FAZER LOGINThe Gilded Cage
TALIA
The estate arrives before I'm ready for it.
We turn off the main road and the city disappears behind. Like it was completely gone, swallowed by tree line and darkness — and then the gates open and I see it.
Glass and steel rising out of manicured ground like something that grew here on purpose. Every light is precise. Every angle is intentional. It is the most beautiful and the most unwelcoming building I have ever seen.
I don't say anything.
Neither does Soren. He's been on his phone since the call. Typing. Reading. Existing in whatever dimension he operates in where other people's crises are just logistics to process and file.
My brother is alive. That's what one of his people confirmed twenty minutes ago. A man in the front seat who spoke into his earpiece and then said the asset is secured and receiving medical attention like my brother Eli is a line item. Like he isn't the person who taught me how to ride a bike and ruined every birthday cake he ever tried to bake me.
The asset. Receiving medical attention.
I stared out the window and didn't cry. I've decided not to cry in front of Soren Vane. That feels like the one boundary I can actually hold.
The inside of the estate is worse than the outside.
Not ugly. No, it’s quite the opposite.
Every room is immaculate and carefully designed with high ceilings, pale stone floors and furniture that looks like it was selected by someone who understood beauty as a concept but not warmth as a feeling. There are no photographs on the walls. No clutter. No evidence that anyone has ever set a coffee cup down carelessly or kicked their shoes off at the door.
A woman named Petra shows me to my room. It's on the second floor. It has its own bathroom and a window seat overlooking grounds I can't fully see in the dark and a bed so large it seems faintly absurd.
"Mr. Vane's room is at the end of the hall," Petra says. Neutral. Professional. "Breakfast is at seven. If you need anything before then there's an intercom by the door."
She leaves. I sit on the edge of the enormous bed in the dress that costs more than my life and look at my phone.
No new messages. The countdown is gone.
It should feel like relief. It almost does– except relief and I have been strangers long enough that I don't quite trust it.
I keep waiting for the next thing. The next Dex. The next buzzing countdown. The next door I walk through by accident into a situation I can't walk back out of.
I think about Eli. Receiving medical attention. I asked Soren if I could see him. He said not yet. Safety reasons — loose ends still being managed. I asked what that meant and he said, ‘Exactly what it sounds like,’ and that was the end of the conversation.
I traded one cage for another. I know this. The bars here are made of better material but they are still bars. Clause 4. Physical proximity. His word is final.
I just signed it. I sat in his suite and I signed it with a shaking hand.
I lie back on the bed still in the dress and look at the ceiling, telling myself to sleep. My body ignores me entirely.
—
By one in the morning, I give up.
The hallway is dim and silent. I move through it in bare feet . Petra had pointed out a closet with things in my size and I'm not asking how that's possible. The house breathes around me. Cool air. Faint hum of systems running somewhere below. The kind of quiet that isn't empty but loaded.
I'm not snooping. I'm just walking. I tell myself that.
The study is at the end of the east wing and the door is open which I decide counts as an invitation. The room smells like paper and something darker — cedar maybe. Or something close.
Bookshelves on two walls. A desk that's almost aggressively large. And on the corner of that desk a manila folder sitting at an angle that catches the light from the hallway.
I should keep walking.
But I stop.
The folder has a tab on the side. A label printed in small clean font.
JETT, T. — Background.
My name.
My full name. My last name. On a folder that already exists on a desk in a house I arrived at two hours ago. On a desk belonging to a man who supposedly found me by accident — a random waitress with a tray of scotch who happened to push the wrong door.
My hand opens the cover before I finish deciding to.
Inside is paper. Several sheets. The first is what looks like a financial summary — numbers I recognize. My debt. Eli's debt. The specific figure that Dex quoted in that cigarette booth. Below it is something that looks like a timeline. Dates. The gala. My name on the staff list. A note in the margin in handwriting I don't recognize yet but will learn:
‘Suitable. Proceed if necessary.’
The floor moves slightly under my feet. Or mabe it was me who moved.
He knew.
He didn't find me by accident. He found me the way he finds everything — deliberately. He researched, priced, evaluated and even filed me under suitable. The bottle in my arms. The wrong door. None of it is wrong at all.
The lights in the hallway shift. Or maybe I imagine it.
I look up.
Soren is standing in the doorway.
He's not in the suit anymore. He is wearing dark trousers and a shirt that's open at the collar and untucked — the first time I've seen him look anything other than constructed. His hair is slightly displaced. He looks like sleep interrupted him, except his eyes are fully awake.
They are alert and fixed on me with an expression that isn't anger but is close enough to make my throat tighten.
He is more dangerous like this. That's the thought that arrives first and stays.
In the boardroom, he was controlled and cold and I could map the edges of him. Here in the half-dark space, he is something else entirely. The kind of dangerous that doesn't announce itself.
He walks toward me slowly. I don't move — there's nowhere to move. The desk is at my back and he fills the space between us down to nothing and stops with his chest almost touching mine.
"Rule number one of our contract Talia." His voice is quiet. That particular quiet that's louder than most people's shouting. "Never go through my things."
I should say something. But my mouth has other plans.
He leans in — not touching. Just close. His breath is warm at my ear and my pulse makes a decision my brain hasn't approved.
"Now." A pause. Deliberate. "Shall we discuss rule number two?" Another pause — long enough to be cruel. "The one about sharing a bed?"
The Gilded CageTALIAThe estate arrives before I'm ready for it.We turn off the main road and the city disappears behind. Like it was completely gone, swallowed by tree line and darkness — and then the gates open and I see it.Glass and steel rising out of manicured ground like something that grew here on purpose. Every light is precise. Every angle is intentional. It is the most beautiful and the most unwelcoming building I have ever seen.I don't say anything.Neither does Soren. He's been on his phone since the call. Typing. Reading. Existing in whatever dimension he operates in where other people's crises are just logistics to process and file.My brother is alive. That's what one of his people confirmed twenty minutes ago. A man in the front seat who spoke into his earpiece and then said the asset is secured and receiving medical attention like my brother Eli is a line item. Like he isn't the person who taught me how to ride a bike and ruined every birthday cake he ever tried t
The Lion's DenSORENThe boardroom is on the thirty-eighth floor and the elevator ride up is forty seconds of silence.I use it to observe.Talia is standing straight. Chin level. Hands loose at her sides — not balled this time, which tells me she made a decision somewhere between the suite and the lobby and chose performance over panic. The dress helps. Mira always delivers. But the dress isn't doing the work her spine is doing right now.She's terrified. I can see it in the slight tension at her jaw and the way she breathes just a fraction too carefully. But if you didn't know to look you wouldn't find it.Interesting.The elevator opens. I put my hand on the small of her back and feel her go rigid for exactly one second before she releases it. Adjusts. Falls into step beside me like she's been doing it for months.Good girl.I don't say it. But I think it.The room is already full when we walk in.Twelve chairs. Nine occupied. Three men standing by the window with coffee they're no
The Devil’s PlanTALIATwo million dollars.I keep staring at those words on page one like they'll rearrange themselves into something that makes more sense. Like maybe I misread. Like maybe it says two hundred or two thousand or anything that doesn't make my brain short-circuit.It says two million.I turn to page four.Clause 4: The Party of the Second Part agrees to maintain physical proximity to the Party of the First Part at all public and private engagements as defined in Schedule A, and shall not be absent from shared residence for a period exceeding twelve hours without prior written consent.I read it twice. Then a third time.Physical proximity. At all times.I turn to page seven.Clause 7: In all matters pertaining to public conduct and private decisions affecting the integrity of this agreement, the judgment of the Party of the First Part shall be considered final and binding.The Party of the First Part is Soren Vane.His word is final. In public and private. In my home —
The Aftermath of a KissSORENThe cameras are still going when I pull back.I count — three seconds, maybe four — enough for the shot to be clean, enough for the story to write itself. Billionaire Soren Vane and Mystery Woman. By morning, it'll be on every entertainment feed that matters, and Cassandra's seventeen seconds of video will be competing with something far more compelling: the Ice King, apparently, has a soft side.I let go of her jaw.The woman doesn't move. It’s like she is frozen, eyes wide, lips parted, and the expression on her face is the kind of shock that comes right before a person either faints or screams. I put my hand on the small of her back, lightly, a gesture that reads as tender to the cameras and functions as a warning.Don't.She doesn't.Good instincts. Or maybe just good fear of response. Either way, useful.I smiled for the cameras, then spoke just three words that would cause chaos before I shut the door.“Meet my fiancée.”And just like I predicted, t
The Wrong DoorTALIAUnknown: 24 hours left. Bring the money or die.A wave of iced chills rolled down my spine and I gulped down the last champagne left on my tray.I can’t die. And I cannot lose my brother.But when a man named Dex sat across from me in a booth that smelled like cigarettes 48 hours ago, and told me in a very calm tone that my brother's debt was now my debt. He said my brother had been stupid enough to put our mother's apartment up as collateral. He'd smiled when he said it. Like it was good news.Like it wasn’t a ruin.I looked around this ballroom, looking for my plan – Marcus Webb.Marcus Webb is a philanthropist, semi-drunk on his third glass of champagne by eight-thirty, and he has a reputation for being sentimental about hard-luck stories. I just need five minutes and enough composure to ask him for a loan without crying. I've been rehearsing the speech in bathroom mirrors all evening.But I couldn’t find him amdist the crowd of expensive perfumes and rich laug







