Mia’s eyes snapped open.
Darkness. A heavy, suffocating black. As her senses adjusted, she realised her vision was covered—soft, silky fabric pressing gently against her eyelids. She tried to lift her hands but couldn’t. Thick ropes dug into her wrists, pinning her to something solid beneath her. She moved her mouth—only to find it gagged with the same silky material, tied tight behind her head. Panic flared instantly in her chest, but then she realised her clothes were still on. Relief pulsed through her, shaky and thin, but there nonetheless. Stop. Breathe. Listen. Somewhere in the dark, footsteps echoed faintly, slow and steady, drawing closer. Then—click. The door. Keys. And locks sliding inside the doors structure. Mia’s stomach twisted. “Don’t you look beautiful all tied up and helpless, darlin’?” Axel’s voice purred through the shadows, rich with amusement, too smooth, too calm. He sat down beside her, the mattress dipping slightly under his weight. Cool fingers brushed against her cheek as he gently untied the blindfold, and light burst through, blinding her temporarily. Mia blinked rapidly, her vision adjusting to the brightness. When she could finally focus, she took in the room—large, opulent, but locked tight. Several bolts lined the heavy wooden door. No quick escape here. Axel tilted her chin toward him, their eyes meeting. His stare was intense, predatory—but maddeningly beautiful. It made her feel exposed, seen in a way that made her shiver. Vulnerability wasn’t something Mia allowed herself often, but here it was, creeping into her bloodstream. “What’s happening?” she managed around the gag as he untied it, her voice shaky but sharp. “Why am I tied up? What do you want?” Axel smirked lazily. “Depends how much you really wanna know, doll. You passed out downstairs—I thought it was best to keep you safe until I knew you weren’t gonna try to claw my eyes out.” His eyes darkened, dragging slowly down her body, lingering in ways that made her pulse hammer wildly in her ears. She was tied to the posts of an antique four-poster bed, her arms stretched awkwardly above her. “Untie me. Now,” she said, firm but trembling. “Now, why would I do that and spoil all the fun?” His hand trailed up her thigh, stopping at the hem of her dress, his smile both seductive and extremely dangerous. Mia flinched, muscles tensing. His smirk widened. “Aw, don’t be shy. I thought you liked playing games.” Mia didn’t hesitate. The moment his eyes dropped, she kicked out—hard. Axel reacted in a blur, catching her legs and pinning them with his weight. He straddled her easily, like a predator toying with its prey. His lips brushed her neck, soft at first—then a sudden bite, sharp enough to make her cry out. Tears burned the corners of her eyes. “Learn, or be punished. Your choice, sweetheart.” His tone was playful, but there was venom under the silk. Then, just as quickly, he stood, straightening his shirt like nothing had happened. “I like you. You’ve got fight. That’s gonna make this interesting.” With that, he walked out, leaving Mia alone—heart racing, wrists burning, mind spinning. Time blurred into meaningless stretches as Mia lay bound, forcing herself to breathe, to think. It’s just another game. Just a game. That was how Mia survived everything in life—turning it into something to win, something to beat. If she panicked now, she’d lose. And losing wasn’t something she ever did willingly. When the door clicked open again, the scent of whiskey followed Axel into the room, rich and smoky. He approached, glass in hand. “Here. Drink.” He untied the gag, and Mia realised how dry her throat had become. The whiskey burned on the way down, making her head swim instantly. She cursed herself. Whiskey. Of all things. It had always been her weakness. “You’ll get food when you’ve earned it,” Axel murmured, setting the glass aside, sitting close again. His smirk sent chills down her spine. “I reward good behavior. How good you are to me… well, that’ll decide what kind of meal you get.” “And how exactly do you expect me to ‘earn’ it with my hands tied?” Mia shot back, forcing the sharpness back into her voice. He hesitated, assessing her. Testing her. After a moment, he began untying her wrists, one by one. “You didn’t have to tie me up, you know,” Mia said softly, leaning toward him just enough for the words to feel like an invitation. “I would’ve come willingly.” Axel’s gaze heated, that predator smile curling at the edges of his mouth. “Oh, doll… for what I really want? You’d have bolted.” As soon as the last rope loosened, Mia moved. Fast. She scrambled across the bed, bolting for the door, fingers fumbling over the locks. One, two, three… Almost there— A soft, amused laugh echoed behind her. “You’re cute when you think you’re clever.” Mia froze. The final lock—a biometric thumbprint. No key. No code. Just him. He’d planned it perfectly. Just enough freedom to give her hope—just enough to break it. Fury rose hot and wild in her chest. “You can’t just take people! Someone will notice—I’m not just going to disappear!” Axel’s expression shifted. No more playful teasing. This was the real man underneath the charm. Cold. Merciless. “Sweetheart,” he said softly, dangerously, “I’m not some amateur kidnapper. I’m the man in this city. Nobody crosses me. Nobody even thinks about it.” Mia’s breath hitched. “You’re mine now, doll. You just don’t know it yet.” With one last smirk, he left her again, locking the door with a soft, mechanical click. Panic threatened to surge up again, but Mia stuffed it down ruthlessly, locking it in the same vault she kept all her worst fears. No one’s coming for you, she thought grimly. Replying the same mantra over and over. You get out of this by your own damn self. Just like you have done your whole life. Survive Mia, just survive. There isn’t another option. He thought he was the player. But Mia? Mia was the game.Mia slid silently back into the booth, every step heavy like weights strapped to her ankles. Daniel looked up, concern softening his handsome features. “Everything okay?” he whispered. Looking around the bar wondering what had bothered her so much. She swallowed hard. “I’m fine, don’t worry” she lied, wrapping her fingers around the cold glass in front of her. Fine. A lie even to herself. She watched Axel move through the crowd, laugh at something Amber said, Amber’s red hair catching the light as they became one moving shadow. He was gone. He’d made his choice. Anger ignited in her chest—bright, scorching, consumed the hurt. She clenched her jaw. He doesn’t get to do this to me. I won’t let him break me. He ran straight back to her as she expected. “Not fine,” she admitted, voice low and rigid. “I need to get out of here.” Daniel’s brow furrowed. “Do you want me to take you somewhere?” “Yeah,” she said briskly. “Come back to my place, my rental apartment. Lauren’s not in
Mia slipped into The Lone Wolf with the kind of cautious grace she’d forgotten she possessed. The bar had a quiet hum to it—low orange lighting, clinking glasses, and leather booths dimly lit by flickering sconces. It felt warm, anonymous, far away from penthouses and polished marble and the smell of cigar smoke she associated with Axel and Slade. She found a booth tucked into the corner. Dark. Private. Safe. Her hands were still trembling. Not from fear—well, not entirely. It was the adrenaline. The giddy, anxious buzz of being outside again. Alone. Free. Every step outside that casino felt like reclaiming a piece of herself. Then she saw him—Daniel. He hadn’t changed much. Still that same crooked smile. Sandy hair tousled like he’d just run his hands through it after a long day. The way he walked—lazy, confident, familiar—made her throat tighten. “Mia?” he grinned, sliding into the booth. “Shit, you always look so beautiful, it’s leaves me stunned.” Her lips curved int
The Vegas air was dry and bright, the sun painting every building in the golden evening heat. For once, Mia didn’t feel it smothering her, she no longer felt suffocated. She stepped through the automatic glass doors of a tech store tucked off a back street, her fingers trailing the edges of sleek displays until one phone caught her eye. A rose-gold smartphone, simple and clean—untouched by ghosts. She bought it in cash. No ID. No contract. Just freedom in the form of pixels and glass. A way to communicate with her old life again. As soon as she sat on the stone bench outside, her fingers trembled slightly as she typed in Lauren’s number. She closed her eyes to remember the last few digits, her memory of her former life had slowly started to slip away like it never happened. It rang once. Twice. Then a click. “Hello?” said a voice. Sharp. Cautious. Mia’s heart stuttered. “Lauren?” A pause. Then— “Who is this?” Mia swallowed. “It’s me. It’s—Mia.” Silence
Mia waited in the shadows by the doorway until she heard Axel’s footsteps fade down the hall. The weight of the last few weeks—a suffocating mix of betrayal, fear, and heartbreak—sat heavy in her chest, but under it all bubbled something new: defiance. Freedom. She exhaled and pressed her thumb flat against the scanner. It clicked green. Something about that felt like a quiet victory. He had changed it—updated it after everything—to let her into the apartment. She scoffed at his high hopes for her to come back. She was finally done with chasing a shadow. She slipped inside, the door closing with a soft hiss behind her. The apartment felt hollow without him, too still for the storm she carried inside. Mia moved quickly now, opening drawers with a quiet kind of desperation. She pulled a few changes of clothes into a carry-on, including the black dress she hadn’t worn since the night she first met Axel, then paused at the safe under the dresser. Her hands didn’t shake as she punche
The apartment door creaked open like it hadn’t been touched in days. Like it knew the weight it now carried. Mia looked up from where she sat on the floor, back resting against the cold marble near the wall of windows. She hadn’t moved in hours. Maybe not since morning. Time had melted into something useless—something cruel. A joke of a concept when all her body knew was hurt. Then she saw him. Axel stood in the doorway, shadowed and hesitant. His usual confidence—no, his dominance—had drained from him entirely. What remained was a man wearing guilt like a second skin. She could feel it before he even stepped inside. Her breath stuttered in her chest. She said nothing. He said nothing. He just walked forward, slow and heavy-footed, like each step was penance. His jacket came off and landed on the back of a chair, his hands running through his hair before he leaned against the counter. Silence stretched between them like a blade. “You went,” she said softly, u
The ballroom was too bright, too loud, too fake. Laughter rang out like static in his ears, clinking glasses and glittering gowns blurring into meaningless noise. Axel sat at the edge of the crowd, back stiff, jaw clenched as he nursed a glass of something he hadn’t tasted in months. Whiskey. Across the room, a man in a gold-seamed suit held up a ridiculous beach hat to auction with exaggerated flair. “Private island getaway! A full week of paradise. Bidding starts at ten thousand!” Axel raised his hand before the number even left the announcer’s lips. He didn’t blink. Didn’t look away from the stage. He didn’t care how much it cost. It didn’t matter. Not when he was trying to buy the smallest scrap of peace for Mia. For the girl he had failed. Yet again. He’d already failed to keep her safe. And now, he didn’t even know how to hold her. The holiday wasn’t for him. It was a desperate offering, a way to reach the girl locked inside that apartment with dead eyes and pol