LOGINDamien Voss catches the hacker tearing his empire apart and forces a brutal deal: one year as his live-in shadow, total obedience, including his bed, or Riven’s little sister loses the treatment keeping her alive. Riven signs because he has no choice, even though the man he’s sworn to destroy is the same one who’s secretly paid for that treatment for years. What starts as cold revenge turns vicious the moment they touch. Damien’s hidden condition triggers a vision of his own murder — with Riven holding the gun. Now the contract that was supposed to give Damien control has become a cage neither man can escape. Every kiss, every night in the same bed, brings the death prophecy closer and sharper. Riven keeps telling himself he still wants Damien dead, but the longer he stays, the harder it gets to remember why. Damien watches the man he’s forcing to submit and realizes he’s falling for the only person fate keeps showing him as his killer. In the end they don’t break the prophecy by fighting it. They break it by choosing each other anyway — knowing one of them might still have to die for the other to live. Some contracts can only be paid in blood or in surrender, and Damien and Riven are running out of time to decide which one they’re willing to give.
View MoreChapter 60Riven’s words hung between us like a blade.“The deeper signal is slower. More likely the real one. Marcus wants us to rush the obvious — and you’re in no condition to run into another trap.”I stared at the two blinking dots on the screen. My vision blurred at the edges. Blood continued to seep through my shirt, sticky and warm. The pain had moved past burning into a deep, nauseating throb that made every breath feel borrowed.“We take the closer one,” I said again, voice low. “We can’t afford to guess wrong on the long shot.”Riven’s jaw tightened. He didn’t look at me. “And if it’s a trap? You can barely stand. If something goes wrong, I’m not losing both of you tonight.”The fracture cracked wider.For the first time since the warehouse, we weren’t standing on the same side of the choice.“Riven,” I said, the name rough in my throat. “We don’t have time for this.”He was already pulling the car over. The engine idled. He looked at me then, eyes raw with everything we st
Chapter 59The tracker blinked on Riven’s phone, a small red dot moving northeast. We followed in silence, headlights off, the engine a low growl. My side burned hotter with every turn. Blood had soaked through the bandage completely now. Each breath pulled at the stitches like barbed wire. The dizziness was getting worse, the edges of my vision tunneling.Riven kept glancing over. “You’re losing too much blood.”“Drive.”The target building appeared — an abandoned distribution center, windows boarded, fence sagging. The dot stopped dead in the center. We parked two blocks away and approached on foot. My legs felt heavy. I leaned against a container for a breath, blood warm against my palm. Six hours had become five. Time was collapsing faster than we could move.We slipped through a side door. The interior was vast and dark, moonlight slicing through gaps in the roof. Crates and old pallets formed a maze.Too quiet.Riven raised a hand. We froze.Lights snapped on — harsh fluorescent
Chapter 58The city blurred past the windows as Riven drove. My side burned with every bump in the road, fresh blood soaking through the bandage and into my shirt. I pressed my palm against it, jaw clenched. The pain kept me sharp. It reminded me that this wasn’t over.Riven’s hands were tight on the wheel. “Elias’s last known location is the old warehouse district. Same area as before. He’s not answering his phone.”“Of course he’s not.” I checked the magazine in my gun again. Full. “He knows we’re coming.”We didn’t speak much after that. The silence between us was different now — not the heavy guilt from the clinic, but something sharper. Elias had been my shadow for years. The man who fixed problems before they reached my desk. The man who knew where every body was buried because I had handed him the shovel.And now he had handed Lila to Marcus.The old warehouse district rose around us, skeletal buildings and chain-link fences under flickering streetlights. Riven killed the headl
Chapter 57The safe house appeared ahead, high walls and reinforced gates cutting sharp lines against the night sky. It should have felt secure. Instead, the moment we pulled up, the silence felt wrong — too complete, too deliberate.The front gate was ajar.No guards.No lights.Riven killed the engine. “Stay in the car.”I didn’t listen. I stepped out, gun in hand, ignoring the sharp pull in my side. Blood seeped through the bandage, warm and sticky against my skin. The world tilted for a second, dizziness clawing at the edges of my vision, but I forced it steady. I had lost too much blood already tonight. Every step reminded me of it.We moved through the house room by room. Empty. Too empty. The air smelled of nothing — no coffee, no faint trace of Lila’s shampoo, no lingering presence of the security detail that should have been here. Furniture was undisturbed, but the absence felt violent.Lila’s bedroom door was open. The bed was unmade. Her blanket was on the floor, as if she
Chapter 56The world returned slowly, dragged back by pain and the steady beep of machines.I woke to sterile white walls and the faint smell of antiseptic. My side burned like someone had poured acid into the wound. Every breath pulled at the stitches, a sharp reminder of how close we’d come. The
Chapter 55Gunfire tore through the warehouse like thunder trapped in concrete.I fired twice, dropping the guard closest to Lila. The second man spun toward me, muzzle flashing. I dove behind a rusted loom as bullets chewed the metal inches from my head. Dust exploded into the air. My ears rang.“
Chapter 51Riven stood frozen in the doorway like the confession had drained every drop of strength from his body.I didn’t move closer. I couldn’t. The space between us felt like miles of broken glass.“Say something,” he whispered, voice cracking. “Please.”I looked at him — really looked. The ma
Chapter 49:The head of legal broke in under ten minutes.Jonathan Hale sat across from me in the secondary conference room, sweat beading on his forehead, hands trembling on the table. Kane stood behind him like a shadow. I didn’t raise my voice. I didn’t need to.“You drafted every major contract






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