LOGINThe power dies at 8:17 PM.
Not flickers. Not a brownout. Dies. One second I’m arguing with Chicago’s CMO over Slack about font weights — because apparently billion-dollar deals hinge on whether “Meridian” is bold or semibold — and the next, the entire 47th floor goes black. The emergency lights kick in half a second later, bathing everything in that sickly, apocalypse-green glow. My monitor goes dark. The city outside the windows doesn’t. Manhattan keeps glittering like nothing happened, which feels personal. “Goddammit,” I mutter. My laptop battery is at 6%. My phone is at 9%. I’ve been here since 7 AM because the “We’ll keep the lights on” update launches at midnight and I don’t trust anyone else not to break it. “Generator should be online,” Marcus’s voice says from the hallway. He sounds pissed. Marcus always sounds pissed, but now it’s pissed with a purpose. “Stay at your desks. IT’s checking the—” The emergency lights die too. Now it’s just me, the city, and the sound of rain starting to hammer the glass. Great. I fumble for my phone, turn on the flashlight. The beam catches dust motes and the edge of Dominic’s coat — still on the back of my chair. I haven’t given it back. He hasn’t asked for it. We’re in a cold war of wool and plausible deniability. “Marcus?” I call. No answer. Then I hear it. Footsteps. Not Marcus. Too measured. Too deliberate. Dominic appears in the glow of my phone like he was built from the dark. No flashlight. He doesn’t need one. He just knows where things are. “The generator failed,” he says. No preamble. No “are you okay.” Just facts. “Backup to the backup is cycling. Could be five minutes. Could be five hours.” “Fantastic,” I say. “I have a launch at midnight.” “I know.” Of course he knows. He knows everything. He steps closer. The light from my phone catches the rain on the windows behind him, turns him into a silhouette with a city for a halo. He’s still in his shirt from this morning, sleeves rolled up, tie gone. He looks like he’s been fighting the building itself and losing. “You should go home,” he says. “My laptop’s dead. My work’s here. My job’s here.” “It can wait.” “It can’t.” I set my phone down, the light pointing up, turning us into a caravaggio painting — all shadows and sharp lines. “You told me results matter. So I’m getting results.” He’s quiet. Then: “The servers are down, Alina. There are no results to get.” Alina. Not Ms. Reyes. The rain gets louder. It’s not rain anymore. It’s a goddamn monsoon, lashing the windows like it wants inside. Thunder cracks close enough that the glass vibrates. I wrap my arms around myself. The AC died with the power. It’s getting cold fast. “You’re shaking,” he says. “I’m fine.” “You’re lying.” “Wouldn’t be the first time.” It slips out. Too honest. Too sharp. His eyes narrow. “Don’t,” he says. “Don’t what?” “Don’t do that. Don’t turn yourself into a weapon and then act surprised when you bleed.” The thunder rolls again, longer this time. The building groans. I laugh, but there’s no humor in it. “You don’t know me.” “I know you haven’t slept more than four hours a night since you started. I know you re-did the entire onboarding flow because one user in the beta said it felt ‘cold.’ I know you drink oat milk lattes when you’re stressed and black coffee when you’re angry, and you’ve been drinking black coffee for three days.” He steps closer. “I know you tell yourself you’re here for work, but you stayed late on your birthday to fix a bug in the analytics dashboard that no one else even noticed. So no, I don’t know you. But I’m paying attention.” The air is too thin. Or too thick. I can’t tell. “You shouldn’t be,” I say. My voice is barely a whisper. “Why not?” “Because I’m not—” Good. Safe. Who you think I am. I don’t finish. He does it for me. “Not what? Not temporary?” The word hits like the thunder. Temporary. Ethan’s word. The word that started this. I take a step back. My legs hit my chair. His coat is there. I can smell cedar. “You don’t get to do that,” I say. “You don’t get to see me and then act like it doesn’t mean anything.” “I never said it didn’t mean anything.” “Then what does it mean, Dominic?” First name. Out loud. In the dark. It changes the air. He goes still. Completely still. Like I’ve pulled a trigger. “Careful, Alina.” “Of what?” I’m angry now. Not at him. At me. At the plan. At the fact that I’m standing in the dark with Ethan’s father and I don’t want to be anywhere else. “What should I be careful of? Men who say things like ‘I’m paying attention’ and then—” He moves. He doesn’t walk. He closes the distance in one step, like the storm outside is inside him too. His hand is at my jaw before I can breathe. Not grabbing. Not forcing. Just… there. Thumb under my chin, tilting my face up. His palm is warm. Calloused. Real. “You should be careful,” he says, voice low, rough, “of men who are used to getting what they want.” “And what do you want?” I hate that my voice shakes. I hate that I’m not pushing him away. He doesn’t answer. He kisses me. It’s not soft. It’s not asking. It’s a mistake we both make at the exact same time. His mouth is hot, angry, desperate — like he’s been holding his breath since the first day I walked in. Like all that control is a dam and I just said the wrong word. I gasp against him. My hands fist in his shirt. I meant to push. I pull instead. He makes a sound, low in his throat, and his other hand goes to my waist, yanking me against him. The chair hits the back of my knees. My phone light glares up at us, turning everything stark and white and too much. He tastes like coffee and rain and bad decisions. I kiss him back like I’m trying to win something. Like if I do this right, I can rewrite the last month. Rewrite the rooftop. Rewrite Ethan. His teeth catch my lower lip. Not gentle. A warning. Or a promise. My fingers find his tie — no, it’s gone. Just his collar. I grip it anyway, pulling him closer, standing on my toes to meet him. He’s taller, broader, everything Ethan pretended to be. His body is solid, unyielding, and when he presses me back against the desk, I feel the edge bite into my hips. The thunder cracks again. The windows rattle. Or maybe that’s me. His hand slides from my jaw into my hair, fingers tightening. Not enough to hurt. Enough to tell me I’m here. I’m real. Stop running. I don’t. I can’t. I kiss him harder, deeper, until I’m not thinking about plans or revenge or names. Just the heat of him. The way he smells like cedar and storm. The way he says my name against my mouth like it’s a confession. “Alina.” It’s not a question. It’s a goddamn prayer. And then — The lights slam back on. The whole floor floods with white, fluorescent, merciless light. The AC kicks in. The servers beep. The world comes back. We break apart like we’ve been burned. I’m breathing too hard. My lips are swollen. His shirt is wrinkled where I grabbed it. His eyes are black, blown wide, and for one second he looks wrecked. Like I did something to him. He steps back. Once. Twice. He doesn’t say anything. He doesn’t look at me. He just turns and walks away. The elevator dings. The doors open. He gets in. He doesn’t look back. I stand there, in the brutal light, with Dominic Cole’s coat on my chair and the taste of him in my mouth. My laptop chimes. Power’s back. The launch is in three hours. My hands are shaking. I touch my lips. They’re still warm. “Shit,” I whisper to the empty floor. “Shit. Shit. Shit.” The plan wasn’t supposed to go like this. The plan wasn’t supposed to have him kissing me like he’s been waiting his whole life. The plan wasn’t supposed to have me kissing him back like I was. I grab my laptop. I open the Meridian deck. We’ll keep the lights on. The lights are on. And I’m the one in the dark.Ethan didn’t say a word as I dropped to my knees, pulled the briefcase out from behind the trash bin, and aggressively spun the dials back to 0 5 1 2. The click of the latches popping open felt like the sound of a hammer hitting a glass wall."Amelia, what is that?" Ethan asked, kneeling beside me on the plush carpet. His eyes were fixed on the worn leather, his brows furrowed in deep confusion. "I’ve never seen that briefcase in my life.""Because they hid it from you," I said, my voice shaking as I pulled out the thick manila folder and handed it to him. "Your amnesia wasn't an accident, Ethan. Read it. Please, just read it."He took the folder. I watched his gray eyes scan the first page, his expression transitioning from curiosity to absolute bewilderment, and finally, to a terrifying, deadly stillness. The color completely drained from his face. His fingers gripped the edges of the medical papers so tightly that the heavy stock wrinkled and tore under his thumbs."Compound X-72
The morning light filtered softly through the heavy curtains, casting long, golden lines across the master bedroom. I woke up slowly, feeling a deep, comforting warmth wrapped around me. Ethan was still asleep, one of his heavy, muscled arms draped possessively over my waist, pulling my back flush against his bare chest. I listened to the steady, calm rhythm of his breathing. For a few minutes, I just lay there, letting myself believe that the nightmare was finally over. The phantom ache that had lived in my chest for five long years was gone, replaced by the reality of his skin against mine. Slowly, trying not to disturb him, I lifted his arm and slipped out of bed. I pulled on one of Ethan’s oversized white button-down shirts, the cotton smelling wonderfully of his cologne, and walked out into the quiet hallway. He looked so peaceful asleep, the hard, stressed lines completely erased from his face. I wanted to let him rest. After the public explosion at the gala last night, to
The grand ballroom of the Plaza Hotel was a sea of glittering diamonds, expensive Outfits, and fake smiles. It was the night of the Smith Enterprises welcoming gala, the event meant to solidify Ethan’s return and cement his future merger with the Vance family. I stood near a towering pillar, feeling completely invisible. Ethan had insisted I attend. He had instructed his staff to deliver a dress to my room—a breathtaking, emerald-green gown that fit me perfectly, draping over my curves like a second skin. But no matter how expensive the dress was, I still felt like a girl from the wrong side of the tracks playing dress-up. Across the room, Ethan was surrounded by a crowd of wealthy investors and politicians. He looked magnificent in a classic black tuxedo, his jaw set, his gray eyes scanning the room with his usual cold authority. Standing tightly by his side was Chloe. She wore a dramatic white gown that looked suspiciously like a wedding dress, her hand wrapped possessivel
The morning after the kiss, the mansion felt even colder, filled with an awkward, heavy silence. I spent most of the day hiding in my guest room, staring out at the manicured gardens and playing the memory over and over in my head. His lips had been so desperate. He had kissed me like a man drowning, reaching for a lifeline he couldn’t see. But when he ran away, he had locked himself right back behind his walls. By the time night fell, a heavy storm had rolled in over the city. Thunder rumbled in the distance, shaking the large glass windows of the estate. Unable to sleep, I wrapped a soft knit cardigan around myself and slipped out of my room. The house was dark, lit only by the occasional flash of lightning from outside. I made my way down the grand staircase, hoping to find a glass of water or a book to distract my racing mind. As I passed the downstairs living room, I noticed the double doors were slightly ajar. A single, dim lamp cast long shadows across the floor. Fro
The air in the boardroom was suffocating. I sat on the edge of a plush leather chair, feeling utterly out of place beneath the bright, recessed lights. Across the long table sat Ethan, his face was unreadable. To his left was Dylan, who kept pacing the room like a predator, and to his right was Chloe. She was glaring at me with an intensity that could have burned a hole right through my head. Two corporate lawyers in perfectly black suits stood near the window, speaking in hushed, urgent whispers over a laptop. "This is absurd," Chloe finally snapped, her high heels clicking aggressively against the floor as she crossed her arms. "Ethan, darling, why are we delaying the gala press releases for this? She is obviously a delusional scammer. Look at her! She probably looked up your accident records, found a gap in your timeline, and faked a document to get a payday." I kept my chin up, refusing to let her see how much my hands were shaking under the table. "I don't want your money,
The glass tower of Smith Enterprises looked like a giant shard of ice cutting into the gray morning sky. Standing at the entrance, I felt incredibly small. Wealthy businessmen in tailored suits and elegant women in designer dresses pushed past me, flashing sleek security badges to get inside. They all belonged here. I didn't. I smoothed down the front of my only nice outfit—a simple, dark blue dress I usually saved for funerals or job interviews. In my hand, I clutched my handbag like a shield. Inside it, folded neatly, was the marriage certificate. "You can do this, Amelia," I whispered to myself, taking a deep, shaky breath. "He doesn't get to erase you." I walked through the spinning glass doors and into the lobby. The floor was made of polished white marble so clean I could see my own nervous reflection. In the center of the room stood a massive, curved black desk. Behind it sat a receptionist with perfectly styled hair and a headset. "Good morning. Welcome to Smith Ente
The evening news anchor was smiling, the kind of perfect, plastic smile meant to deliver terrible news with a cheerful face. I barely heard the words coming out of her mouth at first. I was sitting on my worn-out sofa, with a mug of chamomile tea cupped between my hands, letting the background n
Six months later, my life looked completely different. For starters, I no longer woke up alone. I opened my eyes slowly one warm morning to find Kane already awake beside me, watching me with that calm, unreadable expression he wore around everyone else. Except now I knew him too well. I could
I should’ve known peace wouldn’t last. Not for us. Not with someone like Adrian still out there. Three days after Kane told me he loved me, we returned to the city for the first time since hiding at the cabin. My father insisted it was necessary. “There’s increased security,” he promised. Kane
Waking up beside Kane felt perfect. For a few peaceful seconds, I forgot about the threats. Forgot about the stalker. Forgot about everything except the warmth of Kane’s arm wrapped around my waist. I lay there quietly, staring at him. He looked different asleep. Softer. Less guarded. The har







