LOGINBillionaire Julian Thorne built an impenetrable empire to protect his genius wife, Maya. But when a ruthless tech-syndicate led by Maya's own father breaches their fortress, Maya makes the ultimate sacrifice to save their newborn son: she surrenders herself, and her memories are brutally wiped clean. Julian tears the ocean apart to bring her home, only to rescue a terrified stranger who views him as a monster. Now, the Ice King must fight to win back the heart of the only woman he’s ever loved. But the memory wipe was a trap. Her father left a deadly sleeper code buried deep in Maya's mind, turning her into a lethal weapon. Locked inside their own high-tech penthouse, Julian faces his most agonizing battle yet: surviving the woman he would burn the world down to protect.
View MoreFive Years Ago.
Lightning tore through the sky, illuminating the penthouse suite of the Grand Hotel in a blinding flash of white.
Maya Lin stood frozen in the center of the room, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She was a waitress, a nobody. She belonged in the banquet hall forty floors down, serving hors d'oeuvres to bored socialites. She did not belong here, in the private sanctuary of the hotel’s most mysterious guest.
"Service elevator error," she muttered to herself, clutching her silver tray with white-knuckled fingers. "Just turn around, Maya. Just leave."
She took a step back toward the door.
Click.
The sound of a safety catch being released echoed in the silence.
"Take one more step," a voice growled from the shadows, "and you won't make it to the door."
Maya gasped, the tray slipping from her numb fingers. It hit the marble floor with a deafening crash, sending champagne flutes shattering in every direction.
"I’m sorry!" she cried, throwing her hands up. "I didn't mean to intrude! The elevator—"
"Quiet."
The command was a whip crack. A figure detached itself from the darkness near the window. He moved slowly, with the lethal grace of a wounded predator.
As he stepped into the dim light of the hallway, Maya’s breath hitched.
He was devastating. Tall, broad-shouldered, with hair as black as the storm outside. But it was his eyes that pinned her to the spot—an icy, electric blue that seemed to see right through her cheap uniform.
And then she saw the blood.
A dark stain was spreading rapidly across the side of his pristine white dress shirt.
"You're hurt," Maya whispered, her fear momentarily forgotten.
"An astute observation," he rasped, gripping the back of a velvet armchair to steady himself. His face was pale, beads of sweat glistening on his forehead. "Who sent you? The Russians? The Board?"
"No one sent me. I’m just a waitress." Maya took a tentative step forward. "Sir, you need a doctor. That looks deep."
"No doctors," he snarled, though his knees buckled slightly. "Come here."
Maya hesitated. Every instinct screamed *danger*. This man was trouble. He reeked of power and violence. But looking at the blood soaking his shirt, she knew she couldn't leave him to die.
She crossed the room. "I have first aid training," she said softly, her voice trembling. "Let me help."
He collapsed onto the sofa, his head falling back. "Do it quickly."
Maya rushed to the bathroom, grabbing the emergency kit. When she returned, she knelt between his spread legs, her hands hovering over his shirt.
"I have to cut this open," she murmured.
He didn't answer. He just watched her. His gaze was heavy, scorching her skin.
As she worked, cleaning the jagged slice across his ribs, the silence in the room shifted. It became thick. Suffocating. The scent of him—danger, expensive scotch, and rain—filled her lungs.
"You're shaking," he noted, his voice rough.
"You're bleeding," she countered, taping the gauze in place. She looked up, and for the first time, their eyes locked.
The air left the room.
He reached out, his hand large and hot, and cupped her chin. His thumb brushed over her bottom lip, dragging it down. "You have innocent eyes. Too innocent for a place like this."
"I should go," Maya whispered, though she didn't move.
"No," he growled. The pain seemed to recede, replaced by a darker, hungrier need. The adrenaline of his brush with death was morphing into something else. "Stay."
He pulled her down.
It wasn't a choice. It was gravity.
When his lips crashed against hers, Maya felt like she had touched a live wire. He tasted of desperation and power. She knew she should push him away. She knew this could ruin her life.
But for one night, amidst the thunder and the blood, Maya didn't want to be the invisible waitress. She wanted to be seen.
The Next Morning.
Silence.
Maya woke with a start, the bright morning sun stinging her eyes.
The memories of the night flooded back, turning her face crimson. The touches. The whispers. The way he had made her feel like the only woman in the world.
She rolled over. The bed was empty.
"Hello?"
No answer. The bathroom door was open, the shower dry. He was gone.
Panic cold as ice water drenched her.
He left. Oh god, what if the maids come in?
She jumped out of bed, grabbing her uniform from the floor. Her heart sank. The white blouse was ruined—stained with champagne and smeared with his blood. The skirt was torn at the hem.
She couldn't walk out like this. If the manager saw her, she’d be fired on the spot. She would lose her scholarship. Everything she worked for would be gone.
"Think, Maya, think," she whimpered.
Her eyes darted around the room and landed on a chair.
A black suit jacket.
It was draped casually, as if waiting for her. It was huge, heavy, and smelled like him.
"I'm just borrowing it," she whispered to the empty room. "I'll return it. I swear."
She pulled the jacket on. It swallowed her frame, coming down to her mid-thighs, effectively hiding the ruined uniform. She buttoned it tight, feeling a strange sense of security in his clothes.
She didn't check the pockets. She didn't feel the small, hard rectangle of the prototype chip sewn into the lining.
She just grabbed her shoes and ran.
She slipped into the service elevator just as the maid’s cart turned the corner. The doors closed, sealing her fate.
Maya leaned her head against the cool metal wall and closed her eyes, clutching the lapels of the stranger's jacket.
She had escaped. But she had no idea that she was taking the most dangerous part of him with her.
Seven months later.The eastern wing of the penthouse had been transformed into a state of the art maternity suite that rivaled the best private hospitals in the world. Julian Thorne left nothing to chance.Maya stood by the reinforced glass window, resting her hands on the heavy curve of her nine month pregnant belly. The city below was blanketed in a thick layer of winter snow, peaceful and quiet.She felt a pair of strong arms wrap around her from behind. Julian pulled her flush against his chest, resting his chin on her shoulder. His large hands covered hers over the baby.You should be resting, Julian murmured, pressing a soft kiss to the side of her neck. Dr. Evans said your blood pressure was slightly elevated this morning.Maya leaned back into his solid warmth, letting out a heavy sigh. I have been resting for seven months, Julian. I am going out of my mind. If I have to watch one more documentary about ocean life while you and Leo monitor my heart rate on your tablets, I am
The mahogany table in the Thorne Tech boardroom was long enough to land a small aircraft, but today, it felt suffocatingly small.Julian sat at the head of the table, radiating a cold, impenetrable authority. He wore a charcoal suit that looked like armor. To his immediate right sat Maya. She was no longer hiding in oversized, drab clothing. She wore a sleek, tailored navy dress that hinted at the tiny, growing bump at her waist. She looked every inch the billionaire's wife, but her hands were clasped tightly in her lap.The quarterly earnings report had just concluded, but none of the twelve board members were packing up their briefcases. The air was thick with tension.Richard Sterling, the oldest and most vocal member of the board, cleared his throat. He was a man who smelled of expensive cigars and old money, and he had hated Julian since the day Julian took over the company.Before we adjourn, Richard said, steepling his fingers, there is the matter of corporate stability to addr
The penthouse was silent, the kind of heavy, expensive quiet that only existed eighty floors above the city.It was past midnight. The laser grid in the living room was armed, the kids were fast asleep in the newly secured east wing, and Maya was wide awake, staring at the ceiling of the master bedroom.She rolled over, the cool silk sheets sliding against her bare skin. The space beside her was empty, the mattress completely cold. Julian was still in his office.For the past three days, Julian had been operating on pure adrenaline and protective instinct. He had hired a new security detail, interviewed six pediatricians, and ordered a background check on the entire building staff. He was treating her pregnancy like a hostile corporate takeover. It was incredibly sweet, but it was also suffocating.Maya sat up, letting the silk sheet fall away. She didn't want the billionaire CEO tonight. She didn't want the overprotective bodyguard. She wanted her husband.She slipped out of bed, ign
The Gulfstream G650 touched down on the private airstrip outside New York City with a landing so smooth it wouldn't have rippled a glass of water.Maya unbuckled her seatbelt, reaching for her carry-on bag. "That was fast. I barely finished my...""Do not touch that," Julian said instantly, his hand shooting out to stop hers.Maya blinked. "It is a Kindle, Julian. It weighs six ounces.""You are pregnant," Julian stated, as if this medical fact precluded her from lifting e-readers. "I will carry it."He unbuckled his own belt and stood up, buttoning his suit jacket. He looked impeccable as always, but there was a new, frantic energy vibrating under his calm exterior. He grabbed her Kindle, her purse, his briefcase, and—before she could protest—scooped Maya herself up into his arms."Julian!" Maya laughed, swatting his chest. "I can walk! I am pregnant, not broken.""The doctor said to avoid stress," Julian said, marching toward the exit ramp. "Walking is stress. Stairs are stress. Gra






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