The private elevator rose without a sound, but Isabella’s heart roared like thunder in her chest.
She was alone with him. Again.
Damian Knight stood beside her, motionless, composed, unreadable and with one hand in his coat pocket, the other gripping a phone that hadn’t lit up once. He hadn’t said a word since they stepped in, and yet his presence filled every inch of space between them. It wasn’t loud. It was… unshakable.
Like a shadow that didn’t need sunlight to exist.
She tried to keep still, but her fingers kept brushing against the edge of her coat. Her jaw tightened. Her breathing stilled, she tried not to fidget but her hands gave her away.
She stared straight ahead. She was trembling
He didn’t look at her until the elevator reached the thirty-ninth floor. Then, almost without emotion, he turned his head slightly and said,
“You’re shaking
“I’m not.”
“You are.”
She pressed her hands tighter in her lap. “I’ve never been in a penthouse before.”
“You’ll get used to it.”There was no mockery in his tone. No warmth either. Just facts
The elevator stopped.
The doors slid open.
And just like that—Isabella stepped into another world.
The air smelled of quiet wealth—fresh linen, aged wood, and something faintly masculine. The floor was polished marble, cream and onyx veined like frozen lightning. The walls were smooth slate gray with elegant black paneling. Floor-to-ceiling windows stretched across the far side of the room, displaying Manhattan’s glittering skyline in full.
Everything was curated. Every inch of space carried power with sharp angles, dark furniture, chrome accents, silence, masculine luxury and why dominance
This wasn’t a home.
It was a kingdom.
It was a command center.
It didn’t whisper comfort.
It demanded surrender.
She blinked. Then again.
There were no photos. No clutter. No signs that anyone truly lived here.
Only control.
“You’ll sleep in the guest room,” Damian said, already pulling off his coat. “To the left.”
She still hadn’t moved from the elevator entrance. Her heels clicked lightly on the marble when she finally took a hesitant step forward.
He shrugged off his coat and tossed it over the back of a black leather chair. Then he walked into the open-plan kitchen like he’d forgotten she existed.
“You don’t talk much when you’re afraid,” he added, tossing the coat on the back of a leather chair. “I like that.”
She turned slightly. “I’m not afraid.”
He arched a brow. “Liar.”
She flushed.
He stepped into the kitchen and poured himself a glass of something dark. Whiskey, probably. It fitted him,something bitter and clean.just like him.
“You should eat,” he said. “You skipped lunch.”
She hadn’t realized it until he said it.
She hesitated by the hallway.
“What happens tomorrow?” she asked quietly.
He didn’t look at her when he answered.
“Tomorrow, I hunt.”
She shivered.
The guest room was bigger than any space she’d ever called her own. The sheets smelled like fresh linen and something faintly expensive like leather and oak. She peeled off her blazer, sat on the edge of the bed, and exhaled for the first time all day.
There was no television.
No distractions.
Just space.
And silence.
Was this really happening?
A man had followed her.
Threatened her.
And now… she was here. Hiding in the penthouse of a billionaire who looked at her like she was both a problem and a puzzle he couldn’t put down.
What scared her more wasn’t the note.
It wasn’t the man who spoke her real name.
It was Damian Knight’s voice when he said, “You belong to me.”
Because a part of her believed him.
And a darker part didn’t want to argue.
She stood restlessly and wandered the room. Her fingers trailed along the bookshelves. Most were hardbound. Thick, glossy, untouched. Titles like Power & Play, Behavioral Strategy, and Psychology of Loyalty.
One book was crooked.
She tilted her head.
It was the only one not aligned with the rest.
She reached out.
Pulled it.
Nothing happened.
No secret door. No dramatic reveal.
Just an ordinary book with thick pages.
She opened it casually and something slipped out.
A photo.
Her stomach clenched before her brain caught up.
She knelt and picked it up with shaking hands.
It was old. Faded. Creased in the middle.
And it was her.
She was seventeen. Pale. Wearing her Russian high school uniform, the navy blazer with the silver pin at the collar. Hair tied back. Cheeks slightly hollow.
She remembered that day.
The photo had been taken by someone on the school roof. Her father had been in the hospital. She’d been terrified that morning.
No one else had that picture.
No one.
Except….
Her hand flew to her mouth.
How?
The photo slipped from her fingers and fluttered to the floor like a confession.
That’s when she heard his voice.
Low. Even. Dangerous.
“You shouldn’t be touching things that don’t belong to you.”
She turned sharply.
Damian stood in the doorway, arms crossed, gaze locked on her.
But he wasn’t angry.
He was… unreadable.
Worse than angry.
Because in his silence was a storm.
“How do you have this?” she asked.
Her voice was thin.
A thread.
He stepped inside. Closed the door behind him with a click that made her stomach knot.
She backed up slowly, until the back of her knees hit the bed.
His eyes never left hers.
Then, without blinking, he said something that changed everything.
“You’re not the only one who ran from Russia.”
The room seemed to shrink.
“What?”
“I knew your father,” Damian said calmly. “Not well. But enough.”
Her throat went dry.
“You knew him?”
He nodded once. “He was a complicated man. Powerful. Respected. Feared.”
“You worked with him?”
“I watched him,” he said. “And when the walls closed in on him… I watched you.”
She took a step back.
“You were there?”
“I saw you leave Moscow.”
She stared at him, heart pounding.
“You were following me?”
“I was protecting you.”
“That’s not protection. That’s surveillance.”
“Call it what you want,” he said, his voice low. “But I made sure no one touched you.”
Her breath shook. “Why?”
He paused. Looked at her like the answer was dangerous.
“Because even then… I knew you’d belong to me.”
The air thickened.
She didn’t move.
Neither did he.
Then quietly, she asked, “So you knew where I was this whole time?”
She swallowed.
“You hired me on purpose.”
“I hired you because I needed someone smart, quiet, obedient… and not afraid of darkness.”
Her eyes burned. “You manipulated me.”
“I saved you,” he said coldly. “You just didn’t realize it yet.”
He stepped closer.
“I gave you a job. I gave you protection. And now, I’m giving you truth.”
She was trembling again.
Not from fear this time.
From something that felt dangerously close to betrayal… and curiosity.
“Why me?” she whispered.
His eyes darkened.
“Because no matter how far you ran… we were always going to meet again.”
She stood frozen in the silence, the photo still lying between them.
Neither moved.
Until finally, Damian turned toward the door.
“You should rest,” he said. “There’s more to tell you. But not tonight.”
She didn’t stop him when he walked away.
She didn’t speak when the door clicked shut behind him.
But when she picked the photo up again, a question echoed in her mind …
The kitchen looked like a battlefield.Flour dusted the countertops, streaked Damian’s black shirt, and somehow clung stubbornly to Isabella’s hair, forming tiny clouds of white that shimmered in the soft afternoon light. A bowl sat lopsided on the marble island, half-filled with what was supposed to be chocolate mousse. Instead, it looked like melted pudding on the verge of collapse, a sad imitation of her earlier confidence.Damian stood across from her, arms crossed, eyes narrowed but not without amusement. His usual commanding presence was slightly undermined by the specks of flour dotting his pristine shirt and his carefully combed hair.“That does not look edible,” he said finally, his tone flat, though his gaze betrayed a hint of amusement.Isabella doubled over with laughter, clutching her stomach as a small piece of chocolate smeared onto her fingers. “You are the billionaire CEO everyone fears, and yet you cannot even whisk cream properly,” she teased, the sound of her laugh
The scent of garlic and olive oil drifted lazily through the penthouse kitchen, curling around the stainless steel appliances and the polished marble floor like a private invitation. Isabella shifted on her bare feet, feeling the cool tiles press against her skin. Her apron was tied in a lopsided knot at her waist, straps cutting slightly into her shoulders, and a stray lock of hair had escaped, brushing against her cheek. She felt exposed in a way that had nothing to do with the apron.Damian leaned against the counter across from her, sleeves rolled up to his elbows, the light catching the lines of his strong forearms. He watched her with a calm intensity that made her chest flutter. Every time her eyes met his, a small, dangerous thrill ran through her.“You’re staring at me again,” she muttered, slicing an onion with more caution than skill. The knife wobbled slightly in her hand.“I’m observing,” he said smoothly. His voice was quiet but firm, carrying the kind of authority that
The office was louder than usual. Not with voices, but with silence. The heavy kind. The kind that pressed against the walls and seeped into the air like smoke. It was not the comfortable silence of focused workers at their desks, nor the neutral hush of a Monday morning. This was the other kind. The heavy, suffocating quiet that came with eyes following your every step, with gossip pulsing through the veins of the building, sharp and poisonous.When Isabella stepped out of the private elevator beside Damian the next morning, she felt the weight of it immediately. The silence clung to her like a second skin. Stares burned into her flesh, prickling her shoulders, sinking claws into her chest. The world seemed to tilt under the scrutiny.She could hear the faint shuffle of papers being deliberately rearranged, the pointed coughs that were not coughs at all, the faint hush of voices dropping to whispers as soon as they noticed her presence. Every sound seemed designed to remind her she w
Isabella woke to silence.Not the hollow silence of her old apartment, the kind that pressed against her chest like a heavy fog, but a stillness filled with warmth. A kind of warmth that came from knowing someone else was there. The faint hum of the city outside could not break through the cocoon of safety wrapped around her, a fragile shield she did not yet dare to name.The sheets were smoother than anything she had ever slept on. They smelled faintly of Damian, a scent that lingered somewhere between comfort and danger. Her hand reached across instinctively, seeking him, but his side of the bed was empty. Cool to the touch. For a heartbeat, panic lanced through her. Memories rose unbidden. Waking alone after whispered promises. Doors closed on her when she expected warmth. Cold apartments and colder hearts. The fear was a familiar companion, and it almost made her retreat back beneath the covers. Almost.Then she heard it. A faint clink of porcelain drifting from down the hall. A s
The city lights glittered beneath them like scattered diamonds, painting the night in a thousand shifting colors. Isabella stood at the floor-to-ceiling windows of Damian’s penthouse, her reflection staring back at her, fragile and uncertain. The suitcase at her side looked absurdly small in such a vast, immaculate space.She pressed her palm lightly against the glass, her chest rising and falling as if she were standing on the edge of something both exhilarating and terrifying. This wasn’t a dream. Not another fantasy spun in the quiet of her lonely nights. Damian had asked her to move in. And she—heart pounding, hands trembling—had said yes.Yet standing here now, surrounded by sleek marble, polished wood, and gleaming metal that screamed of wealth and dominance, Isabella suddenly felt like a trespasser. Everything about this penthouse was Damian—the boldness, the precision, the untouchable elegance. And she? She was still the secretary who once took the subway in heels that pinched
Helena slammed her fist on the table. The sound echoed through the room like a gunshot, making the chandelier above them tremble.“They took it down? How dare they!”Her voice was venomous, carrying both outrage and humiliation. She paced across the polished marble floor of the private suite they had chosen as their war room. Anger dripped from her every movement, the way her heels struck the ground, the way her hands clenched, the way her jaw tightened until it seemed her teeth might crack.Clarissa, lounging lazily in a velvet chair, lifted her wine glass and swirled it with infuriating calm. “Relax. My mom is with us. This is only the beginning.”But Helena wasn’t in the mood for calm. The fire in her chest burned hotter with every passing second. “Relax? Do you know what it means that it was taken down? Damian has resources, resources that silence people in minutes. He’s protecting her with the same power that once belonged to me. That… that little secretary thinks she’s untouchab