LOGINSophie Steele POV.
I step in.
The water is hot and the pressure remains exactly as I remember it. I feel my shoulders come down gradually. I raise my face to the water and allow it to soak me while I am breathing in and out. The steam thickens around me. The rest of the house and everything within it feels distant from where I am.
I have been here for five minutes when I hear it.
Or should I say I do not hear? That is the problem. I am not even sure. But I know I do not hear the door. I do not hear footsteps. I do not hear anything at all until the curtain shifts.
I spin around with the rapidity of a fan, nearly slipping.
And I nearly scream at what I see…
Dominic stands at the edge of the shower, one hand still holding the curtain back. Did he miss his way here? Or has he been stalking me around, because how do I explain this, that an adult man follows me into the bathroom? To see what exactly? Is it my breasts he has not seen before, because I do not understand. He is staring at me, and I am staring back at him. Neither of us speaks for a long while.
And that's when it happens….
The steam circulates between us.
He looks the same way he did seven years ago in this bathroom and nothing like it at the same time. Yes, he is broader and harder now, alongside the sharper line of his jaw. His chest rises and falls like a steady rush, and his grey eyes that Ethan inherited, which I have spent a good seven years avoiding, are fixed on mine with such depth that my skin itches and feels two sizes too small..
“Get the hell out of here right now,” I almost scream. My voice comes out sharper than the dissatisfaction building within me.
But his reaction wastes the effort I put into the shout.
Does not move an inch. “I did not know you were in here actually.”
“Whatever. Just get your ass out, Dominic.” I look at him. “Please just go. Do not let me do something both of us will regret. You have seen my nakedness again, have you not? I think that should make the rest of your day. Now please move out.”
“Sophie.”
“Do not Sophie me. I said, get out.”
He still does not move, and I detest him for it. I have been screaming here since, and none of it matters to him. He just remains here without flinching, like I am only a noise maker. He says my name like it costs him a lot to pronounce, which I really do hate. I detest that his eyes have not stopped looking at me, though I notice it is only my face he has been focused on, like it is the only part he is interested in, because that makes it harder for me to stay mad at him, or whatever.
My wolf crawls within me, hitting my whole body like a punch against a wall.
The sensation hits violently, suddenly. I flinch, I will not lie. It presses through me with a heat I have not felt in years, pushing and pressing like it wants to dissolve the boundary between my skin and his. It feels senseless, because how can my wolf sense him with such intimacy, like the seven years, the silence, and every careful wall I built mean absolutely nothing to it.
The mate bond. I had managed to curb it and silence it.
I had also managed to reduce it to a distant ache I could schedule around. It had become a feeling I felt occasionally at three in the morning, then buried under work, routine, and the everyday act of raising Ethan. I was so good at burying it, and I had become an expert.
But I am not burying anything at this moment.
Dominic’s eyes shift slightly, a spark moving behind them, and I know his wolf is already active, doing what mine is doing within me. The recognition, the pull, the quiet roaring at him the same way mine is roaring at me.
“Do not,” I mutter, meaning it as a caution, but it comes out like a plea.
He takes one more step forward.
The water bounces off his chest and he does not even blink. He keeps moving slowly in my direction. The steam closes around both of us. My back finds the tiles and I press against them uselessly because there is nowhere to run from this man in front of me, coming close like I am his prey. But then, an embarrassingly sincere part of me is not even sure I want to go anywhere at this point. The fuck.
“You know we shouldn't, right?” I whisper.
“I know,” he responds.
“This is a very terrible idea.”
“I know that too.”
“Dominic.”
He stops right in front of me, close enough that the warmth coming off him is inseparable from the heat of the water. He raises one hand and I go completely still as his fingers brush my jaw, just the tips of them. It feels like he is checking again that I am real, like he is answering a question that has been bothering him through this examination.
My wolf goes mute.
And I know it is not because it is satisfied. It is just because it has already won and it knows it..
I close my eyes, and I feel him lean in immediately. And then his mouth finds mine and seven years of conscious distance collapse in a blink and I stop arguing.
And…
What comes next is not like the dream. The dream was a memory inspired by longing, softened at the edges. But this is nothing like that.
This is fast and immediate, intentional in a way that embarrasses me and undoes me all at once. His hands are in my hair and on my waist, and mine are pressed flat on his chest like I am trying to push him away and pull him closer at the same time. I do not even know what I am thinking right now.
There are no words, no gentleness. Just the two of us, the steam and the water, and the mate bond burning through every nerve ending I have, like it has been waiting for seven years to finally do exactly this.
And suddenly.
His palms slide up my sides, and he knows exactly where they are, not missing a single inch, cupping my breasts. He lifts them as he sucks my nipples hard, drawing a gasp I cannot hold anymore from my throat, and he swallows it with an intense kiss.
I cannot understand why this is so consuming, but I cannot deny that I am not enjoying it.
I arch into him, my legs parting automatically as he presses his cock against my thigh, and I feel the thickness of him. He lifts me slightly, pinning me to the tile, the head of his cock nudging at my entrance, slick and ready, almost slipping in as I whimper against his mouth.
“It is everything I have spent seven good years trying to forget.”
Then a sharp sound emerges from the sink, a bird, I think, perched on the bathroom sink, its wings flapping wildly. We freeze, our hearts pounding like they are about to burst, thinking footsteps are approaching, someone is coming.
Meanwhile, it is just a bird.
And afterwards, the water runs cold.
I come back to myself in pieces. The cold is even helpful in the way it cuts through the heat and the haze, landing me firmly back in reality, which is that I am standing in the east wing bathroom of the Steele family villa on the morning of my stepfather’s funeral, having just made the worst decision of my adult life..
And for a good three seconds, I first press my head against the tile. Then I straighten up.. On the other hand…
Dominic is leaning against the opposite wall, watching me. His chest still rises and falls like a tide. His grey eyes track every movement I make like I am his concern. I do not risk looking at him longer than a second because I cannot afford to.
I walk past him and grab my towel off the rail.
I reach for my clothes.
Then.
His hand closes around my wrist softly.
I stop.
There bathroom is completely quiet except for the last drops of water falling slowly from the showerhead. I stare at his hand around my wrist while I wait for him to speak.
His voice comes out low, like a mutter, but not soft at the same time. A heavy mutter.
“Where is he, Sophie?”
I don't breathe…
Dominic Steele"Everything's here," Lena said quietly, sliding the final folder into her bag as we walked toward the council hall. "Payment records, dates, cross-referenced with Mrs. Harrow's access logs, plus the two additional staff members. It's airtight.""You're certain about the second names.""Confirmed yesterday. One in housekeeping, one in groundskeeping. Both receiving secondary payments from the same property management shell Gerald used for Harrow." She matched my pace. "Three people inside this household, on his payroll, feeding him information for years."I nodded once, pushed open the heavy doors.The council hall was the oldest formal room in the villa, dark wood, high windows, a long table that had hosted every significant pack decision for four generations. Seven chairs around it, six already filled. Gerald sat near the centre, composed, a folder of his own in front of him, looking like a man entirely at ease with whatever was about to happen.Aldric sa
Lena"You're back," I said, not looking up from the file I was organising. "I thought you were in the building until further notice.""I left it with two of Dominic's vetted people," Rowan said, setting his bag down inside the small office off the main hallway. "Council vote is coming faster than expected. He wants me here for that, not standing outside an apartment building watching a car that's already been identified.""Helena Voss's car.""That one." He pulled the second chair around to my side of the desk, which he had no reason to do, which he did anyway, the way he always positioned himself when we worked, close enough to see the documents, not close enough to be accused of anything. "Brief me. Everything you've got on Aldric's contacts, the two undecided council members, Erik's standing."I pulled three folders toward me, opened the first. "Aldric has thirty years on the council, strong relationships with both undecided members, Castellan and Brooke.
Dominic Steele"You need to hear all of it," I said, closing the study door behind her. "Not the version that makes it easier to sit with. All of it."Sophie stood near the desk, arms crossed, already braced for something. She had that stillness she wore when she was preparing to absorb a blow without letting it show. I had learned to recognise it over the past three days. I hated that I had learned to recognise it."Tell me," she said.So I did."Gerald is going to take the question of Ethan's standing to a full council vote. Not the informal version from yesterday's meeting. A formal motion, on record, requiring documentation and proof of the bond." I kept my voice level, factual, the way I delivered anything that needed to be heard clearly rather than softened. "Aldric will support it. Two more council members are already leaning his way. If it passes, you'll be required to appear before the council, prove the bond publicly, and Ethan's status becomes a matter of
Vivienne Steele"Close the door, Gerald."He did, then turned from the door with the ease of a man who had never once in his life walked into a room and felt unwelcome in it. He looked at me across Richard's study, took in the fact that I was seated behind Richard's desk, not in front of it, assessed this, adjusted."Vivienne." He settled into the chair across from me, crossed one leg over the other, relaxed. "You look like you haven't slept.""I haven't," I said. "Sit properly, please. This isn't a social visit."Something shifted in his expression, and I could easily tell it was not an alarm. Gerald did not alarm easily. A recalibration, the adjustment of a man who had expected a different kind of room, a different Vivienne, the one he had been managing successfully for thirty-four years."You called Helena Voss," I said.He didn't flinch. "I reached out to someone who has an interest in how this situation resolves. That's not unusual.""Helena Voss," I repeated, "aba
Dominic Steele"Helena Voss," Lena repeated over the phone, her voice stripped of everything except information. "The car is registered to a property holding company she set up six years ago. It's her current legal name, her current address in the registration. She's been using Erik's network, not Gerald's. Separate line entirely.""They know each other," I said."I'm finding the connection now. It goes back further than Gerald. She was involved with the Steele family commercially before she married Richard. She may have had a relationship with Gerald that predates everything."I stood at the window of Richard's study, the house dark outside, the grounds empty. "Does Sophie know yet?""Lena sent her the message twenty minutes ago," Rowan cut in on the second line. "The woman hasn't approached the building. She's watching. Just watching.""Keep your eyes on her," I said. "Don't move on her yet. I want to know what she's doing before we spook her into doing it faster
Sophie Steele"Mummy!"The voice came through before I'd even gotten the phone fully to my ear, loud enough that I had to adjust my grip, loud enough that I felt the sound land somewhere warm in my chest before I'd processed a single word."Hi, baby." I stepped further into the garden, away from the villa's windows, away from anything that needed my attention for the next few minutes. "Are you being good for Miriam?""I'm always good," Ethan said, with the complete confidence of someone who had never once considered an alternative possibility. "When are you coming home?""Soon," I told him. "I have a few more things to finish here.""What things?""Grown-up things.""That's not an answer," he said, which was true, and also exactly the kind of thing he'd started saying lately, picked up from somewhere, deployed with devastating accuracy.I laughed. "You're right. It's not.""Did you eat your vegetables?" he asked, switching topics with the speed only a six-year-old could
Rowan Ashby"He's still there," I reported Miriam, standing at the apartment window at an angle that kept me out of the sightline from the street below. "Same position, hasn't moved in forty minutes."Miriam came to stand beside me, looked down without getting close to the glass
Lena’s POV"You didn't eat this morning," I told Sophie when I found her in the small sitting room off the east corridor, her coffee untouched, her eyes on the window.She looked at me. "How do you know that?""Because I know what was on the breakfast table, how long you were in
Sophie Steele"You don't have to say anything," Dominic told me outside the meeting room door. "You just have to be in the room.""Why?" I asked."Because Gerald wants you absent," he replied. "So you're going to be present."He opened the door.I walked in.The room held eight peo
Gerald Steele"She's gone," my assistant confirmed over the phone. "Left before five this morning, and took one bag.""Did she speak to anyone before leaving?""Not that we observed.""Thank you." I ended the call, set the phone face down on the breakfast table, and picked up







