LOGINDarkness didn’t feel peaceful.
It felt heavy.
Thick.
Like Vanessa was sinking through it instead of sleeping inside it.
Voices floated somewhere above her.
Muffled. Distorted. Distant.
“…how long... ”
“…dose was strong... ”
“…boss said no marks... ”
Her brain clawed upward through the fog.
No marks.
Boss.
Dose.
Her heart slammed hard enough
The first thing Vanessa noticed was the silence.No shouting.No running.No alarms screaming in the distance.Just the soft hum of the city waking up.Morning light spilled across the hospital room in pale gold streaks, stretching across the floor and climbing the edge of the bed where she lay. Her body ached in that deep, bone-tired way that only came after adrenaline burned itself out.Her eyes blinked open slowly.For a moment, she didn’t move.Didn’t think.Didn’t remember.Then everything came back at once.Victor.The warehouse.The gunshots.Alexander.Her head snapped to the side.He was there.Slumped in the chair beside her bed, still in yesterday’s clothes, tie loosened, sleeves rolled, eyes closed. His hand was wrapped around hers like he was afraid she might disappear if he let go.Her heart cracked open in her chest.
Darkness didn’t feel peaceful.It felt heavy.Thick.Like Vanessa was sinking through it instead of sleeping inside it.Voices floated somewhere above her.Muffled. Distorted. Distant.“…how long... ”“…dose was strong... ”“…boss said no marks... ”Her brain clawed upward through the fog.No marks.Boss.Dose.Her heart slammed hard enough to hurt.Memory rushed back in fragments.The street.The SUV.The needle.Alexander.Her eyes flew open.The ceiling above her was unfamiliar, metal beams, industrial lighting, no windows.The air smelled like dust and engine oil.Warehouse.Her wrists jerked instinctively.Pain shot through them.Zip ties.Tight.Her ankles were bound too.She sat on a metal chair in the center of a wide, e
Vanessa didn’t notice the car at first.The street looked ordinary.Busy. Loud. Harmless.Horns blaring.Vendors calling.People weaving between traffic like they did every day.Normal.After everything that had happened upstairs, normal felt like oxygen.She inhaled deeply and pulled out her phone to order a ride.Her hands trembled slightly.Not from fear, she told herself.From adrenaline.From the argument.From the way Alexander’s voice had broken when he said that distance might save your life.Her ride request sent.Two minutes away.Vanessa exhaled and stepped closer to the curb.Across the street, the man with the newspaper ended his call.He folded the paper neatly.Placed it on the bench.And walked away.The black SUV rolled forward seconds later.Slow.Careful.Invisible in the flow of traffic
The elevator doors closed.And the silence they left behind felt louder than the alarms ever had.No one moved for several seconds.The guards waited for orders.The analysts watched the screens.But Alexander stood perfectly still in the center of the hallway like the world had narrowed to a single, terrifying point.Vanessa.Victor’s last words echoed in the air like a curse.The one thing he can’t control.Vanessa turned slowly toward Alexander.His expression scared her more than Victor had.Not angry.Not furious.Cold.Focused.Terrified.“Say something,” she whispered.Alexander didn’t look at her.“Escort him out of the building,” he told security. “Then double every guard rotation. No one enters without my approval.”“Yes, sir.”The team moved quickly, disappearing down the corridor.Only when the hallway emptied did Alexander finally turn toward her.His voice came out quiet.“You’re moving back tonight.”Vanessa closed her eyes.“We’re not doing this again.”“We’re absolute
For a moment, no one moved.The red emergency lights cast long shadows down the corridor, stretching Victor Hale’s silhouette across the floor like something unreal.Vanessa felt Alexander’s arm tighten around her waist.Not gently.Instinctively.Like his body had decided before his mind could catch up.Victor noticed.His smile widened.“There it is,” he said softly. “The famous protective instinct.”Alexander’s voice came out low and lethal.“You have five seconds to explain how you got past my security.”Victor tilted his head slightly, amused.“You always did skip the greeting.”Alexander didn’t blink.“One.”Victor chuckled.“Still counting. Still controlling.”“Two.”Victor slipped his hands into his coat pockets, completely relaxed.“I walked in the front door.”“Three.”“I told you, Alexander. People are persuadable.”“Four.”Victor’s gaze slid to Vanessa.“And this must be the woman worth destroying an empire for.”Alexander stepped forward instantly, blocking her from view.
Darkness swallowed the war room in a single breath.For half a second there was nothing.No screens.No data.No city skyline glowing through the glass.Just the distant howl of emergency alarms echoing through the building.Vanessa’s grip on Alexander’s hand tightened instinctively.“Tell me that’s a drill.”“It isn’t.”His voice had changed again.Cold. Controlled. Dangerous.Backup lights flickered on, casting the room in dim red.Every screen remained black.The analyst’s voice came through the hallway, panicked.“Sir! We’ve lost the network!”Alexander moved immediately, pulling Vanessa with him into the corridor.“How?”“Full system shutdown! Someone triggered an internal failsafe!”Alexander stopped walking.“Internal?”“Yes, sir. It came from inside the building.”Vanessa felt the floor tilt beneath her.“He has someone here.”Alexander’s silence confirmed it.A traitor.Inside Cole Industries.The realization hit harder than the blackout.Victor hadn’t just infiltrated their
By the time Vanessa and Alexander returned to the executive floor after the press conference, the atmosphere inside Cole Tower had shifted again.The building felt like a command center preparing for a storm.Phones rang constantly. Employees rushed between offices carrying reports.
By midday, the plaza outside Cole Tower had transformed into a sea of cameras, microphones, and restless journalists. Satellite vans lined the street, reporters stood shoulder to shoulder behind barricades, and every major news outlet had someone present.Inside the building, security had
Vanessa barely remembered the elevator ride down from the penthouse.Her mind raced with Collins’s message, the words replaying over and over.They also leaked internal financial files.That wasn’t just scandal.That was war.The morning air outside the Cole Tower was brisk as she stepped out of th
Morning arrived differently now.For months, Vanessa had woken each day with the quiet pressure of the contract hovering over her life like an invisible clock counting down. Every conversation, every glance from Alexander, every moment of tenderness had once been shadowed by the knowledge that it w







