LOGINShe was never supposed to catch his attention. She was never supposed to survive it either. When Aria crosses paths with Cassian Virelli, a ruthless man who owns power like a birthright, her life fractures in ways she never imagined. Cassian doesn’t pursue—he claims. And once he decides she is his, walking away is no longer an option. To Cassian, Aria is fragile. Beautiful. Breakable. A woman meant to bend beneath his control. But Aria carries scars of her own, and beneath her silence lies a strength forged by pain, not weakness. The more Cassian tries to dominate her world, the more she threatens to unravel his carefully constructed darkness. What begins as possession turns into obsession. What was meant to break her slowly begins to expose him. In a world where love is dangerous, trust is a weapon, and power always demands a price, Mine to Break is a dark, intense romance about control, resistance, and the thin line between destruction and devotion. Because some hearts are not meant to be broken… And some monsters were never meant to fall in love.
View MoreAria learned early that silence was safer than attention.
Attention asked questions.
Attention invited damage.
So she kept her head down as she walked into Virelli Tower that night, heels clicking softly against marble floors polished to a merciless shine. The building smelled like money—cold, sharp, untouchable. Power lived here. It breathed through the walls, watched from every reflective surface, and judged anyone foolish enough to belong.
She didn’t.
She was only here because she had no choice.
The elevator doors slid shut with a quiet finality, sealing her inside with her reflection. Pale skin. Calm face. Eyes too knowing for someone her age. Aria adjusted her grip on the slim folder pressed to her chest and exhaled slowly as the numbers climbed.
Top floor.
Cassian Virelli didn’t meet people below the clouds.
By the time the doors opened, her heartbeat had steadied. Fear was useless now. Fear had never saved her before.
The executive floor was silent—no ringing phones, no footsteps, no voices. Just a long stretch of glass and shadow leading to a single door at the end of the hall.
VIRELLI.
No title. No nameplate. Just ownership.
She knocked once.
“Enter.”
The voice was low. Calm. Uninterested.
Aria stepped inside.
The office was vast, dark-toned, and deliberate. Floor-to-ceiling windows revealed the city sprawled beneath them, glowing like a living thing at Cassian Virelli’s feet. He stood near the glass, back to her, hands in his pockets, as if he already knew she was there—and had decided she could wait.
He turned slowly.
And the air shifted.
Cassian Virelli looked like a man carved from restraint. Tall. Broad shoulders wrapped in black. Dark hair pushed back with careless precision. His face was sharp, unreadable, devastatingly composed. But it was his eyes that pinned her in place—deep, assessing, stripped of warmth.
They moved over her once. Slowly. Thoroughly.
Not admiration. Not desire.
Assessment.
“You’re late,” he said.
Aria lifted her chin. “I arrived at the scheduled time.”
His brow arched faintly. “In my world, people arrive early.”
She didn’t apologize.
That earned her a second look.
“Why are you here?” Cassian asked, turning away again as if she’d already exhausted her relevance.
She stepped forward and placed the folder on his desk. “Your company acquired the residential block on Seventh Street.”
“Yes.”
“My family lives there.”
That got his attention.
Cassian turned, resting one hip against the desk. “Lived,” he corrected calmly. “Eviction notices were served weeks ago.”
“My mother is ill,” Aria said, keeping her voice steady. “She can’t be moved right now. I’m asking for an extension. Thirty days.”
Cassian studied her like a puzzle missing a piece. “People don’t ask me for favors.”
“I’m not asking for a favor.”
“Then what are you doing?”
She met his gaze. “Negotiating.”
Something dark flickered in his eyes.
“Do you know who I am?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“And you still walked in here thinking you could negotiate?”
“Yes.”
Silence stretched between them, thick and dangerous.
Cassian stepped closer.
One step. Then another.
Aria didn’t move, though every instinct screamed at her to retreat. He stopped just short of her space, towering, overwhelming without touching her at all.
“People usually beg,” he said softly. “Cry. Offer things they don’t have.”
“I won’t beg,” she replied. “And I won’t offer what I can’t give.”
His gaze dropped—to her hands, clenched but steady. To her mouth, pressed into a line of defiance. To the pulse fluttering at her throat.
“You’re afraid,” he observed.
“Yes.”
“But you didn’t run.”
“No.”
A slow, dangerous smile touched his lips. “Interesting.”
He reached out—not to touch her, but to lift the folder she’d placed on the desk. He didn’t open it.
“I don’t do extensions,” Cassian said. “Once I decide something, it’s final.”
Aria swallowed. “Then why am I still standing here?”
His eyes met hers again, darker now. Curious.
“Because,” he said, voice dropping, “you walked into my office like you already belonged to me.”
The words sent a chill through her.
“I don’t belong to anyone,” she said quietly.
Cassian leaned in just enough that she could smell his cologne—something expensive and restrained. “Everyone belongs to someone, Aria.”
Her breath caught. “You know my name.”
“I know everything about you,” he replied. “You just haven’t realized it yet.”
Fear coiled tight in her chest, sharp and familiar. This was the moment—when power shifted, when control slipped, when the ground cracked beneath her feet.
She stepped back.
Cassian didn’t follow.
Instead, he straightened, expression smoothing into something unreadable once more.
“I’ll give you your thirty days,” he said.
Relief flooded her so fast it made her dizzy. “Thank you—”
“But,” he continued, cutting her off, “you’ll work for me.”
Her relief shattered. “I didn’t apply for a job.”
“You are now.”
“I’m not qualified.”
“I decide qualifications.”
Aria stared at him. “And if I refuse?”
Cassian’s gaze hardened. “Then you and your mother will be out by the end of the week.”
The room felt smaller.
“This isn’t work,” she whispered. “It’s leverage.”
“Yes,” he agreed easily. “And you walked in knowing I’d use it.”
She hated that he was right.
“What kind of work?” she asked.
Cassian’s eyes held hers, unblinking. “The kind that keeps you close.”
Her stomach twisted.
“You think I’m fragile,” she said.
“I think,” he corrected, “that you’re mine to break.”
The words settled between them like a sentence.
Aria lifted her chin, fire sparking beneath the fear. “You’ll find I don’t break easily.”
Cassian smiled.
“We’ll see.”
The words didn’t sound like a threat.
They sounded like a promise.
Silence settled over the office again, heavier this time, pressing against Aria’s ribs until breathing felt like work. The city lights behind Cassian flickered like distant fires, turning his outline into something almost unreal—too still, too controlled, too certain of the power he held.
She should have left.
Every instinct told her to turn around, walk out, take whatever consequences waited outside those glass walls. But her mother’s tired smile flashed through her mind. The hospital bills. The quiet strength that had held their fragile life together for years.
Thirty days.
She needed those thirty days.
“What exactly would I be doing?” she asked finally, forcing her voice to stay level.
Cassian didn’t answer immediately. He moved back toward his desk, slow and deliberate, as if giving her time to reconsider—even though they both knew she wouldn’t.
“You’ll assist me,” he said. “Meetings. Schedules. Travel. You’ll be where I need you when I need you.”
“That sounds like a personal assistant.”
“It sounds,” he corrected, “like proximity.”
The word slid under her skin.
Aria crossed her arms, grounding herself. “And after thirty days?”
Cassian’s fingers tapped once against the desk before stilling. “We’ll renegotiate.”
“That’s not an answer.”
“It’s the only one you’ll get tonight.”
She watched him carefully. There was no cruelty in his tone—no anger. Just quiet certainty. Like a man who had never once doubted that the world would bend around his will.
“You enjoy control,” she said.
“I enjoy honesty,” he replied. “And you knew exactly what kind of man you were walking toward when you came here.”
She hated that he was right again.
Aria took a slow breath and stepped closer to the desk. “Fine. Thirty days. I work for you. After that… I walk away.”
Cassian studied her for a long moment, eyes dark and unreadable. “You believe that,” he said softly.
“I need to.”
Something flickered across his face—amusement, maybe. Or interest.
He picked up a sleek black card and slid it across the desk toward her. “Report here tomorrow. Eight a.m. Don’t be late.”
She hesitated before taking it. The weight of the decision settled into her palm, heavier than the thin piece of metal had any right to be.
This was a mistake.
She knew it.
And yet…
“Thirty days,” she repeated.
“Thirty days,” he echoed.
Aria turned toward the door, forcing her legs to move even though she could feel his gaze following her every step. The room seemed colder now, the air thicker, like she had just stepped into something she couldn’t yet see the edges of.
Her hand touched the door handle.
“Aria.”
She froze but didn’t turn around.
“Yes?”
Cassian’s voice was quieter this time, almost thoughtful. “You should know something.”
She glanced back over her shoulder.
His eyes held hers—steady, unblinking, impossibly intense.
“I don’t make decisions I regret,” he said. “And I don’t let go of things that interest me.”
A chill slid down her spine.
“I’m not a thing,” she replied.
His lips curved faintly. “Not yet.”
The door closed behind her before she could respond.
Out in the hallway, the silence felt different—less suffocating, but no less dangerous. Aria walked toward the elevator on unsteady legs, the black card still clutched in her hand like proof of a bargain she couldn’t undo.
When the doors slid shut, she finally let out the breath she’d been holding.
Thirty days.
Just thirty days, she told herself.
But deep down, a quiet voice whispered a truth she wasn’t ready to face—
Some doors didn’t close once you stepped through them.
And Cassian Virelli wasn’t the kind of man anyone walked away from unchanged
The system did not return to calm.What followed the first intrusion was not silence, but tension that lingered beneath every movement in the network. The structure the signals had formed remained intact, but it no longer felt untouched. It had been tested, and in surviving that test, it had revealed something important—not just to Aria and Cassian, but to whoever had tried to force their way in.They now knew it could resist.Which meant the next attempt wouldn’t be careless.Aria stood a few steps back from the interface, no longer leaning in as she had before. She forced herself to observe from a distance, resisting the instinct to step in, to interfere, to guide what was unfolding. The system had proven it could respond on its own, and stepping in now would risk changing the very thing she needed to understand.Cassian, however, wasn’t as patient. He moved restlessly, his gaze shifting between the stabilized signals and the outer edge
Aria stood in the quiet hum of the control room, the soft glow of the interface casting long shadows across her face. She could feel it—the presence, no longer tethered to her mind, lingering at the edges of the network. It wasn’t trying to pull her back in, but its awareness had settled like smoke in a room, stretching into every corner, watching everything she did. The signals on the screens had stopped their frantic surges, but their movement was far from inert. Each pulse, each wave of data, carried intention. They weren’t chaotic anymore; they were deliberate, structured, as if learning the rhythm of thought itself. Aria realized that what she had feared—that the presence could not be contained—was already true. The system no longer depended on her to act. It was observing, absorbing, integrating everything around it, including the decisions she had made, the resistance she had asserted, the boundaries she had set. Cassian paced behind her, the sharp lines of ten
The moment Aria felt it understand denial, everything shifted.Before, the presence had been curious.Observant.Learning in a way that felt neutral—almost distant.Now—There was tension.Not anger.Not aggression.But something closer to… resistance.---“Aria, pull out now,” Cassian said, sharper than before.She tried.This time without hesitation.She forced the connection to weaken, cutting off access points, withdrawing her awareness from the deeper layer.For a split second—It worked.The presence receded slightly.The pressure eased.---Then—It pushed back.---Aria gasped softly, her body tensing as the connection snapped tighter instead of breaking.“Aria!” Cassian stepped closer. “What’s happening?”“It’s not letting go,” she said, her voice strained.
The moment Aria realized it was changing because of her, she tried to pull back.Not fully.Just enough to create distance.The response was immediate.The presence followed.Not aggressively.Not forcefully.But with intent.Like it understood the concept of losing something—and didn’t want to.---“Aria,” Cassian said, voice tight, “disconnect. Now.”“I’m trying,” she replied, but there was strain in it.Because the connection wasn’t behaving like a system link anymore.It wasn’t something she could just sever.It was… anchored.On both sides.---Inside, the presence shifted again.Her answer—choice—was still moving through it, still being processed, but now something else layered over it.A response.Not a question this time.Not curiosity.Something closer to… reflection.
The signal didn’t stabilize.It multiplied.What had started as a faint attempt to reconnect spread across the dead system like cracks in glass. One request became ten. Ten became hundreds. Each one carried a different signature, a different intent, a different claim.A
The silence didn’t last.It never did.At first, it lingered just long enough to feel real—long enough for Aria to believe, even briefly, that the worst was over. The systems were down. The constant pressure of surveillance and control had vanished. For the first time in what fe
That was where the real story began.But beginnings didn’t arrive with clarity.They didn’t come with direction, or purpose, or any sense of certainty.They came quietly.Uncertain.Fragile.---The SilenceFor the first
When everything else fell apart.That was when the truth revealed itself.Not in the chaos.Not in the noise of collapsing systems or failing structures.But in the moments that followed—When there was nothing left to hide behind.---












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