LOGIN⚠️ Contains mature content When the company's helicopter goes down over the Pacific, struggling intern Ariana Tokes never expects to wake up on a deserted island stuck with her domineering and cold billionaire boss, Nathaniel Coop. He’s demanding. He’s used to controlling everything. But the island doesn’t care about money, power or titles. Together, they must fight to survive storms that try to tear apart their shelter, venomous creatures, hunger, and the crushing loneliness of the endless sea. With no rescue in sight, they become each other’s only hope, and the only danger is how close they might get before the world finds them.
View MoreAriana's POV
Today was Tuesday. It was also the three-hundredth day I had spent at Coop Enterprises. I was currently engaged in a very serious task which was the stapling of reports. If you had told the teenage version of me that I would eventually land a position at a multi-billion-dollar global empire, I probably would have laughed in your face. Coop Enterprises was the kind of company people sold their souls to join. The lobby was all glass and expensive looking, the air smelled like expensive cologne. We didn't just make tech here, we made the tech that made the tech. And at the top of it all sat Nathaniel Coop. He was the city’s most eligible bachelor, though "eligible" was a strong word for a man who seemed to have been carved out of a block of ice. I had seen him a few times in the lobby. He was always followed by a wall of security guards and a secretary who looked like she had never eaten junk food in her life. Mr. Coop never looked left or right. He never smiled. He just focused on where he was going like the rest of us were inconsequential beings. "Stapler job again?" I looked up to see Maya leaning over the partition of the cubicle next to mine. Maya was a marketing intern and the only person in this building who didn't make me want to fake my own death to get out of a meeting. "The stapler is a formidable opponent," I said, finally clicking a row of metal into place. Maya laughed. "At least you have a desk. I spent all morning organizing Mr. Henderson’s digital filing system. He has a folder named 'Stuff' with four thousand documents in it.” "At least 'Stuff' is descriptive," I countered, leaning back in my chair. "I’m currently filing 'Project X-24 Alpha.' It sounds like a secret weapon, but it’s actually just a logistics report on office furniture shipments to the Tokyo branch." "Living the dream, Ariana," Maya teased. She glanced toward the elevators. "Did you see him today? The Ice King?" "Mr. Coop? Yeah, I saw the top of his head as he went into the private elevator this morning. He looked very... executive. I think his suit costs more than my college tuition." "He’s handsome, though," Maya mused, popping a raisin into her mouth. "In a 'I might fire you for breathing too loudly' kind of way." "He doesn't even know we exist, Maya. We’re just the background noise in his very expensive life." My phone buzzed on the desk, vibrating against the wood. I glanced at the screen, and my stomach did a slow, unpleasant roll. The screen read: Dad calling. "I have to take this," I said, my voice losing its sarcastic edge. "Go ahead. I'll keep an eye out for the supervisor," Maya said, her expression softening. She knew my relationship with my family wasn't exactly perfect. I stepped into the stairwell, the heavy door muffling the sounds of the office. I waited for the third ring before answering. "Hello?" "You took your time," my father’s voice came through, thick and demanding as always. He didn't say hello. He never did. "I’m at work, Dad. I’m an intern, not the boss. I can't always jump when the phone rings." "Don't give me that smart-mouthed attitude," he snapped. I could hear the clink of glass in the background. It was only 11:00 AM. "I got another notice from the bank. That 'loan' we talked about? I haven't seen the transfer." I closed my eyes and leaned my head against the cold concrete wall. "I sent you half of my paycheck on Friday. I need the rest for rent and groceries. I’m living in a studio the size of a closet, Dad." "You’re working for the richest man in the country. You’re telling me you can’t find a way to get a little extra? A bonus? Something?" The fear I had carried since I was sixteen flickered in my chest, a reminder of why I never argued too loudly. My father wasn't just a man who made bad choices. He was a man who knew exactly how to make me feel small and powerless. "I’ll see what I can do next week," I whispered. "I have to go. My supervisor is looking for me." "Don't forget who looked after you when nobody else would, Ariana. Send the money." He hung up without a goodbye. I stood in the quiet stairwell for a minute, taking deep breaths. I hated that he still had this much power over my mood. I hated that I was working myself to the bone just to fund his habits. But mostly, I hated that I was too scared to tell him no. I wiped my face, straightened my blazer, and headed back to my desk. I needed to focus. I needed to be an efficient intern so I could keep this job and eventually move far enough away that he couldn't find me. When I got back to my station, Maya was buried in her computer, but there was a shadow hovering over my desk. It was Mr. Miller, my direct supervisor. He was a man who loved spreadsheets and generally ignored me unless I made a mistake. Right now, he looked like he had seen a ghost. "Ariana," he said, his voice sounding a little strangled. "Yes, Mr. Miller? Is something wrong with the Tokyo report? I can redo the formatting if—" "Forget the report," he interrupted, wiping sweat from his forehead with a handkerchief. "Pack your things. Or don't pack them. Just... come with me." I blinked, my heart starting to race. "Am I fired? Did I staple something I wasn't supposed to?" "Fired?" Miller let out a nervous, high-pitched laugh. "No. I just got a call from the executive suite. They need a translator for the 2:00 PM flight to Fiji. Apparently, the lead consultant's father had a heart attack, and the backup is stuck in London. HR went through the files and saw you’re fluent in the Southern Dialect." I stared at him. "The Southern Dialect? I mean, yes, my grandmother taught me, but I’ve never used it for business." "It doesn't matter," Miller said, ushering me out of my cubicle. Maya’s head popped up, her eyes wide with shock. "They need someone now. The helicopter leaves from the roof in twenty minutes." "The roof?" I tripped over my own feet. "Mr. Miller, I’m wearing a cheap blazer and I have a half-eaten bagel in my bag. I can't go to a high-level meeting." "You aren't going to a meeting, Tokes. You’re going to the 21st floor." I froze. The 21st floor was a myth to people like me. It was Nathaniel Coop’s personal domain. It had its own security detail, its own air filtration, and, according to office rumors, floors made of literal gold. Only the board of directors and his hand-picked inner circle ever set foot up there. "The 21st floor?" I repeated, my mouth dropping open. "Why?" "Because Mr. Coop is already by the helicopter," Miller said, his voice dropping to a panicked whisper. "And he doesn't like to be kept waiting. If you aren't up there in five minutes, it’s both our heads. Move!" He practically pushed me toward the elevator. It wasn't the regular ones that stopped at every floor to let out tired employees. He swiped a special black keycard against a hidden sensor, and the doors opened to a space lined with dark wood and plush carpeting. "Wait, Mr. Miller!" I said as the doors began to slide shut. "I don't even have a suitcase! How long is this trip?" "Three days," he called out as he vanished behind the closing doors. "Buy what you need on the company card! Good luck, Tokes. Dial down on the sarcasm and try not to say anything stupid!" The elevator lurched into movement. I watched the digital display skip the numbers. 10... 15... 20... When the bell dinged for 21, my stomach stayed on the 10th floor. The doors slid open to reveal a hallway lined with various posh artworks. Silence hung heavy in the air, broken only by the distant, rhythmic thump-thump-thump of helicopter blades spinning on the roof above. Mr. Coop’s secretary was waiting for me, wearing a sharp grey suit. She didn't smile. Not shocking. "Ariana Tokes?" she asked. "Yes?" My voice came out as a squeak. I cleared my throat. "Yes. I'm here for the... translation?" "Follow me," she said, turning on her heel. "Mr. Coop is ahead of schedule. We’re leaving now." I followed her, my mind spinning. Ten minutes ago, I was worried about a stapler. Now, I was being led toward a private helicopter to fly across the ocean with a man who didn't even know my name. We reached a glass door that led to a staircase. As we climbed, the wind began to rage, and the roar of the engines grew louder, vibrating through the soles of my simple flats. We stepped out onto the helipad. The sun was blinding, and the wind whipped my hair across my face. There, standing by the open door of a sleek, black helicopter, was Nathaniel Coop. He was looking at his watch, his brows furrowed in a look of pure impatience. He looked up, his dark eyes landing on me like I was an ant beneath his shoes. He didn't look happy. I wasn't late, was I?Ariana’s POV I gripped the armrests of the plane seat, focusing on my breathing. I was desperately hoping my breakfast wouldn't make a reappearance. After the crash, I’d told myself I would never step foot on a plane again, but Nathaniel had convinced me. He called the crash a fluke, a one-in-a-billion accident that wouldn't happen twice. Still, as the small aircraft dipped toward the turquoise water, my heart was in my throat. The plane touched down on the familiar stretch of sand and slowed to a halt. We climbed down, and almost immediately, the pilot took off again. I watched it disappear into a speck in the blue sky, and for a second, panic flared in my chest. We were alone. Again. Then I looked around. "Nathaniel?" I breathed. The island had been transformed. It wasn't the coarse, dangerous place we had fought to survive in. It looked like a luxury getaway. Near the edge of the tree line, a beautiful open-air pavilion had been set up, draped in soft white linen. There were c
Nathaniel’s POV Two weeks had passed, and for the first time in my life, I truly understood what people meant when they talked about stability.Our days had settled into a rhythm of domestic bliss. Ariana spent her mornings doing her remote data analysis work from the sunroom, her laptop humming as she navigated the spreadsheets for CloudWorkers—her biological father’s company, ironically enough. I went into the office, handled the board, and watched the stock prices continue their steady climb back to record highs.The threats that once loomed over us had lost their teeth and even my mother had shifted her tactics. Once she realized that Ariana was the daughter of a CEO that was doing well for himself, her hostility vanished, replaced by a sudden, frantic interest in wedding planning. It was an emotional whiplash, but I’d take her overbearing "guidance" over her active sabotage any day.The day for the court hearing finally arrived. It was a crisp morning, and as we pulled up to the
Ariana’s POV "What?"The word left both mine and Nathaniel’s mouths at the same time. I sat there, paralyzed, as I looked at the man sitting across from me. James, the CEO of CloudWorkers, was now a full-blown mess. He wasn't just sniffling anymore; he was sobbing into his hands, his shoulders shaking with a grief that looked absolutely unconsolable.People from the surrounding tables were starting to stare. "James, please," my mother whispered, her own eyes red. She looked at me with a pained expression. "Go out for a minute, get some air."James nodded weakly, grabbed his handkerchief, and stumbled toward the exit. I watched him go, my mind spinning. I turned back to Eunice. "How... is this for real? Is this some kind of joke?""It’s no joke, Ariana," she said softly. "Before I left Arthur, I found James again. I found out that he never married. He never moved on. He told me he still loved me and that he regretted his cowardice every single day of his life. I decided to go back to
Ariana’s POV I didn't let him hide under the covers. I kicked them back, wanting to see every inch of him in the moonlight. Nathaniel didn't hesitate; he pulled down his sweatpants, and his cock bounced out, thick and firm. Even in the dim light, I could see the familiar dark, flushed head was already glistening, leaking a small trail of anticipation.He started to stroke himself and I watched his muscles ripple in his arms and chest with every movement. He wasn't being gentle, probably because he was driven by the same hunger I felt. After a few seconds, I couldn't just watch. I reached out, my fingers wrapping around the base of his shaft, feeling the frantic pulse of his heart beneath the skin.He groaned, his head falling back against the headboard. "Ariana," he rasped, his pace quickening. I leaned in, my breath hot against his skin, and began to trail my tongue along the underside, following the vein that throbbed with every stroke.When I felt his body go rigid, his breath hit
Nathaniel's POV I felt sick.It was a deep, oily nausea that pooled in the pit of my stomach. I looked at Ariana, sitting there in the flickering firelight, and all I could see was the shadow of that sixteen-year-old girl waking up in a dingy clinic to find her future had been carved out of her.H
Ariana's POV The moss was a trap. One second I was scrubbing the stubborn green-and-white streak of bird poop off my thermal sleeve, muttering about how much I hated this island, and the next, the world tilted. My heel hit a slick patch of slime, and my feet went flying.Everything happened in a b
Ariana's POV The memory hit me as I stared into the dying embers of our fire. I was twenty-two, standing in the cramped kitchen of my father’s apartment in Greenwich Village. The air smelled of stale coffee and the lemon-scented floor wax he made me use every Saturday."I got the internship, Dad,"
Nathaniel’s POV I am a man who deals in facts, but the fact I was facing right now was unbearable and it was that I was a fucking coward. I had used a young woman’s deepest trauma as a weapon because I couldn't handle my own failure.I stood in the middle of the jungle, my lungs burning. Ariana ha






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