MasukAdeline’s POV
The penthouse felt like a gilded cage, all glass and steel and suffocating silence. I stood at the window, city lights blurring through the floor-to-ceiling glass, and tried not to think about how high up we were. How far I'd have to fall.
The wedding dress hung in the closet behind me, black silk and lace that had transformed me into something I barely recognized. A Gravano wife. The thought still tasted like poison on my tongue.
My neck throbbed where I'd been rubbing it—a nervous habit I'd developed since that night three weeks ago. The night everything changed. The night I should have been smart enough to walk away.
But I'd never been smart about the dangerous ones.
Footsteps echoed behind me, expensive leather against marble. I knew that walk—predatory, confident, completely at ease in his own territory. I didn't turn around. Couldn't. Not when my pulse was already racing from just the sound.
"Having second thoughts?" Kayden's voice cut through the quiet, smooth as aged whiskey and twice as intoxicating.
"About which part? Marrying you, or not killing you when I had the chance?"
He moved closer. I could feel the heat radiating from his body, the way the air seemed to thicken around him like he carried his own gravity. My reflection in the window showed him approaching, all dark elegance and controlled power.
"You mean the hotel."
It wasn't a question. Of course he knew exactly what I was thinking about. He'd probably been waiting for this conversation since the moment I'd agreed to his twisted proposal.
My fingers found the faint scar at my throat—barely visible now, but I felt it every time my pulse jumped. Every time he looked at me like I was prey he hadn't decided whether to devour or keep as a pet.
"I should have slit your throat," I whispered.
"But you didn't."
The memory hit like a physical blow, dragging me back to that night when I'd still believed I was the one in control.
The Phoenix Hotel had been a fortress of glass and gold, the kind of place where men like Kayden Gravano held court over their kingdoms of blood and money. I'd spent hours mapping every security system, every blind spot, every possible escape route.
The contract was simple: eliminate the Mafia Prince. No complications, no witnesses, no mercy.
I'd slipped into his suite like smoke, every movement calculated and silent. The target stood with his back to me, completely unaware that death had just walked through his door. It should have been over in seconds.
One bullet. Clean death. Another name crossed off my list.
But when he turned...
"You hesitated," Kayden said now, his voice closer than before. I could see him in the window's reflection, standing just close enough to touch. "Just for a second. Right there at the end."
His eyes. Gray like storm clouds, sharp as broken glass, holding intelligence and danger in equal measure. When our gazes locked across that hotel room, something electric had passed between us. Recognition of a kindred spirit. Challenge accepted. Danger wrapped in the most intoxicating desire I'd ever felt.
Rain pounded against the windows, slicing the darkness into jagged shards of neon. The city outside blurred, drowned beneath the storm, but inside, it was all him—all weight, all heat, all danger.
I didn’t need to see him move. I felt it—the shift in the air, the impossible certainty that he had been waiting for me, knowing I’d come. My knife hovered, a sliver of cold steel trembling in my grip, but the real threat wasn’t the blade—it was him.
Every motion he made was a shock to my senses. Every step, every move, every near-miss carried a pulse I hadn’t felt in years. My heart thundered, not from fear, but from the awareness that every second with him was a gamble I couldn’t afford to lose—and one I might not want to win.
He mirrored me instinctively, reading me like an extension of himself. There was no violence yet, only tension, tight as a drawn bowstring. Every breath we shared, every brush of our bodies, was a silent negotiation neither of us could name.
And then, sharp and undeniable, the truth struck me: he wasn’t just a target. He wasn’t a mission. He was the fire I had buried, the part of myself I had sworn never to awaken.
I steadied my voice, though my pulse was betraying me.
"Any last words?" I'd demanded, trying to ignore the way his body felt beneath mine, all lean muscle and controlled strength.
"You're beautiful when you're about to kill someone," he'd whispered, and something in his voice—challenge, invitation, raw honesty—had made me freeze.
That heartbeat of hesitation had cost me everything.
"Why didn't you kill me that night?" I asked now, finally turning to face him.
"Same reason you didn't kill me." His hand settled on my shoulder, thumb brushing the edge of my scar with devastating gentleness. "You felt it too."
I spun fully to face him, anger flaring hot and bright to mask the other emotions clawing at my chest. "Felt what?"
"The pull." His fingers traced my jawline, gentle as a prayer, deadly as a promise. "That moment when hunter and prey realize they're perfectly matched. When the chase becomes something else entirely."
My breath caught in my throat. He was close enough to kiss, close enough to kill. Close enough to destroy everything I thought I knew about myself and the careful walls I'd built around my heart.
The city sprawled below us through the floor-to-ceiling windows, millions of lights in the darkness. All those people living their simple, safe lives while we played this dangerous game sixty stories above them.
"You're my enemy," I whispered, hating how breathless I sounded.
"Yes."
"I'm supposed to hate you."
"You do hate me." His thumb brushed across my bottom lip, and I had to fight not to lean into the touch. "But you want me anyway."
The truth of it hit like a physical blow. Three weeks of marriage, three weeks of this impossible tension stretching taut between us like a wire ready to snap. Three weeks of pretending the electricity in every accidental touch didn't set my world on fire. Three weeks of telling myself this was just survival, just playing a part.
But survival didn't make my pulse race when he walked into a room. Playing a part didn't make me dream about those storm-gray eyes every night.
"This is just the contract," I said, but even I could hear how hollow the words sounded. "One year, and then I'm free."
"One year," he murmured, echoing the terms that bound us together. His free hand settled on my waist, thumb tracing small circles through the silk of my dress. "Think you can resist me that long?"
I lifted my chin, letting all my defiance blaze in my eyes even as my traitorous body leaned slightly into his touch. "Try me."
His smile was sharp enough to cut, predatory and knowing and absolutely devastating. "Oh, sweetheart. I plan to."
The promise in his voice sent shivers down my spine. This wasn't just about the contract anymore, wasn't just about Belle's safety or his need for a wife. This was about the fire that had sparked between us in that hotel room, the recognition that we were two sides of the same deadly coin.
The city hummed below us, sixty stories of steel and glass between us and the ground. But the most dangerous fall wasn't the one outside the window.
It was the one I was already taking, straight into the arms of the man I should have killed when I had the chance.
Then the balcony door behind me slid open. Footsteps—slow, and deliberate—echoed against the marble floor. My pulse jumped. I pressed back against him, knife hidden, breath catching. Whoever was out there didn’t know I was ready. But I had a feeling…they were about to find out.
Adeline's POVI watched the video three more times. Each time, Sienna's face looked more real, more alive….more angry."We need to analyze this," Marco said, reaching for my phone.I pulled it away. "No.""Adeline, there could be metadata, location data—""I said no." My voice came out harsher than intended. "She sent it to me. This is personal."Kayden touched my arm gently. "Let them check. If there's any chance of tracking where she sent it from—""She's too smart for that. She taught me half of what I know about digital security. There won't be anything to find."But I handed Marco the phone anyway.He took it to the tech specialist in the van. I watched them work, knowing they'd find nothing.Sienna was a ghost. Had been for five years. She wouldn't make amateur mistakes now."Talk to me," Kayden said quietly. "What are you thinking?""That she's right. I did leave her." I looked at him. "The mission…there were twelve hostages. Every minute I spent searching for Sienna was a minu
Adeline's POVThe facility was in chaos. Smoke everywhere, alarms screaming, guards running in all directions trying to secure the breach points.I found Kayden in the sublevel corridor, being checked by a medic. Blood on his temple where someone had hit him."I'm fine," he was saying. "Check the others—""Kayden!" I ran to him, grabbing his face. "Are you hurt?""Concussion maybe. Nothing serious." He caught my hands. "They took him. Grey's team extracted him exactly like he planned.""I know. I saw them leave." My voice shook. "And I saw her."Kayden's eyes met mine. "Sienna."The name hung between us like a ghost."She's alive," I whispered. "All this time, she's been alive.""Grey said she's been working for my father. For five years." Kayden stood despite the medic's protests. "Is that possible? Could she have survived?"I thought back to that night. The mission that went wrong. The explosion. The building collapsing. I'd searched the rubble for hours before the authorities force
CHAPTER SEVENTY-FIVE - THE MEETING Kayden's POVThe secure facility was two hours outside the city, buried in industrial wasteland where screams wouldn't carry. Russio owned it through three shell corporations. Officially, it didn't exist.Perfect place to make people disappear.Adeline sat beside me in the SUV, silent since we'd left the mansion. Belle had cried when we left, begging Adeline not to go. But we both needed this. Needed answers.Marco drove, eyes constantly checking mirrors. "Security's tight. Russio has twenty men on site. Grey's in the basement level, maximum security cell.""Has he said anything?" I asked."Not to the interrogators. Just keeps asking when you're coming." Marco glanced at me in the rearview. "Boss, you sure about this? Guy's a manipulator. Whatever he says—""I know what he is."We pulled up to a nondescript warehouse. Guard towers disguised as water tanks. Electrified fence hidden behind chain-link. From the outside, it looked abandoned.Inside was
Adeline's POVThe foundry was chaos when we arrived. Emergency vehicles everywhere, Fire trucks, ambulances, bomb disposal units, police cruisers with lights flashing.But no explosion.The technical team had done it. That disarmed the bombs with eight minutes to spare.I ran toward the building, pushing past paramedics and officers. Marco was right behind me, shouting clearances and credentials."Where's Kayden?" I demanded of the first Gravano soldier I saw."Sub-basement. They're bringing everyone up now."I didn't wait, didn't follow protocols or safety procedures. I just ran toward the elevator shaft we'd used earlier.A hand caught my arm. Russio."Slowly," he said. "The building is still structurally unsound. The last thing we need is another collapse.""I need to see him—""And you will, in a moment. First—" He pulled me aside, away from the crowd. "—we need to discuss what happens next.""What happens next is I make sure Kayden and Belle are okay.""After that." Russio's voic
Adeline's POV Marco coordinated the tactical deployment from the mobile command center, his voice crisp and efficient over the encrypted channels. "Sniper Team Alpha, position at the bell tower. Team Beta, take the adjacent building, west side. Team Gamma, rooftop across the street. I want full three-sixty coverage of that church." "Copy that." "In position in ten minutes." "Confirmed." I watched the grain silo, waiting to see if Grey would emerge. Waiting to see if he'd actually take the bait. My phone buzzed. Text message from unknown number. Tell Russio I'm watching. Any sign of his men, any hint of a setup, and I detonate immediately. This is his last chance to do the right thing. I showed Marco the message. "He's paranoid," Marco said. "Good. Paranoid people make mistakes." "Or paranoid people see traps coming." "Either way, we're committed now." He gestured to the map on his tablet. "St. Michael's is here. Old stone church, been abandoned since the archdiocese cons
Adeline's POVI climbed back through the rope system to the surface, leaving Kayden below with Belle and the bomb techs. Every instinct screamed at me to stay, but we both knew what had to happen.Someone had to convince Russio to come.And Kayden couldn't leave the others trapped below.Marco met me as I emerged from the elevator shaft, helping me over the edge. "Well?""We need Russio. Now.""He's not going to—""I know what he's going to say. But it's not up to him anymore." I wiped dust and sweat from my face, looking at the foundry. "Grey made his demands clear. Russio comes, or everyone dies.""And if Russio refuses?""Then we find another way."But we both knew there was no other way.My phone rang before I could say anything else. I answered. "What?"Grey's voice, calm and controlled: "I assume you've discussed the situation with your people by now, assessed your options and realized you don't have any.""What do you want, Grey?""I told you what I want. But let me be more sp







