(Xavier’s POV)
The crowd parted for me without a word. They always did. Power had a way of making space for itself, and I wore mine like a second skin. But as I closed the distance, my focus wasn’t on the investors, the cameras, or the whispers trailing behind me. It was on her. Laila. Head tipped against Adrian’s shoulder, drowning in his jacket. My cousin’s jacket. Her skin flushed, her movements slack, her perfume—wild and sweet—muddied with the sharp sting of whiskey. And Adrian… standing there like she belonged to him. A muscle ticked in my jaw as I shrugged off my tuxedo jacket. The weight of it slid down my arms, but the pressure in my chest only grew heavier. I didn’t stop until I stood in front of him. He didn’t move. Didn’t even look ashamed. His eyes locked with mine like a challenge. My voice was calm, but the edge was razor-sharp. “She doesn’t need your jacket.” I slipped it from her shoulders, slow, deliberate. My fingers brushed silk and skin—her skin—warm and trembling beneath my touch. She instinctively leaned into me. I held Adrian’s jacket a beat too long before thrusting it back into his hands. His expression didn’t falter, but I caught it—the flicker. A warning. A rivalry buried deep in blood. With one swift motion, I bent and swept Laila into my arms. Bridal style. Exactly where she belonged. “Thank you for your service, Adrian,” I said coolly. “But I don’t think it’ll be needed anymore. Her husband is here now.” I didn’t wait for his reply. Didn’t care about the murmurs around us. All I saw was her. Josh had the car ready before we reached the curb. He rushed to open the door, bowing his head slightly. I shifted to set her down—only for her fingers to snag my shirt in a clumsy, desperate grip. “Don’t…” Her voice was soft, broken, drunk. “Don’t let go of me.” The words cracked something in me. I could’ve reminded myself she was tipsy, that she wouldn’t remember half of this tomorrow. I could’ve blamed the drug Celeste had slipped into my drink for the way my pulse thundered. But it wasn’t that. It was her. Always her. So instead of pulling away, I slid into the car with her still in my lap. She buried her face against my neck, lips brushing my skin in a clumsy pout. “You were busy… with that girl… didn’t look at me…” She inhaled deeply, humming. “Mmm. You smell nice.” Her words were jumbled, ridiculous—yet every syllable seared into me. My jaw clenched, hand tightening at her waist. Celeste’s poison burned in my veins, urging me to lose control, but it wasn’t her doing this to me. “Christ,” I muttered, my control hanging by a thread. She tilted her face up, eyes hazy but locked on mine. “Don’t leave me. Promise?” She lifted her left pinkie, wavering in the air. I stared. “Pinkie promise me,” she mumbled again. Messy hair. Flushed cheeks. Lips parted like she was waiting for me to shatter. My chest ached in ways I didn’t allow. I hooked my right pinkie around hers. “Pinkie promise,” I said, voice low. She smiled—the smallest, sleepiest curve of her lips—and let out a satisfied sigh. Then she pressed her mouth to my neck and kissed me there. “Fuck,” I whispered harshly, eyes closing. I would make Celeste pay for this. For slipping that goddamn Viagra in my drink. The blood in my body was running wild, and the woman in my arms was busy whispering half-thoughts only she understood. The car moved forward, city lights bleeding into the night. My phone buzzed in my pocket—Adrian, Celeste, whoever the hell it was. I ignored it. They could wait. “Xavier,” Laila murmured, pulling me back. “Yes?” My voice was tighter than I intended. “I have beeeen calling your name seventeen timesss,” she slurred, glaring adorably. “Why weren’t you listening?” No, you haven’t. You only said it once. “I’m sorry,” I said instead. “What were you saying?” “Xavier… did I look pretty today?” My chest softened despite myself. “Yes. You did.” Her pout deepened. “Who’s prettier—me or that vanilla-scented girl?” That actually made me chuckle. Celeste wasn’t even in the same universe as her. “You,” I said simply. Her hands came up to hold my face, clumsy and tender all at once. “Goooood boy,” she slurred, then kissed me full on the lips. And just like that, every ounce of control I had left snapped.I changed into my fifth outfit of the evening, staring at myself in the mirror with frustration tightening my chest. Dresses, skirts, jeans, blouses—everything either felt too much or not enough. I didn’t know why I cared so much. This wasn’t a date. This was Xavier. My husband. The man who wore his indifference like armor and barely spared me more than a few clipped words.And yet, there was this foreign warmth in my chest. A restlessness that made my palms sweat and my heartbeat race. It didn’t feel like dread. It didn’t feel like hatred. It felt… like home.I hated it.Finally, I settled on a soft cream dress, simple but delicate. My hair fell loose, brushing against my collarbone. My hands wouldn’t stop fidgeting, and I hated myself for waiting—like some lovesick fool—for the sound of his footsteps.And then he came.Xavier Russell walked into my room like he owned the air itself, his expression carved from stone. His white shirt clung to his shoulders, the sleeves rolled up, vein
[Xavier's POV]Her body writhed under my mouth, every sound she made burning me alive. She was so close—too close. I could feel it in the way her thighs trembled, in the way her fingers tugged my hair like I was her lifeline.And then I stopped.Her gasp was sharp, her pout instant. “Why…?” Her voice cracked, half-cry, half-demand.I kissed the inside of her thigh instead, rolling my sleeves down with a curse under my breath. “Because you’re drunk, Laila. And tomorrow, you’ll hate both of us if I don’t stop tonight.”Before she could argue, I scooped her up into my arms bridal-style. Her head fell against my chest, her body already heavy with exhaustion. She mumbled my name, soft, needy, and it carved straight through my chest.“Sleep,” I whispered, carrying her through the halls.The maid hurried to open her door. I gave her a single look. “Change her into something comfortable. Make sure she rests.”The girl nodded quickly, and I laid Laila gently on her bed before leaving. My fists
[Xavier]Her kiss hit me like fire.Warm. Messy. Desperate. Mine.For a second, I froze. I’d built walls, chains, rules. But the taste of her broke all of them.I kissed her back. Hard. Deep. My hand cupped her jaw, pulling her closer until her body melted into mine. She sighed against my lips, tasting like whiskey and sweetness, and suddenly nothing else in the world mattered.Laila pulled away, breathless, eyes glassy but blazing. “See? You do look at me,” she whispered.Before I could reply, she swung a leg over and settled on my lap. My pulse slammed. Her gown rode up, the heat of her pressing against me, ripping apart my control.“Laila,” I warned, my voice low. “We shouldn’t do this. You’re drunk.”She didn’t care. Her hands slid into my hair, her mouth hot against my neck as she ground her hips against me. A soft sound left her throat—needy, wrecking me.“Christ.” My grip on her waist tightened. The poison burning in my blood made restraint feel impossible.Then she shifted aga
(Xavier’s POV)The crowd parted for me without a word. They always did. Power had a way of making space for itself, and I wore mine like a second skin. But as I closed the distance, my focus wasn’t on the investors, the cameras, or the whispers trailing behind me.It was on her.Laila.Head tipped against Adrian’s shoulder, drowning in his jacket. My cousin’s jacket. Her skin flushed, her movements slack, her perfume—wild and sweet—muddied with the sharp sting of whiskey.And Adrian… standing there like she belonged to him.A muscle ticked in my jaw as I shrugged off my tuxedo jacket. The weight of it slid down my arms, but the pressure in my chest only grew heavier.I didn’t stop until I stood in front of him. He didn’t move. Didn’t even look ashamed. His eyes locked with mine like a challenge.My voice was calm, but the edge was razor-sharp. “She doesn’t need your jacket.”I slipped it from her shoulders, slow, deliberate. My fingers brushed silk and skin—her skin—warm and tremblin
Chapter FiveThe Russell estate was alive with light. Chandeliers spilled gold across marble floors, crystal glasses chimed, and the murmur of wealth hummed in every corner. It was the kind of gathering where every smile was rehearsed, every laugh calculated, and every person carried daggers in their pockets, hidden behind designer gowns and tailored suits.Xavier walked beside me, tall and sharp in a black tuxedo that looked as though it had been stitched to his frame. He wore no bow tie, only the open confidence of a man who didn’t need one. His presence was magnetic, the crowd parting for him like waves before the shore.And then there was me.Julia had worked her magic. My body was draped in a dark navy satin gown, the off-shoulder cut exposing the curve of my collarbone, the backless design brushing whispers against my skin. The fabric clung to me like water, catching the light each time I moved. My reflection in the mirrored walls barely looked like me—too polished, too flawless
When I opened my eyes, the first thing I saw was the ceiling—high, white, unfamiliar. The sheets beneath me were soft, expensive, scented faintly of cedar and linen. For a fleeting moment, I forgot where I was. And then my gaze shifted.He was there.Xavier Russell.Lying beside me, his arm resting lazily against the pillow, his face calm, unreadable. His side of the bed looked untouched, as if he had been there only to watch me, not to sleep.A shiver slid down my spine. This wasn’t my room. It was his. His world. His rules. I didn’t belong here—and yet I was bound to it by vows spoken in panic and duty.“You’re awake.” Xavier’s voice was smooth, deep, but edged with his familiar, icy detachment. He rose with effortless grace, pulling on his jacket. “There’s someone here to see you.”My throat tightened. “Who?”He didn’t answer. His dark eyes brushed mine for a fraction of a second before he stepped out.My pulse quickened, my mind racing through possibilities. My parents? My sister?