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."
(Adrian)I hadn't filed anything yet.I'd drafted the board notification. Begun the internal prep for the seven percent transfer. Kept it contained, off the main systems, routed through a secondary channel Marcus had set up specifically to limit visibility.I hadn't confirmed. Hadn't sent. Hadn't made the move.My phone lit up.A single line on the captors' channel.Noted. Proceed with the remainder by 20:00.I read it twice.I hadn't made the move yet. But something had already responded to it.Jolene wasn't watching my actions.She was watching my intent. Reading the shape of what I was preparing before it became visible. Which meant she had eyes somewhere inside the secondary channel Marcus had built in the last eighteen hours, or inside the system Marcus was using to build it, or inside Marcus himself in a way I wasn't prepared to follow that thought to its conclusion.I closed the draft and said nothing to anyone in the room.***Maya broke pattern at six-oh-four.Not the control
(Adrian)The second message didn't come through Marcus's clarification channel.It came through my personal line. The number I gave to perhaps twelve people in the world, none of whom were supposed to know each other.No document this time. A voice note. Eighteen seconds. A neutral voice, the same flat register as the first call, delivering three sentences clipped and efficient, each sentence clearly prepared in advance.Initiate the preliminary transfer of seven percent by close of business today. File a board notification of intent to restructure the Hartwell operational committee. Confirm by the same channel within the hour.Then silence.I played it twice.Then I set the phone down and looked at the wall and understood that the rules had just changed in a way that wasn't accidental.A different channel. A partial transfer before full compliance. A board notification that would be visible, on record, irreversible once filed. Jolene wasn’t waiting for the deadline anymore. She was r
(Adrian)The reply came faster than it should have.Marcus had sent the clarification request eleven minutes ago. Two questions, carefully worded, professionally framed. Requests for entity documentation on two of the shell vehicles. The kind of due diligence that should have taken hours to respond to, if they responded at all.Eleven minutes.I read the response twice.Jolene had answered both questions. Precisely, completely, with documentation attached that matched the request exactly. But she’d also included a third clarification, one Marcus hadn't asked for, addressing a structural ambiguity in the transfer instrument that I had noticed but hadn't put in writing.I hadn't put it in writing anywhere."We didn't ask for this level of detail," I said.Marcus looked at the screen. Read it again."No," he said. "We didn't.""But she gave it anyway."He set his pen down slowly. Neither of us said what that meant. We didn't need to.She wasn’t just responding to the questions. She was r
(Adrian)The numbers lined up. The timeline held.And that was the problem.I'd been going back over the demand structure for the last forty minutes while Marcus drafted the clarification response and Maya worked the Castaneda thread. The share accumulation sat at fifteen point five percent through the Meridian vehicles. The forced transfer clause would bring that to forty percent combined. Controlling interest, cleanly achieved, legally documented.It worked.Mathematically, structurally, it worked.So why did it feel like I was looking at the wrong answer to a question I hadn't been asked yet.***I pulled up the acquisition timeline and laid it against the shell structure build.The Meridian vehicles had been accumulating shares for fourteen months. Slowly, carefully, below the disclosure threshold. Patient work. At that rate, without the forced transfer, they'd have reached controlling interest in another eight to ten months through market accumulation alone.They didn't need the
(Sienna)The light had moved.Somehow the quality of it, the angle through the high panel above the door, told me the afternoon had deepened. I'd been quietly tracking it the way I tracked everything in this room, filing each small change against the last.Something else had changed too.The footsteps outside had been running on a pattern I'd mapped across the last several hours. Regular enough to be deliberate, irregular enough to suggest they'd been told not to be predictable. I'd found the rhythm underneath the variation anyway, like finding a heartbeat under noise if you listened long enough.That rhythm had shifted.Tighter now. More frequent. The pauses between passes shorter than they'd been this morning.The fact that they’d adjusted their rotations meant something had happened that I hadn't seen and couldn't directly confirm, and the question was whether it had come from inside this room or outside it.I hadn't spoken since the camera adjustment. I'd given them stillness and
(Adrian)Nobody spoke.The document was still open on the desk. Waiting. The deadline counter running somewhere I couldn't see but could feel, the way you felt a change in air pressure before a storm arrived.One forty-three in the afternoon.Four hours and seventeen minutes.The demand had already done its work. Everything now was consequence.Marcus broke the silence first."If you sign," he said, "you trigger a traceable financial event that ties you directly to those entities. Whatever they're connected to, whatever Jolene built that structure to receive, your signature makes you part of it. Not a victim of it. Part of it.""I know.""And if you don't sign by eighteen hundred, we don't know what the escalation looks like. We don't know if there's a contingency. We don't know if the deadline is real or constructed to create pressure." He set his pen down. "This isn't a negotiation. It's a forced move.""Yes," I said. "That's exactly what it is."Maya had been looking at the documen
(Adrian)The missed call had come in four minutes before the alert. The number was the handset I'd given her in the Mayfair kitchen, the one she wasn't supposed to need.I called back immediately. Then again.Nothing, both times.Then the alert came through my aviation contact at just past six in t
(Sienna)Three green lights.That was all I needed.I didn't have them."Manual override non-responsive," Daan said. His voice was even. Good man."Confirm gear position unknown," I said. "Declaring emergency. KL approach, Hartwell cargo niner-four, we have a landing gear malfunction, requesting em
(Sienna)At cruising altitude, the world simplified.That was the thing about the cockpit that had drawn me to the left seat since I was small enough that my feet didn't reach the rudder pedals. Everything reduced to what was immediate and knowable. Instruments. Checklists. The steady conversation
(Adrian)I watched the aircraft until it disappeared into the pre-dawn grey.Then I stood on the apron for another thirty seconds, which was twenty-nine seconds longer than was useful, and made myself turn away.The drive back to Mayfair was quiet. Roland had sent three messages during the terminal







