LOGIN(Sienna - Six weeks before the wedding)
The seat beside me in the first-class lounge had been empty for an hour.
Then it wasn’t.
He sat down like the space had been waiting for him. No apology. No polite hesitation. Just quiet certainty.
Dark jacket. Open collar. The kind of watch that didn’t need to announce itself.
My brain said: oh.
Not oh, someone sat down.
More like oh, that man should not be allowed to exist in public.
His glass of whiskey landed on the table. Then he turned slightly toward me and said, as though we were already halfway through a conversation:
"They're going to cancel your flight."
I blinked. "What?"
"About ten minutes." A slow sip. "When they do, everyone in this lounge will queue for a hotel voucher and spend the next hour pretending they're surprised."
I studied him.
“You sound very confident.”
The corner of his mouth shifted. Almost a smile.
“You could stay here and suffer through the announcement with everyone else.” A pause. “Or you could come upstairs with me and spend the night doing something significantly more interesting.”
My brain stalled.
Did I just hear him correctly? Did he just proposition me? Just like that?
No buildup. No apology. Delivered in the same tone someone might use to suggest switching tables in a restaurant.
I felt my ovaries clench unexpectedly at the mere thought. Because the worst part was that he didn’t sound arrogant. He sounded certain.
And the deeply inconvenient thing was that certainty, on him, was… compelling.
“You’re very direct,” I said.
“I prefer efficiency.”
“And this,” I said carefully, “is your efficient solution to a delayed flight?”
His eyes held mine. “I think you already know the answer to that.”
The silence between us stretched.
I should have said no. Should have been offended, or at least properly amused.
Instead I found myself thinking something far more dangerous.
He might be right.
***
The door barely closed behind us.
I had just enough time to think how the hell did this happen before his mouth found mine. Again.
One second I was in a brightly lit airport corridor making what I had confidently described to myself as a reckless but interesting decision.
One moment I was in a brightly lit corridor making what I'd confidently described to myself as a reckless but interesting decision. The next I was pressed against a hotel room door with a man I'd known for fifteen minutes kissing me like he'd spent the whole evening waiting to do exactly this.
His hand slid around my waist and pulled me closer.
Oh God. This was happening.
My brain attempted a very late intervention.
You don’t do this. You are Sienna Hartwell. You are responsible. Sensible. You don't do sex without a relationship.
His mouth moved against mine again, slow and certain, and the thought dissolved along with the taste of whiskey on his tongue.
Apparently tonight I did.
His hand slid into my hair, holding me exactly as he liked. I should have said something intelligent. Cautious. Slightly less enthusiastic.
Instead I kissed him back.
Hard.
The responsible part of my brain threw up its hands and left the building.
Because the deeply inconvenient truth was this: I had wanted to know what this would feel like from the moment he sat down beside me.
I felt him against me, already hard, and a shiver moved straight down my spine. My nipples tightened beneath my silk blouse, brushing against his chest.
“God, this is so not me,” I whispered.
The words slipped out before my brain could stop them.
He shuddered. Actually shuddered. A sharp inhale through his teeth, like the words had landed somewhere deeper than I'd intended.
That reaction did absolutely nothing for my self-control.
I nipped his lower lip. He hissed softly.
Addictive.
My hands found his belt. At the same moment he dragged my blouse free, and his hands found my breasts, thumbs circling through thin lace until I gasped, heat flooding through me without apology.
The moment his fingers met damp fabric he went completely still.
Then a slow, disbelieving exhale against my neck.
Oh. Well.
"Fuck," he murmured, voice rougher now. "You're so wet."
My hips moved against his palm before I could stop them.
Good job. Really maintaining that whole mysterious, composed woman image.
He walked me back toward the bed. We tumbled onto it together, the mattress shifting beneath us. My skirt rode up as he slid my underwear down, and cool air met my skin a half-second before his mouth did.
My brain made one last attempt at protest.
You met him fifteen minutes ago.
Then his moved with slow, deliberate focus and my brain left the conversation entirely.
I cried out, fingers twisting into his hair as he breathed come for me against me, and the sound of those two words alone nearly finished it.
The first orgasm hit fast and violent, ripping a sound out of me that I fervently hoped nobody in Heathrow Terminal Five could hear.
He laughed softly against my skin.
Then he stood, dragged me toward him, and pushed inside in one long stroke.
The sudden fullness made me gasp.
“Holy—”
My sentence didn’t survive the next thrust.
I hadn’t seen him, yet. But what I felt was huge.
And when I did finally see him minutes later, fully erect and unashamedly eager, I knew I was in for the ride of my life.
Holy indeed…
I came twice more. Maybe three times.
When his breathing finally deepened into sleep, one thought surfaced through the wreckage of my composure: Well. That escalated.
I waited until I was sure.
Then I moved. Slow. Careful.
I found my clothes in the dark, dressed without sound and gave the room one last look and left without looking back.
The lobby was bright and merciless.
Powerful, I told myself, crossing it.
The word landed hollow. Full of something I'd just voluntarily emptied out and was already, quietly, missing.
***
(Adrian)
She was gone.
Fuck.
For the first time in my life, I was the one left in tangled sheets that smelled like whiskey and a woman whose name I didn't know.
It landed like a punch.
Not because she'd refused to give it.
Because she'd never asked for mine.
Most women did. Within minutes of meeting them. If they hadn’t already recognized me before we even met.
But somewhere between the lounge and the hotel bed, names had become irrelevant to both of us, and the bewilderment of that almost made me smile.
I put a call through to my PA.
"Sally," I said, when she picked up. "I need a list of every woman who checked into the first-class lounge for DL564 last night."
(Sienna) Adrian's hand trembled as it reached for mine.None of the iron control I'd come to expect, the steady grip that brooked no argument, but a subtle shake in his fingers. The room was dim, just the desk lamp casting long shadows across the scattered reports confirming Harbinger's betrayal. He didn't speak. Didn't need to. The weight of it hung in the air between us, thick as the silence after a detonation. I laced my fingers through his, feeling the calluses rough against my palm."Come here," I whispered, tugging gently until he stepped into me, his forehead dropping to my shoulder. His breath was uneven, warm puffs against my neck carrying the faint salt of unshed emotion, body heavy with exhaustion. The kind that hollowed you out after some home truths carved too deep. I guided him back toward the low couch in the corner, the leather cool under my thighs as we sank down together. No urgency in his touch this time, no demand. Just need: raw, quiet, anchoring.His arms wra
(Adrian)Sienna told me at seven in the evening.She didn't build toward it. She sat across from me at the kitchen table with her hands around her cup and said Maya had called and told me what Maya had found and then she stopped talking and let it sit.I heard it.All of it.The Meridian connection, the registered agent, the operating name that matched the man I'd called twice in my life and trusted both times without fully examining why.I heard it and I didn't say anything for a long time.The kitchen was quiet. Outside the window the street was doing its ordinary things, cars moving, a door closing somewhere below, the distant sound of the city that didn't adjust itself to the scale of what was happening in this room."Adrian," Sienna said."I know," I said.She waited.I stood and moved to the window because sitting still had become something I couldn't manage. I looked at the street without seeing it and went back through the decisions I'd made.The first time I'd called Harbinge
(Maya)The last document in Edmund Kessler's file was a letter.Not the handwritten one to Sienna's father. A different one, typed, unsigned, printed on paper that had gone slightly yellow at the edges from years in a dark, dry place. No letterhead. No date. No indication of who had written it or how it had come to be in Edmund's possession.I almost missed it. It had been folded inside the back cover of the bound solicitor's document, flat against the cardboard, easy to take for part of the cover itself if you weren't paying attention.Ollie had found it.He'd set it on the table between us without comment and gone back to the shareholder register. That was how Ollie operated. He surfaced things and let you come to them at your own pace. I'd learned to trust that instinct.I unfolded it carefully. The creases were deep, the paper softened along the folds. Edmund had opened and refolded this many times.I read it once fast. Then again, slowly.It was a threat.Dressed as correspondenc
(Sienna)Celeste didn't call ahead.Of course she didn't. She arrived certain her presence was its own justification, that whatever had preceded it could be managed once she was already in the room.My mother had given her the address. I found that out afterward, and filed the irritation separately, because there was too much else to manage and my mother was a problem for a different day.I opened the door and looked at my sister.She looked worse than I'd expected. Not dramatically. Celeste didn't do dramatic deterioration. She maintained. But there was something underneath the maintenance that hadn't been there before, a tiredness that had settled into the set of her mouth and the way she was holding her shoulders, as if she'd been braced for a long time and the bracing had become structural."I need to talk to you," she said.I stepped back and let her in.She stood in the middle of the kitchen and looked at the table, the closed laptop, the notepad I'd turned face-down when I hear
(Adrian)I called the meeting at seven.It wasn't a formal briefing. Nothing about it was. The room was wrong, the configuration was wrong, and two of the five people around the table had no operational obligation to be there at all. Maya and Ollie came because Sienna had asked them to and because the investigation had reached a point where the information lived with them rather than with me.I ran it like a briefing anyway. It was the only format I knew how to use.Status on the regulatory timeline. The Voss account activity, now formally flagged to the investigators through the appropriate channel. The Harlow thread, which Maya summarised in four sentences that contained more useful information than most hour-long presentations I'd sat through.I noticed she had notes she didn't reference.I said nothing.I closed the session at seven forty-two and assigned the follow-up actions and watched everyone move back into their respective orbits. Maya and Ollie left together. Marcus stayed
(Sienna)The scrape of his knuckles against my slick folds made me whimper, throbbing under the pressure as he pressed one thick finger inside me without warning, curling it just right to hit that spot that made stars burst behind my eyelids.Wetness coated him immediately as he pumped slowly, deliberately, thumb circling my nub with maddening precision. "Adrian—" It came out as a plea, half protest, half demand, my hips bucking against his hand despite myself.Surrender. The word echoed in my head, hated and craved in equal measure. He'd always been the one in charge, the strategist, the one who saw five moves ahead. But here, with his finger stretching me, adding a second that burned just enough to make me clench around him, I was losing the fight. "Say it," he demanded, withdrawing his fingers abruptly, leaving me empty and aching, clit pulsing in the sudden absence.I didn’t bother with pretending not to know what he meant. We’ve played this game before. I might angry as a spit







