LOGINElara Quinn never intended to belong to a man like Dominic Voss. Struggling to survive after one reckless decision shatters her fragile stability, Elara is forced into the orbit of the most dangerous man in the city—a ruthless empire builder whose name commands fear and silence. Dominic Voss doesn’t offer rescue. He offers ownership disguised as protection. Cold, controlled, and merciless, Dominic rules his world with iron discipline. He should see Elara as a liability, someone to discard once her usefulness ends. Instead, her sharp tongue and quiet resilience awaken an obsession he refuses to name. What begins as a calculated arrangement soon becomes a game of power, desire, and control neither of them can escape. Trapped in Dominic’s mansion under rules she never agreed to, Elara walks a thin line between defiance and surrender. Every encounter tests her limits. Every touch pulls her deeper into a bond forged from fear, hunger, and undeniable attraction. Dominic’s protection becomes a cage—and the only thing keeping her alive. As enemies close in and Dominic’s dark past resurfaces, Elara uncovers the truth behind why he chose her—and the cost of remaining by his side. Loving Dominic Voss means surrendering safety, freedom, and possibly her soul. But walking away from him may be the most dangerous choice of all.
View MoreThe lock clicked behind me.
It was a small sound sharp, final but it landed in my chest like a verdict. My fingers tightened around the door handle instinctively, my pulse spiking as I twisted it once, twice.
Locked.
I frowned and turned back to the room, forcing calm into my voice. “Why did you lock the door?”
No one answered.
The living room felt suddenly unfamiliar, as if the walls had shifted when I wasn’t looking. The curtains were half drawn, muting the late afternoon light into something gray and lifeless. My aunt sat rigidly on the edge of the sofa, her back too straight, her hands folded so tightly in her lap that her fingers had turned pale. She stared at the carpet like it might open up and swallow her whole.
Marcus, my fiancé stood near the window. He had his phone in his hand, screen dark, his shoulders tense. He wouldn’t look at me.
A knot formed in my stomach.
“Marcus?” I tried. “What’s going on?”
Still nothing.
The silence stretched, thick and heavy, pressing against my ears until I became painfully aware of my own breathing. I took a step forward, irritation beginning to replace my unease.
“This isn’t funny,” I said. “If this is some kind of surprise...”
Footsteps sounded behind me.
They were slow. Deliberate. Not the hurried steps of someone unsure or apologetic, but the measured pace of someone who knew exactly where he was going and why.
My skin prickled.
I didn’t turn right away. Every instinct in my body screamed that once I did, something would change irrevocably. That the life I knew fragile and imperfect as it was, would fracture the moment I met whoever stood behind me.
“Miss Quinn.”
The voice was low and even, smooth without warmth. It carried no curiosity, no hesitation. It wasn’t asking for my attention. It was claiming it.
I turned.
He stood a few feet away, dressed in black from head to toe, as if color had no place in his world. He was tall, taller than Marcus, and broad-shouldered, his presence dominating the space without effort. His face was sharply defined, his expression unreadable, his eyes dark in a way that felt unsettling rather than merely intense.
Behind him stood two men, silent and imposing, their jackets unable to fully conceal the outlines of weapons beneath them.
My mouth went dry.
“Who are you?” I asked.
He stepped forward, each movement unhurried, and placed a thick folder on the coffee table between us. The sound it made when it hit the wood was soft, but it echoed in the room.
“Dominic Voss.”
The name hit me like a punch to the gut.
I had heard it before. Everyone had. It existed in whispers, in half-finished sentences that trailed off when someone else entered the room. A name connected to power, money, and things people didn’t talk about openly. A name that never appeared in the same news article twice because the articles always disappeared.
I swallowed.
“I think you’re in the wrong place,” I said, straightening my spine. “This is a private matter.”
His gaze lingered on me for a moment, assessing, calculating, as if he were looking at an object rather than a person.
“This matter stopped being private the moment payments ceased.”
My heart began to race. “Payments for what?”
He opened the folder.
Inside were documents dozens of them. Bank statements. Contracts. Legal forms stamped with seals I didn’t recognize. My name appeared again and again, printed neatly at the top of pages I had never seen before.
“You owe thirty-two million,” Dominic said calmly.
I laughed a short, disbelieving sound. “That’s ridiculous.”
“Is it?”
“I don’t have that kind of money. I’ve never borrowed anything close to that.”
“You didn’t,” he replied. “Your fiancé did.”
My head snapped toward Marcus. “What?”
Marcus flinched but still didn’t look at me.
Dominic continued as if we weren’t interrupting him. “The loan was taken eighteen months ago. High interest. High risk. Your aunt acted as guarantor.”
I turned to her. “Aunt Lydia?”
Her lips trembled. “Elara, I—”
“No,” I said sharply. “You don’t get to explain this away.”
My chest felt tight, my breaths shallow. “Marcus,” I demanded, “tell him he’s wrong.”
Marcus finally looked at me.
His eyes were bloodshot. Guilty.
“I meant to fix it,” he said quietly. “Just needed more time.”
The room spun.
“Fix what?” I whispered.
“The debt,” Dominic answered. “Which has now defaulted.”
I took a step back. “That still doesn’t involve me.”
“In my world,” he said evenly, “it does.”
He slid one of the documents toward me.
“Upon default,” he continued, “responsibility transferred to the next legal beneficiary.”
I stared at the paper, dread pooling in my stomach. “That’s not how debt works.”
“It is when the guarantor signed this.”
He tapped a line on the page.
My name.
My signature.
Forged.
“This is fake,” I said, my voice shaking. “I never signed this.”
“I know,” Dominic replied.
Something in his tone made my blood run cold.
“You knew?” I asked. “Then why—”
“Because consent,” he said, “was never required.”
I shook my head. “I won’t be sold.”
The words came out sharp, instinctive.
Dominic stood.
He was close now. Too close. I could smell his cologne—clean, sharp, expensive. His height forced me to tilt my head up to meet his gaze.
“You already are,” he said quietly.
My pulse thundered in my ears.
“No,” I whispered.
“Yes.”
His eyes were steady, unblinking, as if he had already won.
And in that moment, something inside me cracked—not loudly, not completely, but enough for fear to seep in.
Because I realized something then.
This wasn’t about money.
This was about ownership.
The morning light grew stronger as the hours passed, spilling through the cracked windows of the safehouse and turning the floating dust in the air into soft golden particles.The world outside was alive now.Cars moved along the distant streets. The occasional siren echoed faintly across the river. Somewhere nearby, a cargo truck rumbled past the old warehouse district.But inside the safehouse, everything felt strangely still.Elara sat at the small wooden table, staring at the cooling coffee in her mug.Her body had finally started to relax after the long night, but the exhaustion that followed felt heavier than the battle itself.Dominic was across the room, standing near the window with his arms folded, watching the quiet street below.He hadn’t said much since they finished reviewing the news.Elara studied him for a moment.He looked calm, as always.But she had spent enough time around him now to recognize the subtle signs beneath the surface.His shoulders were tighter than u
The city was still waking when the first wave hit.Elara didn’t see it at first.From the outside, the safehouse looked like any other abandoned building tucked between warehouses near the river. Its cracked brick walls and broken windows hid the quiet tension inside.But the world beyond those walls was exploding.She stood near the narrow kitchen window, watching the pale light of morning creep over the skyline. The river reflected the dawn in dull silver streaks, and a thin fog hung low over the water.Behind her, Dominic sat at the small wooden table with a tablet in front of him.The room smelled faintly of dust and strong coffee.Elara wrapped both hands around her mug, absorbing the warmth. Her body still ached from the fight at the terminal. Bruises were beginning to bloom along her ribs and shoulder, and exhaustion pressed down on her like gravity.But it wasn’t the pain that kept her quiet.It was the realization of what they had done.“Anything new?” she asked without turni
The black sedan slipped quietly through the sleeping city.Streetlights passed over the windshield one by one, their pale glow sliding across Dominic’s face before disappearing again into darkness.The road ahead was almost empty, only the occasional distant car and the faint hum of traffic somewhere beyond the river.Inside the car, the silence felt heavy.Not uncomfortable.Just… full.Elara kept both hands on the steering wheel, but her shoulders finally began to loosen as the adrenaline drained from her body. Hours of tension, gunfire, alarms, the near collapse of the servers, had finally caught up with her.Her hands trembled slightly.She hadn’t noticed until now.Dominic noticed.He didn’t say anything at first. He simply watched her for a moment before lowering his gaze to the tablet in his lap.The screen lit the car with a soft blue glow.Information scrolled endlessly.Elara glanced sideways.“You’re awfully quiet.”Dominic didn’t answer immediately. His thumb moved slowly
The maintenance tunnel smelled like rust and damp concrete.Elara dropped lightly onto the metal ladder first, boots clanging softly against the rungs as she descended into the darkness below the server chamber. Cold air drifted upward, carrying the stale scent of old machinery and standing water.Behind her, Dominic slid the access panel shut, sealing the server room above them.The moment it clicked into place, the distant sound of boots echoed through the floor.They had reached the chamber.Elara glanced up.“Perfect timing.”Dominic started down the ladder.“Move.”She didn’t need to be told twice.At the bottom of the ladder, a narrow service corridor stretched out into darkness. The only light came from a few flickering maintenance bulbs spaced along the ceiling.The tunnel looked ancient, cracked pipes running along the walls, old wiring hanging loose from brackets.Elara raised her rifle and started forward.Their footsteps echoed softly in the confined space.Behind them, th
Morning with Dominic was nothing like crisis with Dominic.I learned that in the space between waking and moving, that fragile, golden stretch where the world hasn’t yet remembered to demand anything.I woke before him, which surprised me. He was usually precise even with rest, rising at controlled
Love doesn’t always arrive like lightning.Sometimes it arrives like warmth, gradual, undeniable, until you realize you’re no longer cold anywhere.We didn’t leave the terrace when the dance ended. Neither of us wanted to be the one to break the stillness. My hands were still resting lightly at the
Every system needs a counterweight.Without one, power tilts, then slides, then crushes whatever stands beneath it. Markets call it correction. War calls it retaliation. Dominic calls it balance.I was beginning to understand that balance, with him, never meant peace. It meant controlled force appl
There are visible borders: fences, firewalls, armed guards, encrypted gates.And then there are invisible ones; the lines people draw inside themselves when they finally decide who they are willing to stand beside when pressure stops being theoretical.Day three of acquisition pressure felt quieter






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