LOGINHe's New York's most powerful billionaire—cold, untouchable, and known as the Ice King. She's just a nurse fighting to keep her dying mother alive. Their worlds should never have collided. But one glance across a crowded room changes everything. Ella Reynolds never expected to catch the attention of Alexander "Xander" Black. She was just a waitress for one night, invisible to people like him. But when she drops a tray of champagne at his feet, he does something no one expects—he notices her. The heat in his emerald eyes ignites something she's never felt before, and his obsession begins. He sends extravagant gifts. He pays her mother's medical bills. He pulls Ella into his world of luxury, secrets, and dangerous passion. But Xander's walls are built from years of betrayal. His ex-fiancée, Isabella, destroyed him once, and she's returned to finish the job. When Ella discovers that Xander's company plans to stop producing the life-saving medication her mother depends on, everything shatters. Is his love real, or is she just another pawn in Isabella's deadly game? With her mother's life hanging in the balance and a ruthless woman determined to tear them apart, Ella must decide: trust the man who's broken her heart, or lose everything she's ever loved. Their love is forbidden. Their passion is undeniable. And their secrets could destroy them both.
View MoreThe ice clinked against the crystal glass as I poured another whiskey for a guest who wouldn't even look at me. That was fine. I wasn't here to be seen. I was here to help Sophie, and more importantly, to earn the extra cash that would cover Mom's next round of medication.
"Ella, sweetie, table seven needs more champagne." Sophie's voice crackled through the earpiece I'd reluctantly agreed to wear. "And try to smile more. You look like you're attending a funeral."
I forced my lips into something resembling a smile. It felt foreign on my face. The truth was, funerals were probably more cheerful than this event. Hundreds of Manhattan's elite mingled under the glittering chandeliers of The Pierre Hotel, their laughter too loud, their jewelry too heavy, their smiles too perfect. They floated through life on money I couldn't even imagine, while I calculated whether I could afford both Mom's medication and groceries this week.
"Smiling," I whispered back, adjusting the black vest that felt like a costume on my body. I wasn't a waitress. I was a private care nurse who happened to be moonlighting as one tonight because Sophie's regular girl had called in sick.
The ballroom was overwhelming in its opulence. Gold leaf trimmed every corner, fresh flowers exploded from enormous vases, and the champagne—God, the champagne probably cost more than my monthly rent. I balanced my tray and weaved through clusters of designer dresses and tailored suits, delivering drinks to people who didn't even acknowledge my existence.
*Just a few more hours*, I told myself. *Then home to Mom, then sleep, then back to the hospital tomorrow.*
I was reaching for an empty glass from a nearby table when it happened.
The room didn't go quiet. The music didn't stop. But something shifted in the air, a current I couldn't explain, and I felt my gaze being pulled toward the entrance like a magnet.
He stood there like he owned the place. He probably did.
Dark hair, perfectly styled but with a rebellious strand falling across his forehead. A suit that clearly cost more than my entire wardrobe combined—midnight blue, tailored so precisely it looked painted on his broad shoulders. But it wasn't his money or his looks that stopped my breath. It was his eyes.
Green. Sharp. Cutting through the crowd like searchlights, missing nothing. And cold. So impossibly cold, like winter had taken up permanent residence behind them.
He wasn't looking at anyone. He was assessing, calculating, cataloging. The other guests practically parted around him like he was a predator they instinctively feared. Women straightened their dresses, men puffed out their chests, but he noticed none of it. He just stood there, a lone island of ice in a sea of desperate warmth.
I didn't realize I was staring until Sophie's voice crackled in my ear again.
"Ella? You there? Table seven is still waiting."
"Sorry," I breathed, tearing my eyes away. My heart was pounding against my ribs like it wanted to escape. "I'm on it."
But my traitorous eyes kept finding their way back to him as I moved through the crowd. He'd started walking now, accepting handshakes with the enthusiasm of someone touching garbage, nodding at greetings with barely concealed boredom. People wanted something from him. They always did. I could read it in their hungry expressions.
I wondered what it would be like to be that untouchable. That powerful. That alone.
"Ella!" Sophie's voice was more insistent now. "Move!"
I shook myself and focused on the task at hand. Table seven. More champagne. Smile. Don't think about the man with the frozen eyes.
But I couldn't stop thinking about him.
Every time I glanced up from pouring drinks or collecting empty glasses, he was there. A dark anchor in the glittering sea. He'd moved to the edge of the room now, away from the press of bodies, and was speaking with an older man who kept nodding nervously. Even from here, I could see the power dynamic—the older man was terrified of him.
*Who is he?* I wondered. Not that it mattered. People like him didn't exist in my world. They floated in an orbit so far from mine that we might as well have been on different planets.
I collected my tray and headed toward the bar for a fresh round of drinks. The path took me closer to him than I'd been before. Close enough to see the sharp line of his jaw, the way his full lips pressed together in barely concealed annoyance, the slight tension in his shoulders that suggested he'd rather be anywhere else.
Close enough that I caught his scent—expensive cologne mixed with something darker, something that made my stomach flip in ways I didn't want to examine.
And then, as if sensing my attention, he turned.
Our eyes met across the crowded room.
Time stopped. The music faded. The chatter dissolved into meaningless noise. I was suddenly, acutely aware of everything—the weight of the tray in my hands, the cheap fabric of my vest against my skin, the rapid flutter of my pulse at my throat.
His eyes weren't just cold. They were bottomless. I felt like I was falling into them, tumbling through layers of ice into something deeper, something dangerous.
His gaze traveled over me slowly, deliberately. Taking in my too-cheap shoes, my work-reddened hands, my hair escaping from its tight ponytail. I expected dismissal. Disdain. The look wealthy people gave servants who accidentally made eye contact.
But his eyes lingered. Changed. Something flickered in those green depths—surprise? Interest? I couldn't tell. But it was there, a crack in the ice, and it made my breath catch in my throat.
*He sees me*, I thought wildly. *He actually sees me.*
For one impossible moment, the crowded ballroom contracted to just the two of us. I forgot the tray in my hands. I forgot Sophie's voice in my ear. I forgot my mother waiting at home, my empty bank account, my borrowed uniform.
There was only him. And those eyes. And the terrifying, exhilarating feeling that I was standing on the edge of something I couldn't name.
His lips parted slightly. Was he about to speak? To call me over? To dismiss me?
I'll never know.
Because at that exact moment, someone jostled me from behind—a waiter rushing past with another tray—and my carefully balanced drinks wobbled dangerously. I gasped, trying to steady them, but it was too late. The tray tipped. Glasses slid. Champagne and whiskey rained down in a golden cascade.
The crash was deafening. Glass shattered against the marble floor. Liquid splattered across expensive shoes and designer hems. Gasps and exclamations erupted around me.
I stood frozen, mortified, my empty tray dangling from numb fingers. Every eye in the room was on me now. The poor waitress who'd just made a fool of herself. I could hear the whispers, the barely concealed laughter, the judgment.
But I only saw him.
The man with the frozen eyes hadn't moved. He stood exactly where he'd been, unaffected by the chaos around him. Champagne had splashed his perfect shoes—shoes that probably cost more than my mother's entire hospital stay—but he didn't look down. He didn't curse or complain or summon a manager.
He was still looking at me.
And in that moment, surrounded by broken glass and my own humiliation, I could have sworn I saw the corner of his mouth twitch. Just slightly. Just enough.
Like he was amused.
Like he was intrigued.
Like this ordinary, disastrous night was suddenly the most interesting thing that had happened to him in years.
Then he turned and walked away, disappearing into the crowd like a ghost.
And I was left standing in the wreckage, my heart pounding, my hands shaking, knowing with absolute certainty that my life would never be the same.
The private investigator's report arrived on a Tuesday.Xander read it first, his face growing darker with each page. Ella watched him from across the kitchen table, Clara asleep in her arms, the morning light streaming through the window. She knew something was wrong before he spoke. Could see it in the tension of his shoulders, the set of his jaw."She's out.""Who?""Sophia." He set down the report. "She was released last week. Early parole for good behavior."
The photograph sat on the kitchen counter like a threat.Ella couldn't stop looking at it. Every time she walked past, her eyes were drawn to the image of her daughter in that incubator, tubes and wires keeping her alive, someone watching from the shadows. The word on the back echoed in her mind. *Soon.* Soon what? Soon they would strike again? Soon they would take what they'd come for? Soon they would destroy everything Ella had fought to build?Xander had called the police within hours of finding the envelope. Two officers had come to the house, taken statements, examined the photograph, asked questions Ella couldn't answer. No, she didn't know who had sent it. No, she hadn't seen anyone suspicious. No, she couldn'
The wheelchair felt strange beneath her, but Ella didn't complain.She was out of the ICU. She was awake, alive, and on her way to see her daughter. Nothing else mattered. Xander pushed her through the long corridors, his hands steady on the handles, his presence a quiet comfort at her back. The hospital was bright this time of morning, sunlight streaming through the windows, casting patterns on the floor.The NICU was quieter than she'd expected.Soft lights, soft voices, the gentle hum of machines designed to keep tiny bodies alive. Nurses moved between incubators, checking monitors, adjusting blankets.
The chair had become an extension of his body.Xander couldn't remember the last time he'd stood up. Hours had blurred into each other, marked only by the changing patterns of light through the window and the quiet shuffling of nurses on their rounds. Ella's hand rested in his, warm now instead of cold, her fingers occasionally twitching in her sleep. The monitors beeped their steady rhythm, proof that she was still fighting.He talked to her. Had been talking for hours, his voice hoarse, his throat raw. He told her about the baby—about Clara's tiny fingers, her shock of dark hair, the way she'd gripped his finger when he'd touched her palm. He told her about the house by the ocean, about the garden her mother
The knife clattered against the floor, the sound echoing off the concrete walls.Sophia was on her knees, her hands covering her face, her body shaking with sobs. Ella held her, her own tears falling, her heart aching for the sister she'd only just found. The years of anger and pain were s
The warehouse looked abandoned from the outside.Weeds pushed through cracks in the pavement, windows were boarded up, and the walls were covered in graffiti that had faded over years of exposure. But the door was new—steel, reinforced, with a keypad that glowed red in the darkness.
The hallway was still chaos.Patients milled around in their gowns, nurses tried to restore order, and firefighters moved through the building checking for smoke that didn't exist. Ella stood in the middle of it all, frozen, her mind refusing to accept what her eyes were telling her. Her m
The hotel room had a view of the lake.Ella stood at the window every morning, watching the mist rise off the water, the mountains slowly emerging from the clouds. It was beautiful here. Peaceful. Nothing like the chaos she'd left behind in New York. But the peace felt temporary, fragile,


















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