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.
Chapter 119: When the Night Finally Softens The safehouse settled deeper into silence as the hours crept toward morning. The city beyond the reinforced windows had quieted, the distant traffic thinning until only the occasional hum of a passing vehicle drifted through the walls. Inside, the monitors glowed steadily, casting soft blue light across the room. Dominic remained at the console, finishing the last system sweep he had promised. But his focus wasn’t entirely on the screens. Every few seconds, his eyes drifted toward the hallway that led to the sleeping area. Where Elara had disappeared. He exhaled slowly and leaned back in the chair. Everything was clear. Every perimeter sensor. Every camera feed. Every internal security protocol. For the first time all night, there was nothing demanding his attention. Yet he still didn’t move. Because the moment he stood up, he knew exactly where he would go. And that realization both amused and unsettled him. Across the hall,
The safehouse lights dimmed automatically as the system shifted into night mode. Outside, the city’s distant glow flickered through the reinforced glass, painting faint patterns across the floor.For the first time in hours, there were no alarms.No warnings.No shadows moving across the monitors.Just quiet.I lay on the narrow bed in the adjoining room, staring at the ceiling, but sleep refused to come. My mind replayed the evening in fragments, Kessler’s traps, the alarms, the tension in Dominic’s voice… and the moment we had almost crossed the line between restraint and something deeper.The warmth of his hand still lingered in my memory; the soft brush of his fingers against my cheek, the brief kiss on my forehead that had sent my heart racing. I turned onto my side with a quiet sigh.Through the open doorway, I could see the faint glow from the control room where Dominic still sat. He had insisted on monitoring the systems for another hour, just in case Kessler decided to make a
The alarms had finally gone silent.For the first time since the night began, the safehouse settled into a deeper quiet. Not the tense silence that came before danger, but the fragile stillness that arrived after exhaustion had burned through every nerve.The monitors glowed softly across the room, their pale blue light washing over the walls and furniture. Outside, the city lights flickered through the reinforced windows, distant and muted.Dominic leaned over the console, scanning the last security reports.“All clear,” he said after a moment, his voice quieter now. “For now.”I exhaled slowly, tension slipping from my shoulders like a weight finally loosening its grip.“For now,” I echoed.He turned toward me.And suddenly the room felt smaller.Not because of danger.Because of him.For a moment neither of us moved. The air between us felt heavy, charged with everything that had been building all night, every interrupted moment, every glance, every brush of skin that had sparked s
The safehouse had fallen into one of those deceptive silences, the kind that feels like the hush right before a storm breaks. The ventilation system whispered overhead, monitors glowed with their steady, indifferent blue, and outside the reinforced walls Dominion City kept its restless pulse.Kessler was still out there, invisible threads of surveillance snaking closer with every failed probe, but for the first time in what felt like days the alerts had gone quiet. No shrieking klaxons. No red strobes. Just the two of us, finally allowed to occupy the same small pocket of space without immediate interruption.We sat on the old leather couch, close enough that our shoulders touched from collarbone to elbow. The contact was constant now, no longer accidental.Dominic’s thigh rested along the length of mine, denim against denim, the faint heat of him seeping through until my skin felt branded. Every slow breath he took lifted his chest against my arm; every exhale stirred the fine hairs












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