ANMELDENBy the time I reached the hotel ballroom, my nerves were steel wrapped in satin.
The investor conference was Damian Cross's idea, not mine. "Reassure the market," he'd said with that infuriating calm. "Show them we're aligned."
Aligned. As if he hadn't just hijacked my company.
The ballroom was a chandeliered ocean of suits, glittering jewelry, and clinking glasses. Cameras perched like vultures at the edges of the crowd. The event had been organized in less than 48 hours, yet it looked like a coronation - his, not mine.
Sofia fell into step beside me as we moved through the crowd. "You've got this," she murmured, handing me a glass of sparkling water. "Smile. Investors can smell blood."
"I'm not bleeding," I said, even though I could feel my pulse in my throat. "I'm sharpening my knives."
At the far end of the room, Damian stood on a small stage, talking to a cluster of investors. The gray of his suit looked almost silver under the chandeliers. He laughed at something one of them said, and they leaned in as if he were the sun.
I hated how good he looked under the lights.
I hated even more that I noticed.
When he saw me, his expression shifted - just slightly, but enough. A flicker of awareness. He excused himself from the investors and crossed the room with the smooth confidence of a man who'd been born to own it.
"Ms. Grant." His voice was lower here, almost intimate despite the crowd. "You're on time."
"Of course." I sipped my water. "Wouldn't want to keep you from your admirers."
His mouth curved. "Jealous?"
"Of your boardroom fan club? Hardly."
His smirk deepened but his eyes stayed cool. "We're speaking together at the podium in ten minutes. I'll start with an overview of the merger. You'll follow with a statement about GreenSphere's future under joint leadership."
"Under joint leadership," I repeated, sweet as poison. "Right."
He tilted his head. "You're going to make this difficult, aren't you?"
"Every second."
He chuckled, low and amused, as if my defiance entertained him. That smile - it was dangerous, the way a cliff edge is dangerous. "Good. I'd hate for this to be boring."
Before I could retort, a young woman with a tablet rushed up. "Mr. Cross, Ms. Grant - you're on in five."
He extended his arm toward the stage, a mock-chivalrous gesture. "Shall we?"
I brushed past him without taking it.
The stage was blinding under the lights. A sea of faces stared up at us - investors, journalists, competitors, all waiting to see the power couple of the hour. The phrase made my stomach twist.
Damian spoke first. He was smooth, of course, his baritone wrapping around words like "synergy" and "global reach" as if they were poetry. The room hung on every syllable.
Then it was my turn.
I stepped to the microphone, spine straight, smile fixed. "Good morning. GreenSphere was built on innovation, sustainability, and integrity. Those values remain unchanged. While recent events have created uncertainty, I want to assure you that our vision - my vision - remains strong. This partnership represents an opportunity to scale responsibly, without sacrificing the principles that built this company."
A polite ripple of applause followed. Cameras flashed. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Damian's mouth twitch - approval? Amusement?
We fielded questions. A journalist asked if the rumors of a personal relationship between us were true. My pulse spiked. Damian's gaze flicked to me, unreadable.
"That," he said smoothly, "is an unfounded speculation. Our relationship is entirely professional."
I leaned in to the mic. "Very professional," I echoed, my smile sharp enough to cut.
More polite laughter. More flashes. I wanted to melt into the floor.
As soon as we were offstage, I beelined for the exit. I needed air.
"Ms. Grant," Damian's voice called behind me. "Wait."
I didn't. I pushed through a side door and out onto a terrace overlooking the city. The cool air hit me like a slap. I gripped the stone railing, staring at the traffic crawling below.
A moment later, the door opened again. Footsteps. Damian.
"You handled the question well," he said, coming to stand beside me. "Quick thinking."
I turned to glare at him. "Do you enjoy this?"
"Enjoy what?"
"Humiliating me. Parading me around like some trophy while you gut my company."
His brows drew together, just slightly. "If I wanted to gut your company, Ms. Grant, I wouldn't be standing here on a terrace explaining myself."
I laughed, but it sounded brittle. "You expect me to believe you're the good guy in all this?"
He leaned a little closer, voice dropping. "I expect you to believe I'm not your enemy. Not if you're smart."
"Smart?" My heart beat faster - with anger, I told myself. Only anger. "I built GreenSphere from nothing. I know exactly who my enemies are."
Something flickered in his eyes - frustration? Respect? Both? "And yet you agreed to the co-CEO arrangement."
"I agreed to save my company, not to play house with you."
The corner of his mouth lifted, but it wasn't a smirk this time. More like... interest. "House?"
"You know what I mean." I stepped back, needing distance from the way he was looking at me. "You may have bought shares, Mr. Cross, but you haven't bought me."
He studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. "Good."
I blinked. "Good?"
"I don't want someone I can buy." His voice was low, almost a growl. "I want someone who can stand next to me."
For a heartbeat, neither of us moved. The city roared below, the terrace door clicked shut behind us, and suddenly it felt like the whole world had gone quiet except for the space between us.
Then I stepped back, breaking the moment. "This conversation is over."
Damian's jaw tightened, but he inclined his head. "As you wish. We have another press event tomorrow. I'll send you the details."
He turned and walked back inside, leaving me alone on the terrace with the sound of my own heartbeat and a strange, unwelcome heat creeping under my skin.
I gripped the railing harder. I would not be another one of Damian Cross's acquisitions.
Not my company.
Not me.
But the way he'd looked at me just now - like I was a challenge, not a conquest - it unsettled me more than anything else.
Six months. That was all I had to survive this merger. Six months to outmaneuver him.
I squared my shoulders and headed back inside. Let him think he was in control.
He had no idea what was coming.
They called it a press conference. I called it a firing squad.The ballroom at the Zürich Conference Centre was packed - more lights, more cameras, more microphones than I'd ever seen aimed at a single podium. Reporters jostled for position, their lenses like hungry eyes. Victor Lang stood behind a sleek black lectern, smiling as if he were announcing a charity gala. Beside him, a lawyer in a too-stiff suit held a stack of folders like a threat wrapped in paper.GreenSphere's name flashed across screens in the room and on the live streams. My chest felt cold and hollow, a hollow that my training and stubbornness couldn't fill. Damian's hand found the small hollow of my lower back as we walked in; the touch was brief but steady. We took our places at the side table - me in my navy suit, hair pulled back hard, face set like stone. He gave my hand a fractional squeeze, and then let go.Lang smiled and began."Good morning," he said, all calm, all practiced. "I've called you here because
The dining table in the Kronos suite wasn't really a dining table anymore. It was a battlefield disguised as mahogany, and the three board members arrayed on the far side looked like generals about to choose sides.Reinhardt sat at the center, a man whose silver hair and heavy watch screamed old-world money. On his right, Katerina with her immaculate bun and icy poise, a humanitarian mask over a sharp business mind. Gruber sprawled on the left like a lion at rest, his cufflinks catching the light. He loved being courted.Damian sat at the head of the table, not quite relaxed, but in control of his space. I sat at his right, a folder open in front of me though I already knew every number inside."Thank you for joining us," Damian began. His voice was velvet over steel. "We're here because Victor Lang has been busy."Reinhardt's eyes flickered. "Lang says he can stabilize the merger. He says he has regulators lined up.""Lang says a lot of things," Damian said evenly. "Half of them are
The Gulfstream G700 was a floating boardroom disguised as a jet. Cream leather seats, polished wood, silent flight attendants gliding between us with trays of champagne and espresso. I'd been on private planes before, but never one that felt this... intimate. Or dangerous.Damian sat across from me, jacket off, shirtsleeves rolled to his forearms. He looked like a man who could sign away a country and then relax with a single malt. He was scrolling through his tablet, but I could feel his attention on me even when his eyes weren't lifted.I crossed my legs and stared out the window at the shrinking blue of Lake Geneva below. "So," I said finally, "Zurich. What's the plan?"He looked up. "Straight to the point. Good.""I don't have time for games."His mouth curved faintly. "We're meeting with three of my board members at the Kronos Hotel tonight. Lang's people have been whispering to them. If we're lucky, we cut him off. If we're not-" he shrugged, "-he'll think he has us cornered.""
The elevator hummed softly as it climbed the thirty-eight floors to GreenSphere's temporary headquarters in Geneva. My reflection in the mirrored wall stared back at me - calm, composed, but my pulse beat like a drum under my skin.I'd left Damian standing in that conference room an hour ago. Since then, I'd replayed every word, every glance, every silent move in my head. Marcus. Victor. Betrayal. Bait. Damian had used me, and yet he'd also shielded me. The contradictions were like splinters under my skin.The elevator doors slid open to a floor flooded with pale morning light. Our rented office space overlooked the lake; beyond it, the Alps rose like a painted backdrop. My assistant, June, was waiting with a tablet and a worried look."Ms. Grant, there are three calls waiting - the board, the PR team, and-""Not now," I said gently. "Clear my schedule for the next hour.""Yes, ma'am."I walked straight to my office, shut the door, and dropped my bag on the desk. My hands were already
The conference suite at the Hôtel du Rhône felt like a different world from last night's glittering ballroom. Gone were the chandeliers and soft candlelight; here it was all glass walls and pale wood, the kind of space designed to look transparent but hide a thousand deals.I arrived two minutes early. Damian was already there, of course, sitting at the head of the sleek table like he owned the air in the room. He didn't look up from his phone as I entered, but I caught the faintest flicker of a smile at the corner of his mouth."You're early," he said without looking up."I like to see the battlefield before the enemy arrives," I replied.He chuckled softly. "You really do see everything as war.""Because it is."He finally set his phone down and met my eyes. "Then this morning, we're allies. For now."Before I could ask what he meant, the door opened and Victor Lang stepped in. He wasn't alone. Marcus Hale - Damian's CFO - trailed behind him, looking like a man who wanted to be invi
The ballroom at the Hôtel du Rhône was drenched in candlelight and quiet power. Crystal chandeliers glimmered overhead, silver cutlery glinted on linen-draped tables, and the murmur of European accents filled the air like a low tide. This wasn't just a dinner - it was a stage, and every investor, politician, and green-tech magnate here was an actor playing for keeps.Damian's hand rested lightly at the small of my back as we entered. Not possessive, but steady - like a reminder, or a warning. I didn't know which.The photographers' flashes went off again. I smiled for the cameras, my expression practiced. Inside, my stomach was tight. This was my world once - investors, deals, speeches - but tonight it felt like enemy territory."They're waiting for us at the head table," Damian murmured in my ear. His voice was low, velvet over steel. "Ready?""Always."He smiled, the faintest flicker at the corner of his mouth, as if my defiance pleased him.We took our seats. The table was a who's







