MasukLena left the yacht party before it returned to the marina.
Or rather, she tried to.
The problem with yachts was that dramatic exits required cooperation from the sea.
She settled instead for retreating to the lower lounge, where the music was softer and the guests were fewer. The room was lined with cream leather seating and dark wood panels polished to a mirror shine. A bowl of untouched fruit sat on a glass table. Outside the narrow windows, the water looked black.
Her hands were still shaking.
She hated that.
She hated Nicholas for causing it.
She hated herself more for giving him the satisfaction.
A server entered quietly. “Can I get you anything, miss?”
“No, thank you.”
The server hesitated. “Mr. Ethan asked that I check on you.”
Of course he had.
Lena softened. “I’m all right. Thank you.”
The server left.
Lena took out her phone.
Three missed texts from Maya.
You alive?
Your location is moving, which is rude.If you’ve been kidnapped by wealthy people, send a punctuation mark.Despite everything, Lena smiled faintly.
She typed back.
I’m okay. Long story. Nicholas is here.
The reply came almost immediately.
Nicholas who?
Lena stared at the screen.
Then Maya’s next message appeared.
No.
Then:
Lena. NO.
Then:
Call me as soon as you can. Do not be alone with him. Do not drink anything he gives you. Do not let him talk you into a corner.
Lena’s throat tightened.
Maya remembered everything.
The first time Lena introduced Nicholas to her, Maya had been polite but unconvinced. Later, when Nicholas left, Maya confessed that she had never liked how he listened to Lena, as though collecting weaknesses for future use.
Lena had laughed then.
She had not laughed later.
Footsteps approached.
She looked up quickly, expecting Ethan.
It was Alexander.
Of course.
He paused at the entrance, one hand resting on the doorframe.
For a moment, neither spoke.
Then Lena looked back at her phone. “If you’re here to discuss my professionalism again, I’d prefer to schedule it during business hours.”
“I deserved that.”
The admission surprised her enough to make her look up.
Alexander entered but did not sit. He remained several feet away, as though the distance had been measured.
“I handled that badly,” he said.
Lena’s laugh was soft and bitter. “That is one way to describe it.”
His jaw tightened, but he accepted the blow. “I should not have spoken to you that way in front of guests.”
“No. You shouldn’t have spoken to me that way at all.”
He said nothing.
That silence irritated her more than an argument would have.
“Do you know what the worst part is?” she asked. “For a moment, I thought you actually had a legitimate concern. I thought maybe I had missed something, maybe there was some protocol I didn’t understand. But no. You were jealous.”
The word hung between them.
Alexander’s face closed. “That’s not what this was.”
“No?”
“No.”
“Then say it.” She stood. “Look me in the eye and tell me you would have reacted the same way if those men had been gathered around anyone else. If Ethan had spent the evening introducing another woman around the deck, would you have marched across the room and accused her of becoming an event?”
Alexander’s silence changed.
It became answer enough.
Lena shook her head. “You had no right.”
“I know.”
Again, the admission landed unexpectedly.
She looked at him carefully.
He seemed different here than he had on the deck. Still controlled, still unreadable, but something in him had lowered. Not enough to make him safe. Enough to make him human.
“Why are you here?” she asked.
His gaze sharpened slightly. “Nicholas.”
The name moved through the room like a draft.
Lena looked away. “What about him?”
“What did he do to you?”
Her spine stiffened. “That is not your concern.”
“He upset you.”
“That still does not make it your concern.”
“It does if he intends to interfere with the wedding.”
There it was.
The business reason.
The safe reason.
The only reason a man like Alexander could permit himself to show concern.
Lena smiled without warmth. “Of course. The wedding.”
His expression flickered.
“That isn’t what I meant,” he said.
“Isn’t it?”
“No.”
She wanted to believe him.
That made her angry.
“Nicholas and I dated,” she said finally. “It ended badly. That’s all you need to know.”
Alexander’s eyes darkened. “Did he hurt you?”
The question was quiet.
Too quiet.
Lena looked at him then, truly looked.
There was no curiosity in his face. No gossip. No judgment.
Only something controlled with difficulty.
“He ruined things,” she said. “Not loudly. Not obviously. He was too clever for that.”
Alexander waited.
Lena hated that too. The waiting. The patience. The space he gave her to continue or stop.
She chose to stop.
“I rebuilt my business after him,” she said. “This contract matters because I refuse to keep living inside the damage someone else caused.”
Alexander’s gaze held hers.
For once, he did not give an instruction. Did not correct. Did not command.
He simply said, “I understand.”
“No,” Lena said softly. “You don’t.”
A shadow moved across his face.
“Maybe not.”
The yacht shifted slightly beneath them.
From above, laughter rose and faded.
Lena’s phone buzzed again in her hand. She looked down.
Maya.
CALL ME. I am not joking.
Lena exhaled.
“I need to call my friend.”
Alexander stepped back immediately. “Of course.”
He reached the door, then stopped.
“Miss Hart.”
She looked at him.
“I apologize.”
She nodded once.
He left.
Lena sank back into the sofa, phone pressed against her palm, heart beating harder than she wanted to admit.
When she called Maya, her friend answered on the first ring.
“What happened?”
Lena closed her eyes. “He’s here.”
“Nicholas?”
“Yes.”
“Did he touch you?”
“No.”
“Did he threaten you?”
Lena hesitated.
Maya went silent.
That was all the answer she needed.
“What did he say?”
“Nothing direct. Just enough.”
“Lena.”
“I know.”
“No, I don’t think you do. He’s Celeste’s cousin. Celeste is marrying Alexander. Alexander’s family is your client. Nicholas doesn’t even have to lie loudly. He only has to suggest things.”
“I know.”
“And what about Ethan?”
Lena rubbed her forehead. “Ethan knows Nicholas is connected to me somehow.”
“How?”
“He saw my face.”
“Great. So now Brother Charming is emotionally invested.”
“Maya.”
“And Brother Iceberg?”
Lena did not answer quickly enough.
Maya groaned. “Lena.”
“What?”
“No.”
“I didn’t say anything.”
“You didn’t have to. I heard the silence.”
Lena leaned back. “Alexander apologized.”
“Oh, dangerous.”
“People apologize.”
“Not men like him unless they want something or feel something. Either way, dangerous.”
Lena looked toward the doorway Alexander had left through.
“He was different.”
“That is how it starts.”
“What?”
“The moment when the rude man becomes wounded instead of rude.”
Lena smiled faintly despite herself. “You should write warnings for romance novels.”
“I am trying to keep you from becoming one.”
Too late, Lena thought.
But she did not say it.
Upstairs, Alexander returned to the main deck and found Ethan waiting near the stairs.
His brother’s expression was no longer playful.
“What did you say to her?” Ethan asked.
Alexander’s gaze cooled. “Be careful.”
“No, you be careful.” Ethan stepped closer. “You embarrassed her tonight.”
“I apologized.”
That stopped Ethan for half a second.
Then his eyes narrowed. “You apologized.”
“Yes.”
“To Lena.”
Alexander’s jaw tightened. “Don’t make it sound remarkable.”
“It is remarkable. You once sent a handwritten note to a prime minister that said, ‘Your concerns have been noted,’ and considered that emotional outreach.”
“This conversation is over.”
“No, it isn’t.”
Alexander tried to move past him.
Ethan blocked him.
The two brothers stood close now, their similarities suddenly clearer. The same height almost, though Alexander was slightly taller. The same dark eyes. The same strong features inherited from a family that had been photographed for generations.
But where Ethan wore emotion openly, Alexander buried his so deep it came out as frost.
Ethan lowered his voice. “What are you doing?”
“Nothing.”
“Liar.”
Alexander’s eyes flashed.
Ethan did not back down. “You’re engaged.”
“I’m aware.”
“Then act like it.”
The repetition hit Alexander harder than Ethan knew.
Lena had said the same thing.
Ethan saw the reaction.
His expression shifted. “She said that to you.”
Alexander said nothing.
Ethan laughed once, but there was no humor in it. “God. You are unbelievable.”
“Do not start.”
“No, I think I will.” Ethan’s voice sharpened. “You don’t want her, but you don’t want anyone else near her. Is that it?”
Alexander’s face went cold. “Watch your mouth.”
“Or what? You’ll fire me too?”
“You’re acting like a child.”
“And you’re acting like she belongs to you.”
Alexander stepped closer. “She does not belong to anyone.”
“Good,” Ethan said. “Then stop looking at her like you forgot.”
For one second, the sound of the party disappeared between them.
Alexander’s hands curled slowly at his sides.
Ethan’s eyes did not leave his.
Then Celeste appeared behind them.
“There you both are.”
The brothers turned.
Celeste’s gaze moved from Ethan to Alexander. She smiled, but it did not reach her eyes.
“Are we having a family disagreement?”
Ethan’s charm returned like a curtain dropping. “Always. It’s how we show affection.”
“How touching.”
Alexander looked toward the crowd, where Nicholas stood speaking with Lady Beatrice now.
His expression hardened.
Celeste followed his gaze.
“Nicholas seems pleased to be here,” she said.
“He usually is when there’s trouble,” Ethan muttered.
Celeste looked at him sharply. “Meaning?”
“Meaning your cousin has the emotional depth of a champagne flute.”
Celeste’s smile thinned. “Be careful, Ethan. Nicholas is family.”
“So is Alexander. I’m careful with neither.”
She turned to Alexander. “My mother is asking for you.”
Alexander looked once toward the lower deck stairs.
Then he followed Celeste.
Ethan remained where he was, staring after him.
For the first time that evening, Ethan Vale looked less like the charming younger brother and more like a man who had just realized he was standing in the path of something inevitable.
And it was heading straight for Lena.
The Vale estate stood beyond the city like a place that had refused to be touched by time.It was not a house.It was a declaration.Iron gates opened onto a long private drive bordered by ancient trees, their branches arching overhead like the ribs of a cathedral. Beyond them, the manor rose from manicured grounds in pale stone and dark glass, old-world architecture fused with modern severity. Warm lights glowed from tall windows. A fountain whispered somewhere beyond the circular drive.Lena sat in the back seat of the car and reminded herself to breathe.Maya had called twice before she left.The first call was practical.“Keep your phone charged. Send me the address. Don’t accept any drink you didn’t see poured.”The second call came fifteen minutes later and was less practical.“Also, don’t let Alexander Vale stare you into forgetting common sense.” Lena had nearly choked on her water.“He does not stare me into anything.”“Good. Repeat that until it becomes true.”Now, as the ca
By the time Lena got home, it was nearly two in the morning.Her apartment was dark except for the small lamp Maya had left on in the living room.Maya herself was asleep on the couch, still wearing jeans, one arm tucked under her cheek, a blanket half-pulled over her legs. The television had gone into screensaver mode, filling the room with slow-moving colors.Lena stopped in the doorway.Warmth pressed unexpectedly against her chest.Maya had waited.Of course she had.Lena quietly slipped off her heels.Maya opened one eye. “Are you alive?”“Barely.”“Did you bring snacks?”“No.”Maya sat up. “Then this friendship is under review.”Lena laughed softly, but the sound thinned as soon as it left her.Maya noticed.She pushed the blanket aside. “Come here.”That was all it took.Lena crossed the room and sank onto the couch beside her. For a moment, she said nothing. Then the night began spilling out in pieces.The yacht.Ethan.Alexander’s confrontation.Nicholas appearing on the side
Lena left the yacht party before it returned to the marina.Or rather, she tried to.The problem with yachts was that dramatic exits required cooperation from the sea.She settled instead for retreating to the lower lounge, where the music was softer and the guests were fewer. The room was lined with cream leather seating and dark wood panels polished to a mirror shine. A bowl of untouched fruit sat on a glass table. Outside the narrow windows, the water looked black.Her hands were still shaking.She hated that.She hated Nicholas for causing it.She hated herself more for giving him the satisfaction.A server entered quietly. “Can I get you anything, miss?”“No, thank you.”The server hesitated. “Mr. Ethan asked that I check on you.”Of course he had.Lena softened. “I’m all right. Thank you.”The server left.Lena took out her phone.Three missed texts from Maya.You alive?Your location is moving, which is rude.If you’ve been kidnapped by wealthy people, send a punctuation mark.
By Saturday evening, Lena had changed outfits three times and regretted every decision that had led her to standing in front of her mirror at six-thirty.The first dress felt too eager.The second looked too formal.The third was simple enough to be safe, which somehow made it feel more dangerous.It was black, fitted without being revealing, with thin straps and a soft neckline that made her collarbones look delicate. She paired it with gold earrings, a small clutch, and heels she could walk in if she needed to leave quickly.Maya sat on Lena’s bed eating plantain chips from the bag and watching her with open suspicion.“You’re overthinking this.”“I’m not overthinking.”“You changed earrings twice.”“Earrings matter.”“Not unless they’re going to testify in court.”Lena turned from the mirror. “It’s a business opportunity.”Maya raised one brow.“It is,” Lena insisted.“Mm-hmm.”“There will be investors, society clients, event contacts—”“And Ethan Vale.”Lena looked away.Maya poin
Ethan Vale entered rooms as though they had been waiting for him.Where Alexander brought silence, Ethan brought motion.He arrived at the wedding venue walk-through fifteen minutes late, wearing no tie, sunglasses tucked into the open collar of his shirt, and an apology charming enough to make two assistants forgive him before he finished giving it.“My fault,” he said, lifting both hands. “Entirely my fault. Blame traffic, poor discipline, and the tragic burden of being the better-looking brother.”Alexander did not look amused. “You were expected at ten.”“And now I’m here at ten-fifteen, giving everyone the gift of anticipation.”Celeste glanced up from her phone. “How generous.”Ethan pressed a hand to his chest. “I live to serve.”Lena watched the exchange from beside the aisle markers, clipboard in hand.This was Ethan Vale.Younger brother. Public favorite. Occasional scandal. The one tabloids described as charming, reckless, and impossible to dislike.He turned toward her sud
By the time Lena reached the ground floor, her phone had already buzzed three times.Maya.She answered as soon as she stepped through the revolving doors into the bright city afternoon.“Well?” Maya demanded. “Are they as terrifying as advertised?”Lena adjusted the strap of her bag over her shoulder. “Worse.”“That bad?”“Alexander Vale fired a woman into emotional collapse yesterday and interviewed me like I was applying to dismantle a bomb.”“Were you?”“In a way.”Maya laughed. “And the fiancée?”“Beautiful. Polished. Cold.”“So, rich.”“Very rich.”“And the mother?”Lena paused at the curb as a black car rolled past. “Lady Beatrice is not a mother. She’s an institution.”“That sounds healthy.”“It sounds expensive.”Maya was quiet for half a beat. “Are you taking the job?”Lena looked back at Vale Tower. The glass building rose into the sky like a monument to ambition. Everything about it screamed power, control, and consequences.“Yes,” she said.Maya groaned. “Lena.”“It’s the







