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Chapter Five: The Mask

ผู้เขียน: Caroline
last update วันที่เผยแพร่: 2026-04-29 18:13:57

The heavy silk press of the blindfold remained a warm, black wall against Elias’s eyes, but the shifting layout of the room told him the dynamic had irrevocably altered. The bruising, desperate force of the last hour had slowed, replaced by a dense, suffocating stillness that made his lungs burn. He lay flat on his back where the stranger had left him, his legs still trembling from the dual assault of the man's fingers and mouth, his thighs slick with the cooling, wet remainder of their shared undoing.

Beside him, the mattress groaned. The stranger hadn't stood up to dress yet. He remained hovering in the dark, his broad, hot chest rising and falling in heavy, ragged intervals against Elias’s shoulder. The scent of raw cedar, river rain, and rich, unlit tobacco was thick on his skin—a signature so distinct it felt like an explicit clue, a corporate cipher waiting to be decoded.

Elias turned his head slightly, his swollen lips parting against the damp silk. "You said it was time."

"It is," the stranger murmured. The voice was a low, gravelly vibration that sent an immediate, involuntary twitch through Elias's spent cock. It was an executive's cadence, stripped of its public formality, roughened by a dark, possessive hunger that hadn't been fully satisfied by the physical wrecking of the bed. "The protocol says we walk out through separate terminal gates. No names. No registries."

"But you don't want to walk out," Elias whispered. He hated the raw, transparent desperation in his own words, but the internal tension was too high. For twenty-eight years, his life had been an audit of perfect behavior under Victor Hawthorne’s cold eye. In the span of a single night, this nameless predator had completely dismantled his architecture, uncovering a wild, submitting heat that Elias didn't even know he possessed. He didn't want to lose the only honest thing he had ever touched.

The stranger’s large, calloused hand slid slowly up Elias’s inner thigh, his broad thumb tracing the tender, darkening bruises he had left near the hip. The touch wasn't rough this time; it was a slow, deliberate calculation, a sensory mapping that felt dangerously close to a clinical investigation.

"I have a three-billion-dollar infrastructure target closing at nine o'clock tomorrow morning," the stranger said, his lips brushing the shell of Elias’s ear, hot and demanding. "I spent eighteen months building the litigation lines to liquidate it. But right now, all I can think about is the way your ribs felt under my knuckles when I drove you into the headboard. I want to know whose ledger I’m ripping up."

"Then take it off," Elias breathed, his hips arching up into the slow, tantalizing stroke of the man's fingers.

His hands reached out blindly, his knuckles brushing against the heavy knit of the stranger's sweater before finding the solid, broad lines of his jaw. "Take the silk off. Let me see the mark."

The stranger froze. For a long, agonizing second, the only sound in the private suite was the steady, rhythmic hum of the humidifiers. Elias could feel the man’s silver-gray eyes—or whatever color they were—burning down through the fabric, weighing the cost of the reveal. They were both running the same high-stakes equation. To reveal their identities within the walls of *The Veil* was an invitation to a catastrophe. If this was a competitor, an underwriter, or a state attorney, the exposure would incinerate their respective legacies before the opening bell on Wall Street.

Slowly, the stranger’s hand moved to the back of Elias’s head, his long fingers tangling in the damp hair near the knot of the blindfold. He untied it with a single, smooth pull.

Elias blinked rapidly against the sudden surge of amber light from the wall sconces. His vision sparked with white lines as the contours of the room settled into focus. He looked up, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird, preparing himself for the shock of recognition.

But the stranger was already moving. As the silk fell away, the man turned his face into the deep shadow of the canopy, his broad back blocking the direct light. He had already pulled a secondary, black velvet mask across the upper half of his face, leaving nothing exposed but the hard, angular line of his jaw and his bruised, compressed lips.

"Not like this," the stranger growled, his voice dropping into a harsher, more protective register. "Not while we're still trapped inside their parameters. If I look at your face without a contract between us, Hawthorne, I won't let you leave the building."

The use of his last name hit Elias like a physical blow. He scrambled back against the pillows, pulling the ruined remnant of his white Egyptian cotton shirt over his chest, his skin flushing a dark, furious red. "You know who I am."

"I know the pedigree," the man said, standing up from the bed with a slow, predatory grace that made his massive frame look even larger against the elegant limestone walls of the suite. He didn't look at Elias's face; his eyes remained locked on the dark fingerprints he had left on Elias's pale hips. "And you know mine.

You’ve been tracking my supply lines since the Newark recess. We're running the same terminal route, pretty boy. We’re just holding different ends of the wire."

The realization settled deep into Elias’s stomach, cold and terrifying. This wasn't a random encounter. The man under the velvet mask was a player in his father’s immediate circle—someone intimate with the Delaware strategy, someone who knew exactly how much the $2.3 billion port acquisition cost. The hunger that had felt like salvation minutes ago now felt like an explicit act of corporate treason.

"This is an anomaly," Elias said, his voice tightening into the cold, clinical posture he used for board briefings. He slid off the mattress, his legs shaky but his jaw setting into a hard, rigid line. "An operational error. If my father's legal team catches your replication token on the registry line tomorrow, I will personally sign the default order to liquidate your asset pool. I don't care what happened in this bed."

The stranger let out a low, dark chuckle that vibrated through the quiet room. He reached into his pocket, his long fingers pulling out a small, scratched brass key—the exact twin to the one Elias kept locked in his biometric safe at the office. He didn't offer it; he merely turned it over against his palm, letting the amber light catch the silver serial numbers stamped into the base.

"You'll sign the order because Victor tells you to," the man murmured, stepping closer until the raw heat of his chest was inches from Elias's face. He reached out, his thumb catching Elias's bottom lip, pressing down until the swollen tissue went white. "But when you're sitting at that walnut table, surrounded by your father's attorneys and your sweet, empty fiancée, you're going to feel the stretch in your core. You're going to remember the exact sound you made when I swallowed your come. You won't be able to stay away from the sky, Elias. Not for long."

Before Elias could swing his fist or demand an answer, the stranger pulled back into the shadows, his heavy leather boots striking the carpet with a final, rhythmic tread as he crossed to the service exit. The heavy oak door opened, throwing a brief, blinding wedge of white corridor light across the bed before the lock dropped into place with a dull, final click.

Elias was left entirely alone, his body aching and branded by a ghost. He looked down at his trembling hands, the scent of cedar still burning in his throat, utterly terrified of how desperately he wanted the war to begin.

The transition to the executive floor of the Hawthorne Tower the following morning was a brutal, mechanical exercise. Elias was at his desk by 5:45 AM, his navy Brioni suit pristine, his silver Senate pin fastened to his lapel with a needle-straight backing that pricked his skin every time he leaned forward. His coffee sat black and bitter on the glass table, completely untouched.

He moved through the preliminary logistics briefings with a sharp, frantic energy that left no room for the "uncertainty" Victor had criticized at the engagement gala. He authorized the Hartford uplink, verified the Wilmington ledger sheets, and personally checked the automated execution tokens for the Newark gateway.

He was a Hawthorne. He was the perfect son. He was the weapon his family needed to secure the legacy.

"Good," Victor Hawthorne said, his heavy, rhythmic footsteps halting at the threshold of Elias’s office at exactly ten o'clock. The patriarch looked his son over with cold, diamond-merchant eyes, checking the alignment of his collar, the stillness of his hands. "The London syndicate just uncoupled the secondary insurance pool. The asset is ours if we close the gate by the recess, Elias. Don't let your eyes leave the screen today."

"I won't, Father," Elias said. His voice was as steady as a surgeon's hand. He didn't flinch.

But the moment Victor’s shadow cleared the frosted glass of the door, Elias’s hand flew to his throat, his breath escaping in a long, ragged gasp. The starch of his shirt was rubbing against the dark, distinct bruises on his hips—a constant, throbbing reminder of the authority he had surrendered in the dark room.

He reached down, pulling the confidential dossier on Blackwood Innovations from beneath the port blueprints. The file was empty of photographs; the firm’s leader, Damien Blackwood, was a ghost who operated through European proxies and midnight acquisitions. Elias stared at the name—*Damien*—his mind spinning into a chaotic labyrinth of suspense.

He didn't know if the man with the brass key was Damien Blackwood, or if he was an underwriter working for Victor's own team. He didn't know if the stranger was an enemy trying to ruin him, or a partner trying to save him from his own cage.

All he knew was that the front lines of the $2.3 billion acquisition were no longer written on the ledger sheets. They were written on his own skin, and the real catastrophe would begin the moment the masks finally came off in the daylight.

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