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Chapter 5 — "Damon Kincaid"

Author: Ricardo
last update publish date: 2026-06-02 03:16:17

The room smelled like a hundred different perfumes layered over champagne and the faint chemical tang of the ballroom's industrial carpet cleaner. Aurelia's speech had ended seven minutes ago. Her hands were still shaking under the table.

She pressed her palms flat against her thighs—black silk, the dress she'd bought specifically because Lucian would hate it. Backless. Red. The color of a warning. The color of *look at me now, you coward.*

She'd felt his eyes on her the entire time she spoke. Front row. His glass had shattered in his hand when she mentioned living through the worst year of her life and building something from the wreckage. The sound had carried. A server had rushed to clean it up. Aurelia hadn't looked at him once.

She was looking at him now.

Not on purpose. Her gaze had drifted across the ballroom while she pretended to read the auction catalogue—the glossy pages blurring as she tracked movement in her peripheral vision. Lucian stood near the bar, his jacket off, his shirtsleeve rolled up to reveal a bandage wrapped around his palm. He was staring at her. Unmoving. Like a dog who'd been hit and couldn't understand why.

Cassandra stood beside him. Her hand was wrapped around his bicep like she was afraid he'd bolt. She was talking. He wasn't listening.

Aurelia's stomach turned over.

*Stop looking. You're not that girl anymore.*

She forced her eyes down to the catalogue. Read the same line three times—*Lot 47: A weekend at the Kincaid Estate, Napa Valley*—before the words stopped swimming.

"I'm sorry to interrupt."

The voice came from her right. Low. Unhurried. The kind of voice that didn't ask permission to exist in a space.

Aurelia looked up.

He was tall. That was the first thing she registered—the way he seemed to occupy more vertical space than the men around him, even seated. Dark hair silvering at the temples, clean-shaven, a jaw that looked like it had been carved from granite by someone with a grudge. Gray eyes. Pale, winter-sky gray, catching the chandelier light and throwing it back colder than it arrived.

He wore a charcoal suit that fit like it had been made for him—which it probably had—and no tie. The top button of his shirt was undone. A deliberate choice. The kind of detail that said *I don't need to impress anyone here, least of all you.*

He was holding a glass of amber liquid. Bourbon, maybe. One large hand wrapped around the crystal like he was testing its weight.

"Do I know you?" Aurelia asked.

"No." He pulled out the chair across from her—slow, deliberate, his eyes never leaving hers—and sat down without waiting for an invitation. "But I know who you are. Aurelia Chen. Founder of NovaTech. Took a prototype built in a storage unit to a Series B valuation of forty-seven million in eighteen months."

She blinked. "You've done your research."

"I always do." He set the glass down on the table between them. His fingers didn't leave it. "The pediatric prosthetics division. You funded it personally from the first prototype sale."

"I'm aware of my own company's structure."

"I'm sure you are." A ghost of a smile. Barely there, then gone. "I'm also aware that you don't give interviews. Don't attend industry events. Don't let people photograph you. In fact, your company's website lists a *Haruko Tanaka* as the public-facing CEO nominee, with you as—" he paused, the smile flickering again, "—'lead engineer.'"

"Nominee implies it went through. She *is* CEO."

"For the last eight months. Registered address change, Delaware corporate filing, August 12th." He took a sip of his bourbon. Swallowed. "You stepped down. Quietly. No press release. The Board wondered why."

Aurelia's chest tightened. "You talked to my Board?"

"I talked to a lot of people." He leaned back in his chair, crossing one leg over the other. The movement was unhurried. Fluid. The kind of ease that came from knowing he couldn't be stopped. "Most of them didn't know they were talking to me."

She should have been angry. A stranger, sitting at her table, running background checks on her company like she was a target. Instead, she felt something colder—a prickle of interest, sharp and unwelcome.

"Who are you?" she asked.

"Damon Kincaid."

The name landed like a stone in still water. She knew it. Everyone knew it. Kincaid Group was a holding company that owned stakes in half the tech infrastructure on the East Coast. Logistics, manufacturing, defense contracts. The man himself was famously reclusive—no interviews, no social media, no photographs that hadn't been taken from thirty feet away.

And he was sitting across from her, drinking her table's bourbon, asking questions about her Board.

"You're a long way from the defense sector, Mr. Kincaid."

"Am I?" He tilted his head. "You manufacture prosthetic limbs. Precision engineering. Biocompatible materials. Supply chain logistics that span three continents. I'd say we're in the same neighborhood."

"We're not. You build weapons. I build hands for children who lost theirs."

"Both require titanium alloys, microprocessors, and regulatory compliance that changes every eighteen months." He said it flatly, like a fact he'd memorized. "Both have margins that would make most industries weep. And both—" he leaned forward, his voice dropping, "—require someone at the top who understands what it takes to build something from nothing."

Aurelia held his gaze. "What do you want, Mr. Kincaid?"

"A consultation." He reached into his jacket and produced a card—black, heavy stock, silver lettering. He slid it across the table. "My private line. Yours doesn't ring unless I'm on the other end."

She didn't touch it.

"I don't do consultations."

"You do now." He stood, buttoning his jacket. The movement brought him closer—close enough that she caught a scent she hadn't registered before. Cedar. Tobacco. Something metallic underneath, like ozone before a storm. "Think about it. You've spent three years hiding from the world that hurt you. I'm offering you a reason to stop."

He turned and walked away.

Aurelia watched him cross the ballroom, weaving through tables and clusters of conversation like they parted for him. He didn't look back. Didn't need to.

She looked down at the card.

*Damon Kincaid*

*A single number in silver lettering.*

*No title. No company name. No address.*

Her hand moved before she thought about it, picking up the card. The heat from his touch was still there, transferred through the paper. Or maybe that was her imagination. Maybe she was imagining a lot of things tonight.

She slid the card into her clutch.

And when she looked up, Lucian was still watching her from across the room—his jaw tight, his bandaged hand clenched at his side, his eyes dark with something that looked almost like grief.

She turned away first.

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