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ELARA POV
The rain in Seattle didn’t feel like a cleansing shower; it felt like lead. It soaked through my black wool coat, weighing me down until I thought my knees might actually give way on the muddy grass. I stood alone at the edge of the grave. The crowd of "family friends" and business associates had already thinned out, scurrying away to their warm cars as soon as the priest finished the final prayer. They didn’t want to be associated with a sinking ship. They didn't want to be seen with the daughter of a man whose empire had crumbled into a mountain of debt overnight. "Miss Thorne?" I didn't turn around. I knew that voice. It was Mr. Henderson, my father’s longtime attorney. He was the only one who had stayed behind. "The car is waiting, Elara," he said softly. "We should go. We have a lot to discuss, and this isn't the place for it." "There’s nothing left to discuss, is there?" I asked, my voice sounding thin and hollow. I watched the cemetery workers begin to shovel dirt over the mahogany caskets. "The house is gone. The cars are gone. My father made sure of that before he… before they left." Henderson sighed, the sound lost in the wind. "Not everything is gone. But your father’s will is… complicated. Especially given the debt the estate is currently carrying." I finally turned to look at him. My hair was plastered to my cheeks, and my mascara was likely a disaster, but I didn't care. "Just tell me the truth. Am I homeless?" "No," Henderson said, adjusting his umbrella. "But you are twenty. Under the terms of the trust—and given the liquidation of the main properties—you cannot access your remaining personal funds or the scholarship endowment unless you are under the supervision of a designated guardian until you turn twenty-five." I stiffened. "A guardian? I’m an adult, Arthur." "Technically, yes. But your father didn't trust you to handle the vultures currently circling the Thorne legacy. He appointed someone to oversee your living arrangements and your finances. If you refuse, the remaining assets will be frozen to pay off the primary creditors immediately." I hugged my arms across my chest. "Who is it? My Aunt Margaret?" Henderson shook his head, a strange look crossing his face. "No. It’s Alaric Vance." The name hit me harder than the cold. I felt a sharp, familiar ache in my chest—one I had spent three years trying to bury. Alaric Vance. The man who had been my father’s shadow, his most brilliant protégé. The man who had started as an intern and ended up running half the firm before he left to start his own empire. The man I used to follow around like a lost puppy when I was seventeen, back when I used to call him "Uncle Alaric" just to see him smirk. "Alaric left the city years ago," I whispered. "He doesn't even like my father. They had a falling out." "Alaric is the only one with enough liquidity to bridge the debt and the only one your father trusted to be 'mean enough' to protect you," Henderson explained. "He’s already in the city. He arrived this morning." "I don't need a babysitter, Arthur. Especially not him." "Then you’ll have to find a way to pay for your last two years of university on your own, along with the taxes on the remaining family land. Alaric is waiting." I looked back at the grave one last time. I had no choice. I was a Thorne with a name that was now synonymous with bankruptcy, and my only lifeline was the man who had once been the center of my world. The "temporary residence" wasn't a cozy apartment or a modest hotel. It was a glass-and-steel skyscraper in the heart of the financial district. As Henderson’s car pulled up to the curb, I saw a sleek, matte-black SUV idling near the entrance. The rain was coming down in sheets now, blurring the lights of the city. My hands were shaking, and I tucked them under my thighs so Arthur wouldn't see. "I'll leave you here, Elara," Henderson said, handing me a heavy brass key and a folder of documents. "He’s... expecting you." "You're not coming in?" I asked, a sudden wave of panic hitting me. "I have a flight to catch. Be brave, kid. He's fair." I stepped out of the car, my heels clicking on the wet pavement. I felt small against the backdrop of the massive buildings. As I approached the glass doors of the lobby, the door of the black SUV opened. A man stepped out. He didn't use an umbrella. He didn't seem to care that the rain was ruining what looked like a three-thousand-dollar charcoal suit. He stood tall, his shoulders broad, his presence instantly commanding the space around him. Alaric Vance hadn't changed, yet he was entirely different. His jawline was sharper, his expression more settled into a permanent mask of indifference. His dark hair was cut shorter than I remembered, pushed back away from a forehead that seemed perpetually creased with thought. He looked untouchable. He didn't smile. He didn't offer a hug or even a warm greeting. He just stood there, waiting for me to close the distance. I stopped a few feet away from him, my breath catching in my throat. Up close, he smelled like rain and something expensive—sandalwood and steel. "You're late," he said. His voice was deeper than it used to be, a low rumble that vibrated through the damp air. "I was at a funeral," I snapped, my grief momentarily replaced by a flare of irritation. "I didn't realize there was a schedule for mourning." He looked me up and down, his eyes lingering on my shivering frame for a second too long before returning to my face. There was no pity in his gaze. "The world doesn't stop because you're sad, Elara. Your father’s creditors certainly haven't," he said, stepping toward the entrance. He didn't wait for me to respond. He just held the door open with one hand, his other hand shoved deep into his pocket. "Is that all you have to say to me after three years?" I asked, following him into the warm, silent lobby. "I'm not here to be your friend, and I'm definitely not here to offer you platitudes," he said calmly, walking toward the elevator bank. He pressed the button for the top floor. He turned to face me, his height forcing me to tilt my head back. "Are you still going to make me call you Uncle Alaric?" I asked, the old name feeling like a challenge on my tongue. His eyes darkened, a small muscle jumping in his jaw. He leaned in just an inch, enough for me to feel the heat radiating from him. "You can call me whatever you want, Elara. But inside this building, you’ll call me your guardian. And you’ll follow my rules." The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime. Alaric stepped inside and waited, his dark eyes fixed on mine. I hesitated for a moment, looking back at the rainy street. My old life was out there, buried in the mud. Inside this elevator was the man who held the keys to my future—a man who looked at me like I was a task to be managed rather than a person. I stepped into the elevator. Alaric reached out and pressed the button for the penthouse. As the doors closed, he moved to the opposite corner, leaving a wide, cold space between us. He didn't look at me again for the rest of the ride. He just stood there, perfectly still, his reflection in the polished metal of the elevator looking like a stranger I used to know. The elevator climbed higher and higher, leaving the ground behind. When the doors finally opened directly into a sprawling, modern living area, Alaric stepped out first. He walked over to a marble kitchen island, picked up a set of silver keys, and tossed them onto the counter. The sound of the metal hitting the stone echoed in the quiet room. "Your room is down the hall to the left," Alaric said, heading toward a large glass-walled office without looking back. "There’s food in the fridge. Don't wake me up in the morning. I have a meeting at six." He walked into the office and shut the heavy oak door behind him. The click of the lock sounded final.ELARA POV The morning light in the penthouse was unforgiving. It hit the white marble floors and the glass walls with a brightness that made my head ache. I had spent most of the night staring at the door, half-expecting Alaric to walk in and apologize, or at least explain why he had almost kissed me before throwing my status back in my face. Neither happened. I walked into the kitchen, my footsteps sounding too loud in the quiet apartment. Alaric was already there. He was sitting at the breakfast bar, a tablet in one hand and a cup of black coffee in the other. He was already fully dressed—charcoal suit, crisp white shirt, tie perfectly knotted. He looked like the gala and the elevator ride hadn't happened at all. "There’s breakfast in the warmer," he said, not looking up from his screen. "And your schedule for the month is on the counter." I walked past the food and picked up the printed sheet. It was a rigorous block of time. Classes, library hours, gym sessions, and a strictl
ELARA POV The elevator climbed in a silence so heavy it felt like the air had been sucked out of the small space. I watched the floor numbers flicker on the display—70, 71, 72—my heart thumping in time with the soft mechanical hum. Beside me, Alaric stood perfectly still. He had loosened his collar earlier, but he still looked like a man made of stone. The scent of his cologne, a mix of rain-soaked wood and expensive leather, filled the small space, making my head spin. Every time the elevator jolted slightly, our shoulders brushed, sending a jolt through my skin that had nothing to do with the gala. When the doors finally chimed and slid open into the penthouse, I stepped out quickly, needing the open space. The floor-to-ceiling windows showed the city lights stretching out like a sea of diamonds, but the apartment felt darker than usual. "Elara." I stopped in the middle of the living room and turned around. Alaric was right behind me. He hadn't turned on the lights. He stood in
ELARA POV The silence between us after the blowout in his office was thick, but it wasn’t peaceful. It was the kind of silence that felt like a held breath. Alaric didn’t apologize for his coldness, and I didn’t apologize for my outburst. Instead, he simply left a garment bag hanging on my door the following afternoon with a note: Be ready by seven. The dress was emerald silk, floor-length, and probably cost more than my entire first-year tuition. As I stood in front of the full-length mirror, I felt like a fraud. I looked like a Thorne—polished, wealthy, and untouchable. But underneath the silk, I was just a girl living out of cardboard boxes in a stranger’s penthouse. When I stepped into the living room, Alaric was already waiting. He was dressed in a black tuxedo that fit him with agonizing precision. He was checking his watch, but he stopped when he saw me. His gaze travelled from the hem of my dress up to my face, lingering for a second on my lips before his expression smoot
ELARA POV The fourth night at the penthouse felt different. The initial shock of the funeral had worn off, replaced by a dull, aching reality. I had spent most of my days in the study, digging through the cardboard boxes Alaric’s team had salvaged. Every time I touched an old photo or smelled the faint lavender scent of my mother’s scarves, I felt like I was breaking all over again. Alaric was rarely there. He left before the sun came up and returned long after I had retreated to my room. Our only communication consisted of brief, functional texts: *“Dinner is in the warmer,”* or *“The driver will pick you up at three.”* I was headed to the kitchen to dispose of a empty takeout container when I heard his voice. It was coming from his office. The heavy oak door wasn't fully latched, leaving a thin sliver of light spilling onto the hallway carpet. "I don't care about the sentimental value, Marcus," Alaric’s voice was cold, professional, and terrifyingly final. "The market is peaking
ELARA POV The guest room was as cold as the man who owned it. I sat on the edge of the king-sized bed, my fingers tracing the hem of the silk robe I had found in the marble bathroom. Everything in Alaric Vance’s penthouse was shades of slate, charcoal, and glass. It felt more like a gallery than a home, and certainly not a place for someone who had just lost everything. My damp funeral clothes were folded neatly on a chair, a stark reminder of the mud and the graveside I had left just hours ago. I looked at the digital clock on the bedside table. 3:14 AM. The silence of the penthouse was heavy, broken only by the faint hum of the city seventy floors below. I was exhausted, but every time I closed my eyes, I saw the mahogany caskets and the cold, unyielding expression on Alaric’s face. Restless, I stood up and padded softly toward the kitchen. I needed water. My throat felt like it was lined with sandpaper. I didn't turn on the lights. The moonlight streaming through the floor-to
ELARA POV The rain in Seattle didn’t feel like a cleansing shower; it felt like lead. It soaked through my black wool coat, weighing me down until I thought my knees might actually give way on the muddy grass. I stood alone at the edge of the grave. The crowd of "family friends" and business associates had already thinned out, scurrying away to their warm cars as soon as the priest finished the final prayer. They didn’t want to be associated with a sinking ship. They didn't want to be seen with the daughter of a man whose empire had crumbled into a mountain of debt overnight. "Miss Thorne?" I didn't turn around. I knew that voice. It was Mr. Henderson, my father’s longtime attorney. He was the only one who had stayed behind. "The car is waiting, Elara," he said softly. "We should go. We have a lot to discuss, and this isn't the place for it." "There’s nothing left to discuss, is there?" I asked, my voice sounding thin and hollow. I watched the cemetery workers begin to shovel di







