin them both.
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Chapter 2

The rest of the shift passed in a blur of orders and small talk. When she finally glanced back at booth twelve, it was empty. Alex was gone.

Disappointment hollowed out her chest, sharp and unexpected.

But on the table, next to a stack of bills that would more than cover his tab and tip, was a business card.

Elena picked it up with shaking hands.

**Alexander Hartley**

**CEO, Hartley Industries**

And on the back, written in bold, confident handwriting: *Monday. 7 PM. Don't make me hunt you down. -A*

Below that, a phone number.

Ruby snatched the card before Elena could pocket it. Her eyes went wide. "Hartley Industries? HARTLEY INDUSTRIES? Ellie, do you know who this is? His family basically owns half the city!"

"Give it back, Ruby."

"This man is a billionaire. An actual, honest-to-God billionaire. And he wants to take you to dinner." Ruby clutched the card to her chest dramatically. "This is like a fairy tale!"

"Fairy tales aren't real."

"Maybe not. But Monday at seven is." Ruby pressed the card back into Elena's hand. "Promise me you'll go."

Elena looked down at the card, at the strong handwriting and the phone number that represented a world she didn't belong to.

She should throw it away. She should forget about storm-gray eyes and cedar cologne and the way he looked at her like she was worth noticing.

But instead, she tucked the card into her apron pocket, right next to her tips.

"I'll think about it," she lied.

She'd already decided.

---

Elena's apartment was dark when she finally made it home at 2 AM, but a light glowed from under Ollie's door. She knocked softly before entering.

Her brother was sitting up in bed, sketchpad balanced on his knees, pencil moving across the page with the easy confidence of someone with real talent. At sixteen, Ollie looked younger than he should-the leukemia had stolen weight and color from him, leaving him pale and fragile.

But his eyes, the same hazel as hers, were still bright with life.

"You're supposed to be sleeping," she said, perching on the edge of his bed.

"You're supposed to be home before midnight." He didn't look up from his sketch. "But we both have our rebellions."

"Fair point." She tried to peek at his drawing, but he tilted it away. "How are you feeling?"

"Same as this morning. Same as yesterday. Same as I'll feel tomorrow." He finally looked up, and she saw the fear he tried to hide beneath teenage bravado. "Friday's the big day. Dr. Kim says this round should really make a difference."

Friday. The treatment that cost more than she made in three months. The treatment she was still two thousand dollars short on.

"It will," she said, injecting confidence she didn't feel into her voice. "You're going to beat this, Ollie. I know it."

"With my amazing big sister working herself to death to keep me alive?" He set the sketchpad aside. "Ellie, I see the bills. I know what this is costing you."

"Don't worry about the bills."

"Someone has to. You're going to kill yourself trying to save me."

"Dramatic much?" She ruffled his hair, the way she used to when he was little. "I'm fine. We're fine. The money will work out."

"How?"

She didn't have an answer for that. Didn't have an answer for the stack of medical bills on the kitchen counter or the past-due notice from the electric company or the fact that she'd been eating ramen for dinner so Ollie could have real meals.

But she couldn't let him see her fear.

"It just will," she said. "Now get some sleep. You need your rest."

"You need rest too." Ollie's eyes were too knowing, too old. Cancer did that-aged you in ways that had nothing to do with years. "When's the last time you did something for yourself? Something that wasn't about work or me or surviving?"

The business card in her pocket felt like it was burning.

"Soon," she promised. "Now sleep."

She kissed his forehead and turned off his light, then made her way to her own small bedroom. The card was still in her apron. She pulled it out, studied it in the glow of her bedside lamp.

Alexander Hartley.

She'd heard the name before. It was impossible not to in a city like this. Hartley Industries was everywhere-real estate, tech, investments. The kind of family that shaped skylines and policy with equal ease.

And Alex wanted to have dinner with her.

It was ridiculous. Impossible. She should absolutely, definitely, without question say no.

Elena picked up her phone.

The text was sent before she could talk herself out of it: *Monday. 7 PM. Where?*

The response came less than a minute later: *I'll pick you up. Send me your address.*

She hesitated, then typed out her address. The shabby building in a neighborhood that never made it into the city's tourism brochures.

Another quick response: *See you Monday, Ellie.*

She stared at her phone for a long moment, then set it aside and turned off the light.

Outside her window, the city glittered with a thousand lights-some bright, some dim, all of them reaching toward something just out of grasp.

Elena closed her eyes and tried not to think about what she'd just agreed to.

Tried not to think about storm-gray eyes and the way they'd looked at her like she mattered.

Tried not to hope.

Hope, she'd learned, was the most dangerous thing of all.

Alexander Hartley's office occupied the entire sixtieth floor of Hartley Tower, with floor-to-ceiling windows that offered a view of the city most people would never see. From up here, the world looked orderly, manageable, small.

Alex preferred it that way.

"You're distracted," Marcus Chen said, dropping a folder on Alex's desk with more force than necessary. "That's the third time I've had to repeat myself this morning."

Alex pulled his attention away from the window, from thoughts of dark hair and hazel eyes and a woman who looked at him like he was just a man instead of a dynasty. "I'm listening. The Melbourne project needs revision. The profit margins are too thin."

"That was five minutes ago. Now I'm asking why you look like someone who got hit by a truck and enjoyed it." Marcus settled into the chair across from the desk, his expression shifting from business to concern. They'd been friends since Harvard, which gave Marcus certain privileges-like the ability to call Alex on his bullshit.

"I met someone."

Marcus's eyebrows shot up. "You met someone. You. The man who hasn't been on a date in two years because you're 'too busy building an empire.'"

"I've been on dates."

"Obligatory charity galas with women your mother selected don't count as dates." Marcus leaned forward, genuinely interested now. "So who is she? Please tell me she's not another socialite."

"She's a bartender."

The silence stretched long enough that Alex looked up from the contract he'd been pretending to review.

Marcus was staring at him like he'd grown a second head. "A bartender."

"Yes."

"You. Alexander Hartley. Heir to a fortune older than most of this city's buildings. Are interested in a bartender."

"When you say it like that, you make it sound unreasonable."

"It's not unreasonable. It's unexpected. There's a difference." Marcus's expression shifted to something more serious. "Does your mother know?"

"Why would my mother need to know? I'm having dinner with someone, not proposing marriage."

"Because your mother has very specific ideas about who you should be seen with. Especially now."

The unspoken words hung in the air: *Especially now that the Ashford arrangement is moving forward.*

Alex's jaw tightened. The Ashford arrangement. That's what his mother called it, as if his entire future was a business merger instead of a life. Which, in Margaret Hartley's view, it essentially was.

"I'm having dinner with her Monday night. That's all."

"Alex-"

"That's all, Marcus."

His friend studied him for a long moment, then sighed. "Fine. But be careful. You know how this world works. The wrong association can-"

"I know." Alex cut him off, not wanting to hear the lecture he'd been receiving since birth. *Image matters. Reputation is everything. The family name must be protected.*

He'd built his entire life around those principles. Harvard degree. MBA. Ten-hour workdays. Strategic partnerships. Calculated decisions. No room for impulse or emotion or anything that couldn't be quantified on a spreadsheet.

Until Wednesday night, when a woman with tired eyes and a sharp tongue had looked at him and seen through every carefully constructed wall.

Marcus left eventually, taking his concerns with him. Alex tried to focus on work, but his mind kept drifting back to The Velvet Room, to the moment Ellie had sat across from him and been completely, refreshingly real.

*Three dollars. That's the difference between comfort and sacrifice.*

He pulled out his phone and opened a new search: St. Catherine's Hospital.

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