Home / Romance / Cold As My Heart / Chapter One: The Iceman

Share

Cold As My Heart
Cold As My Heart
Author: You Keika

Chapter One: The Iceman

Author: You Keika
last update Huling Na-update: 2025-06-01 06:19:48

The glass doors of CainTech closed with a hiss behind her. Silence swallowed the lobby no chatter, no phones ringing, no receptionist. Just polished marble, matte black walls, and a tension that wrapped around Sera Vaughn’s ribs like invisible wire.

He was here.

Her fingers tightened around the leather strap of her bag as she stepped into the elevator. Her heartbeat had no right to be this fast. Not just from nerves. From recognition.

The man she was about to meet wasn’t just a billionaire tech giant.

He was a ghost.

She’d seen his face once before.

On a missing person’s poster.

The elevator climbed with mechanical smoothness, no music, no sound. Sera stared at her reflection in the mirrored interior. Red lipstick, perfect. Hair pinned, no trace of the shaking hands or the storm in her gut. She was here under contract, assigned to counsel CainTech employees after a suicide scandal rocked the company.

But that wasn’t the real reason she took this job.

The doors slid open.

A tall woman in a sleek black suit greeted her with a smile that didn’t reach her eyes. “Ms. Vaughn. Mr. Cain will see you now.”

Sera nodded. “Thank you.”

They walked in silence through a hallway lined with screens displaying code, data sets, and soft glowing shapes more like an art museum than a tech firm.

Then she saw him.

Adrian Cain.

Standing in front of a floor-to-ceiling window, bathed in stormlight. Tall, immaculately dressed in charcoal gray. Shoulders squared. Spine straight. Every line of him screamed command.

He turned as she entered and her breath caught.

Same jawline. Same piercing ice-gray eyes.

But it wasn’t just his features.

It was the absence of emotion behind them.

He looked at her like a man might look at a locked door calculating, indifferent, unmoved.

And yet something flickered in his gaze. Something like...

Recognition?

“Ms. Vaughn,” he said. His voice was low, level, stripped of warmth. “You’re early.”

“So are suicides,” she replied, without missing a beat.

His brow ticked upward. The faintest reaction. That was something.

She stepped closer. “Your VP threw himself off the forty-second floor. I’m not here to make you feel better about that. I’m here to ensure the rest of your staff doesn’t follow.”

“You think I need therapy?”

“I think the people who work for you are afraid to breathe wrong.”

His eyes held hers, unflinching.

Sera had been trained to read people. Micro-expressions. Behavioral cues. But Adrian Cain?

He was a vacuum.

“I agreed to this because our board insisted,” he said finally, turning his back to her again. “You’ll have full access to staff. Files. Surveillance footage.”

“Generous,” she said. “And you?”

“What about me?”

“Will I have access to you?”

He didn’t answer. Just stared out at the skyline as thunder growled in the distance.

She took a risk.

“I’ve seen your face before, Mr. Cain.”

He looked over his shoulder.

“In an old file. A boy who went missing when he was seventeen. His name was Daniel Ward.”

His body stilled.

“I have a photographic memory,” she said, stepping closer. “It’s not perfect, but it’s rarely wrong.”

He turned fully now. And for a heartbeat just one his face cracked.

Something passed through his eyes. Not fear. Not anger. Terror.

Then it was gone. Replaced by something colder than before.

“You’re mistaken,” he said. “I wasn’t born until I was eighteen.”

Sera froze. Her breath hitched just slightly, but she didn’t look away.

What kind of answer was that?

His voice hadn’t cracked. His tone hadn’t shifted. But those words they meant something. A warning. A confession. Or both.

“You know that doesn’t make sense,” she said evenly.

Adrian’s eyes narrowed. “You said you’re a trauma therapist, not an investigative journalist. Stick to your title.”

“You don’t believe in boxes,” she replied. “Your people describe you as a futurist. Visionary. God complex, even.”

The faintest twitch at the corner of his mouth. Not a smile. A warning signal like glass under pressure.

“I believe in efficiency,” he said. “And right now, this conversation is inefficient.”

“I think you’re lying about who you are.”

Silence.

The air thickened like fog between them. The only sound was the rain beginning to hit the glass behind him. Gentle, rhythmic, sharp.

She waited.

He didn’t move. He just watched her. Like he was seeing all the way into her searching for something to destroy.

Then he spoke. Low. Controlled.

“If you dig into my past, Ms. Vaughn, you’ll find nothing. That’s not because I’m hiding skeletons. It’s because they’ve already been burned.”

She flinched.

He saw it.

And he stepped forward, one slow, deliberate pace.

“I’ve had over twenty background checks. Government-level clearances. Not a single piece of evidence that suggests I’m anyone but Adrian Cain. And yet… you say you’ve seen my face.”

“I have.”

“Then tell me,” he said, voice a breath away from dangerous, “why are you really here?”

She lifted her chin. “You already know.”

They were only inches apart now. She could feel the heat of him, even through his icy exterior. He didn’t touch her but the tension curled between them like something alive.

For a moment, she wasn’t sure if he wanted to threaten her… or kiss her.

Then his phone buzzed.

He didn’t look away as he pulled it from his pocket and answered.

“What?”

A pause.

“When?”

Another pause.

“Clean it up. Tell legal to delay the press.”

He hung up and turned his back on her again.

“A second employee attempted suicide this morning,” he said calmly. “Same method. This time… they lived.”

Sera’s stomach turned. “What the hell is happening here?”

“That’s what I pay you to find out.” He walked to his desk and tapped a key. “Security will escort you to your office. Access to everything except me.”

“I’m going to find out what you’re hiding,” she said quietly.

“You won’t like what you find,” he replied.

She turned to go.

Then paused.

“You can’t erase a past that isn’t yours to hide, Adrian.”

His fingers curled on the desk, just for a second.

And then

A sound from the hallway. A clatter. Running feet. A woman’s voice calling out: “Sir he’s not responding!”

Adrian was already moving. So was Sera.

They followed the panicked assistant into a security control room. On a monitor, a man in CainTech uniform slumped at his desk, blood pooling beneath his chair.

Another body.

Sera’s hand flew to her mouth.

But Adrian didn’t look shocked.

He looked… blank.

Not detached. Not cold.

Dead inside.

And for the first time since meeting him, Sera wasn’t afraid of what he might do.

She was afraid of what had already been done to him.

As Sera stared at the blood-soaked screen, her phone buzzed.

UNKNOWN NUMBER: “You’re too late, Mara. You’re next.”

Her childhood nickname.

Only one person in the world ever called her that.

And he was dead.

Her breath caught in her throat as she stared at her phone screen.

“You’re too late, Mara. You’re next.”

No name. No number. Just those words.

And that name Mara.

No one had called her that in fifteen years. No one except

Aaron.

Her brother.

Gone without a trace when she was thirteen.

Her hands trembled, the phone slick in her grip. She swallowed the sudden rise of panic, years of therapy trying to rise to the surface, coaching her to breathe, to center, to not spiral. But nothing about this moment was normal.

She hadn't told anyone in this building about her real past. Not her name. Not Aaron. Not the case.

This was intentional.

“You okay?” the security guard asked, catching the way her expression changed.

Sera slid the phone into her coat pocket, tightening her jaw.

“I’m fine,” she lied. “Who’s the man in that footage?”

“Leo Martin,” Adrian’s assistant said quietly. “Internal communications. Five years with the company.”

Sera didn’t speak. Her mind raced.

Another suicide attempt. This time on video. This time... someone made sure Adrian saw it. A message.

She turned and found him still watching the screen, arms crossed, face unreadable.

“You’ve had two employees try to die in a week,” she said. “That’s not a coincidence.”

“I don’t believe in coincidence,” Adrian replied, still calm. Still cold.

“Then you know this is a pattern.”

“I know this is a threat.”

His voice dropped low. A flicker in his expression tight around the mouth, the eyes. Not fear. Not sorrow.

Recognition.

“You’ve seen this before,” she said, watching him. “Haven’t you?”

He didn’t answer.

“I want to talk to the employees closest to both men. Any overlap in projects. Any personal connections. And I want access to their HR files.”

He looked at her then, fully. “You don’t give orders here.”

She stepped closer, her voice sharp. “Two of your employees are dead or close to it, and if you’re more interested in maintaining control than protecting your people, then you might be the real problem.”

That stopped him.

The guard beside them blinked like someone had just yelled "fire."

Adrian tilted his head, eyes narrowing. “Are you always this direct, Ms. Vaughn?”

“Only when I’m right.”

Silence stretched between them like piano wire.

Then he gave her a slight nod. Just once. A crack in the armor.

“I’ll have IT grant you access,” he said. “But if I find out you’re using this for anything else…”

“I’m not the one hiding something,” she snapped. “Not this time.”

She left the room without waiting for dismissal.

Down the hallway. Fast. Focused. Shaking.

She ducked into an empty breakroom and pulled her phone back out, hands trembling. The message was still there.

Still glowing.

“You’re too late, Mara. You’re next.”

She replied before she could think: Who is this? How do you know that name?

No response.

She called the number.

Blocked.

She ran a trace.

Nothing.

Just like Aaron’s phone the night he disappeared.

She stared at the screen.

No one should know that name. No one alive.

Unless...

Unless he remembered something too.

Meanwhile, back in his office…

Adrian stood motionless in front of his desk. The security footage frozen on screen. Blood beneath the chair. Shadows moving in the reflection of the glass behind the man.

He stared.

Zoomed.

Stared again.

In the corner of the screen almost imperceptible a symbol etched into the desk.

A circle. Three lines.

He knew that symbol.

But not from this world.

From his dreams.

The ones where he was trapped in a basement, screaming.

The ones where a girl called his name.

Daniel.

He sat down, slowly. Carefully.

And whispered the name to himself for the first time in fifteen years.

“...Daniel?”

In a secure server beneath CainTech HQ, an alert pings quietly.

KEYWORD TRIGGER DETECTED: “DANIEL”

SURVEILLANCE LOGGING INITIATED.

And in the shadows, someone begins watching.

Patuloy na basahin ang aklat na ito nang libre
I-scan ang code upang i-download ang App

Pinakabagong kabanata

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter 9: The Price of Trust

    Adrian’s hands shook as he read the message again, the words almost taunting him now.You don’t know who’s really behind this, but you will soon. Sera isn’t who she says she is.His throat tightened. He shoved the phone back into his pocket, but the words lingered in his mind, gnawing at him like a persistent itch that couldn’t be scratched. He turned to look at Sera, but she was already watching him, her eyes wide, searching his face for some kind of reaction.“You’re not part of this, are you?” Adrian’s voice was hoarse, barely a whisper. His breath caught in his throat as he met her gaze. “You’re not working with him. With any of them.”The moment he spoke, the room seemed to close in around them. The tension was thick, heavy, unbearable.Sera took a slow step toward him, her body language hesitant but determined. “Adrian, I swear ” Her voice cracked, and she had to stop herself. “I swear to you, I’m not part of whatever this is. I don’t know who’s sending those messages, but I kno

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter 8: Unraveling the Web

    Adrian’s heart thundered in his chest as he stared at Sera, the phone still in his hand, the cryptic text message staring back at him. You already know who the real enemy is.The words seemed to vibrate through his bones. Could he really trust her? Could Sera, the woman who had stepped into his life with a promise to heal him, really be part of the conspiracy that had torn his world apart?His fingers trembled, the phone slipping slightly in his grip. He quickly pushed it back into his pocket, trying to mask the growing panic that threatened to consume him. He couldn’t lose his composure not now.Sera’s expression was unreadable, her eyes scanning him carefully, as if trying to gauge his reaction, trying to figure out how much he knew. Her lips parted, but no words came out. She seemed almost too aware of the weight of the silence between them.Adrian’s mind spun, emotions crashing like waves against jagged rocks. Every instinct he had screamed at him to walk away, to protect himself,

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter 7: The Ties That Bind

    The dim lights of the penthouse flickered as Adrian stood at the window, his cold stare cutting through the rain-slicked glass. Below, the city stretched out like a sea of lights, unfeeling and distant much like the man he had become. Sera’s voice echoed in his mind. Her words: "I’ll find out what happened, Adrian. No matter what."He didn’t want to be found out. But something about her defied every instinct to shut her out. The pull between them raw, intense, and undeniably magnetic was a force neither of them had the power to deny.Sera stepped into the room, her footsteps light but steady. She looked at him, her eyes flicking between the sharp angles of his face and the tortured expression he tried so hard to mask. Her presence had become a constant in his life, an unsettling comfort. But she was also a threat, the one person who could unlock the door to his past."I need answers, Adrian," she said, her voice firm but low, the words slipping past the walls he’d built around himself

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter Six: What Memory Leaves Behind

    He couldn’t breathe.Not from the gas but from the pictures.Three frozen moments, held in his hand like verdicts:1. Sera, unconscious.2. Aaron, dying.3. Himself, smiling.He wasn’t just a witness. Not just a pawn.He’d been the prototype.The first success.He felt the images burning into his palms, branding him deeper than scars.He didn’t remember smiling. Didn’t remember holding a syringe.But the look in his own eyes in the photo?Detached. Cold. Perfectly obedient.“Adrian?” Sera’s voice came from the smoke.He looked up, blinking through the sting, the fear.She crawled toward him, blood on her hand where she’d scraped it during the blast. She grabbed the envelope from him, saw the photos and went completely still.That silence?Worse than screaming.Her hand shook.“Tell me this isn’t real,” she whispered.“I don’t remember it,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.”Her eyes locked on his. “You told me you were a victim.”“I thought I was.”“You told me ”“I kn

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter Five: Burn the Silence

    He couldn't breathe.The moment the video cut off, something inside him buckled.Not from fear.From recognition.The basement in the live feed wasn’t just any room it was the room.The one from his nightmares. The one with the cold tile floor, and the smell of metal, and the screaming that had never stopped echoing in the back of his skull.He’d drawn it a hundred times as a kid, in charcoal and pen and blood before Dorian made him burn every sketch.He’d stood in that room as a boy and forgotten his name.And now they were sending it back to him.Like a trigger. A test.A threat.He slammed the laptop shut and turned to find Sera already pacing the living room, her arms crossed tight against her chest.“They want you to remember,” she said. “They’re trying to speed up your recovery.”“It’s not recovery,” he muttered. “It’s… exposure. They’re unraveling me.”Her eyes locked on his. “Then stop them.”He laughed, bitter and cold. “You don’t stop a machine like this, Sera. You just hope

  • Cold As My Heart   Chapter Four: Things We Pretend

    She stared at the note for a long time.He killed your brother.Her hands shook as she turned it over, but there was no signature. No symbol. No hint of where it came from. Just a crude line of black ink on the back of her hairbrush tucked inside a sealed overnight bag that had been packed by a CainTech security driver.Someone wanted her to doubt him.And they weren’t wrong.What if it’s true?What if the cold-eyed boy on that screen hooked to wires, stripped of his name hadn’t just forgotten Aaron?What if he’d helped erase him?She dropped the note into her coat pocket and stepped into the hallway, silent. The penthouse was too quiet, too still. No city noise. No elevator hum. Just sleek, sterile silence.She found Adrian standing on the rooftop terrace, shirt sleeves rolled, hands wrapped around a whiskey glass. The city stretched behind him like a kingdom he didn’t want.He didn’t turn when she stepped beside him.“You couldn’t sleep either?” he asked.“No.”A pause.Then: “You r

Higit pang Kabanata
Galugarin at basahin ang magagandang nobela
Libreng basahin ang magagandang nobela sa GoodNovel app. I-download ang mga librong gusto mo at basahin kahit saan at anumang oras.
Libreng basahin ang mga aklat sa app
I-scan ang code para mabasa sa App
DMCA.com Protection Status