Their union is strictly a facade. There is no real marriage bond. Draco and Y/N are required to live together, appear as a couple at public events, and maintain the image of a cold, functional, visibly happy domestic partnership. Privately, they clash constantly. Their dynamic is built on hostility, verbal confrontation, and power struggles. Draco resents her presence in his home, yet becomes increasingly territorial and jealous. And Y/N refuses to submit to his control.
“my moon, my man, so changeable” You and Draco Malfoy are the perfect public enemies — ruthless on the Quidditch pitch, sharper still in interviews. But behind closed doors, rivalry turns into something far more dangerous. While he battles pride, prejudice, and the weight of his family’s expectations, you refuse to be anyone’s secret. And when desire is no longer enough, someone will have to choose — love or legacy. “take it slow, take it easy on me and shed some light on me please “
Pressured into a pure-blood marriage, Draco Malfoy announces a calculated engagement to you—a muggle-born Ministry strategist whose reputation makes rejection politically dangerous. What begins as a flawless public performance and a private, emotionless agreement fractures under forced proximity at Malfoy Manor, lingering jealousy from pure-blood circles, and the unresolved chaos of Draco’s past with Astoria Greengrass. Habit turns into attachment, attachment into something neither planned nor n
To stop his parents from choosing for him, Draco Malfoy announces an engagement no one can undo. You are muggle-born, untouchable, and decidedly not one of his girls—no matter how loudly the pure-blood daughters protest. What starts as strategy turns into forced proximity, private chaos, and a very real problem neither of you planned for.
They do not trust each other. They do not like each other. And the tension between them is neither purely academic nor entirely magical. But when Hogwarts activates an ancient magical protocol known as the Prism Project, neither of them is given a choice.
You need to win a prestigious Potions apprenticeship in France. Draco Malfoy offers you a deal—if you fake a relationship to help him win a bet, you will have protection enough to win the competition. It’s supposed to be strategy. It stops being that when it starts to feel real.
You and Draco had a secret relationship for a long time—one no one ever knew about. What you had was real, but it always remained hidden. In the end, Draco refused to make it public or truly claim you, and you couldn’t keep living in a love that had to stay in the shadows. And he decided to end, thinking that it was the best thing for you to stay away from all the messy things from his world. That you would have been better without him.
When Draco Malfoy and You are forced into a deep-cover mission in France, they must pose as a married couple with an adopted daughter to infiltrate the political circle of a rising extremist. But as their daughter befriends the enemy’s son and their fake marriage grows dangerously convincing, hatred, desire, and loyalty begin to blur—threatening both the mission and their carefully constructed lies.
Draco Malfoy could finally be free from being locked up in Azkaban—but he has to prove to you he is sane and stable. However, being imprisoned made him unlearn how to live in society, and the only thing Draco remembers is how to be most filthy, violent and obsessive son of a bitch with you.