LOGINRain hammered the thin motel roof like it wanted to drown the whole world. Elara sat cross legged on the edge of the bed, staring at the greasy Chinese takeout containers between them. The black envelope from the funeral still burned in her mind. That photo of her sleeping in Jax’s arms felt more violating than anything else that had happened since the murders. Someone had stood right outside their window and watched them.
Jax tore into an egg roll with his teeth, chewing aggressively. His hair was still damp from a quick shower, dark waves falling across his forehead. The thin white t shirt he wore clung to his chest, hinting at the tattoos underneath. He hadn’t said much since they returned from the funeral, but the tension rolling off him filled the small room. "You gonna eat or just stare at it?" he asked, voice rough. His hazel eyes flicked up to meet hers. There was challenge there, the same mocking glint he used to wear when he’d catch her in the kitchen at home wearing tiny shorts. Elara pushed the container away. "I’m not hungry." Her voice cracked. The tears she had held back all day at the funeral finally spilled over, hot and angry. She hated crying in front of him. Hated feeling this weak. Jax set his food down slowly. For a second she thought he might ignore her, but then he moved. He slid across the bed until his thigh pressed against hers. His large hand came up, thumb rough as it wiped the tears from her cheek with surprising gentleness. The touch sent electricity racing across her skin. "Stop that shit," he muttered, but there was no real bite in it. "Crying won’t bring them back." Elara jerked away from his hand. "Don’t tell me what to do. You don’t get to play protector after spending two years treating me like garbage." The words poured out, fueled by grief and exhaustion and the confusing heat his touch left behind. "You hated me being in that house. You made sure I knew it every single day." Jax’s eyes darkened. He grabbed her wrist, not hard enough to hurt but firm enough that she couldn’t pull away. "You think this is easy for me? Watching you fall apart while I try to keep us alive?" His voice dropped lower, dangerous. "You have no idea what I’m dealing with." The air between them thickened. Thunder cracked outside, rattling the windows. Elara’s pulse thundered in her ears. She could smell his soap mixed with the faint metallic scent that still clung to both of them. When she tried to yank her wrist free, Jax pulled her closer instead. Their bodies collided. Chest to chest. Her breath hitched as his free hand settled on her waist, fingers digging into the soft fabric of his borrowed shirt she still wore. "You’re shaking," he said, voice husky. His face was so close she could count the flecks of gold in his hazel eyes. His gaze dropped to her mouth, lingering there. Elara’s lips parted without permission. The memory of his body wrapped around hers last night flooded back, the hardness she had felt against her thigh, the way her own body had traitorously responded. "Jax..." His name came out breathless. Wrong. But she couldn’t stop it. He leaned in. Their mouths hovered inches apart, his hot breath fanning across her lips. She could almost taste him. The rain pounded harder outside, matching the wild beat of her heart. For one suspended second, she thought he would kiss her. She wanted him to. God help her, she wanted it. Jax cursed sharply and pulled back, releasing her like she had burned him. He stood up so fast the bed creaked, dragging a hand through his hair. "Fuck this." He paced the small room like a trapped animal, muscles tight under his shirt. "We can’t. You know we can’t." Elara hugged her knees to her chest, cheeks flaming. The rejection stung more than it should have. She was supposed to hate him. This was all wrong. Yet her body still hummed where he had touched her, aching for something she refused to name. The silence stretched between them, heavy and uncomfortable. Jax eventually sat on the only chair, elbows on his knees, staring at the floor. Elara lay down on the bed facing the wall, pretending to sleep while her mind raced. Every shift of his body in the chair made her hyper aware of him. The way he breathed. The low curses he muttered under his breath. Hours passed. The storm worsened. Lightning flashed through the curtains, illuminating the room in sharp bursts. Elara finally drifted into a restless sleep, only to wake sometime later to a different kind of tension. Jax was back on the bed. Not touching her, but close enough that she felt his heat. His breathing was uneven. She turned slightly and froze. His eyes were open, staring at the ceiling, jaw clenched tight. One of his hands rested dangerously close to her hip. She should roll away. Instead, she whispered, "What are we doing, Jax?" He didn’t answer right away. When he did, his voice was raw. "Trying not to make the biggest mistake of our lives." But even as he said it, his fingers brushed the bare skin of her thigh where the shirt had ridden up. The touch was feather light, almost accidental. Almost. Elara’s breath caught. She didn’t move away. The storm outside raged on, mirroring the chaos building between them. Morning light filtered weakly through the curtains. Elara woke to the sound of running water in the bathroom. She sat up slowly, body sore from tension and poor sleep. The takeout containers were gone. Jax must have cleaned up while she slept. She padded toward the bathroom door, which stood slightly ajar. Through the gap she saw him standing at the sink, shirtless again, splashing water on his face. But something caught her eye. His right hand. Fresh cuts across his knuckles, red and angry. Blood trickled slowly into the sink as he cleaned them. Elara pushed the door open wider. "What happened?" Jax looked up sharply, meeting her eyes in the mirror. His expression closed off instantly. "Nothing." She stepped closer, heart pounding. "Those weren’t there last night. Did you go out? After I fell asleep?" He turned off the faucet and grabbed a towel, wrapping it around his hand. Water dripped down his chest, tracing the lines of his tattoos. "Go back to bed, Elara." "No." She blocked the doorway, arms crossed. The borrowed shirt barely covered her thighs. "You’re hiding something. That phone call last night. The way you knew exactly how to run. Those cuts. Tell me the truth." Jax stepped forward until they were almost chest to chest again. His eyes burned with frustration and something darker. Hunger. "You really want the truth right now? Because once I start talking, there’s no going back." Elara lifted her chin, refusing to back down even as her body reacted to his nearness. The secrets between them were multiplying, and she was terrified of what would happen when they finally exploded.Marcus Kane vanished like smoke after the warning, his phone going straight to voicemail and his luxury apartment empty when they broke in under cover of night. Elara’s heart hammered as they searched the lavish space, finding overturned drawers and a half-packed suitcase that suggested he had left in a hurry. The tech heir who had once offered them help now looked like another player in the deadly game, his sudden disappearance screaming guilt or fear. Jax’s jaw was locked tight, suspicion burning in his eyes as he rifled through Marcus’s desk. Every shadow in the penthouse felt like a threat, every creak of the floorboards making Elara jump.The hunt for answers had just become more dangerous. Marcus held pieces of the puzzle they desperately needed, and his disappearance meant the truth was slipping further away. Elara felt the weight of betrayal pressing down on her chest as they left the apartment, stepping back into the dangerous Los Angeles streets where eyes seemed to watch th
The abandoned port warehouse loomed like a tomb under the moonlight, rusted metal groaning in the wind as Elara stood beside Jax, heart hammering so violently she could feel it in her throat. Diego Rivera waited in the shadows with Lila bound and gagged at his feet, her best friend’s eyes wide with terror. The air reeked of salt, oil, and the metallic promise of violence. Jax’s hand stayed on his gun, body coiled like a spring ready to snap. Every second stretched into eternity as they faced the man who held Lila’s life in his hands.Diego smiled coldly, rifle resting casually against his shoulder. “You came. Good. The girl lives if you give me what I want. The access codes to the final accounts. All of them.” His eyes flicked to Elara, lingering too long, making her skin crawl. The deal felt like a trap wrapped in silk, and Elara could feel the noose tightening around all of them with every word.Jax stepped forward, voice low and lethal. “Let her go first. Then we talk.” The negotia
Detective Lena Torres waited in the shadows of an abandoned warehouse on the edge of Los Angeles, her dark hair pulled back tight and her eyes sharp as knives in the dim light. Elara’s heart raced as they approached her, the air thick with the smell of rust and danger. Torres had risked everything to meet them off the record, her badge glinting like a warning under the single flickering bulb overhead. “You two are in deeper than you know,” she said, voice low and urgent. “The ports aren’t just about money. They’re about power. And your parents were right in the middle of a war they couldn’t win.”Jax stayed close to Elara, his hand on her lower back like a brand, body tense and ready for violence at the slightest provocation. Torres’s gaze flicked between them, noting the possessive way he held her. The detective’s words carried weight that made Elara’s stomach twist. Every revelation felt like another layer of the web tightening around their throats.Torres handed them a flash drive,
Gunfire ripped through the elegant Beverly Hills gala like thunder in a crystal palace, shattering chandeliers and sending screams echoing off marble walls. Elara’s heart exploded in her chest as Jax yanked her down behind an overturned table, his body shielding hers from the flying bullets. Glass rained down around them like deadly confetti while guests scrambled for cover in their expensive gowns and suits. The beautiful event had turned into a war zone in seconds, and Sienna’s partial confession still burned in Elara’s mind like poison.Jax’s hand gripped hers hard enough to bruise as he pulled her toward a side exit, gun already in his other hand. “Stay low,” he growled, voice sharp with command. Bullets whizzed past them, embedding in the wall inches from their heads. The chaos was absolute, people trampling each other in panic while masked attackers moved through the crowd with deadly purpose. Elara’s dress tore at the hem as they ran, but she didn’t care. Survival was the only
The Beverly Hills gala glittered like a trap wrapped in diamonds, chandeliers casting golden light over elegant dresses and tailored suits that hid deadly secrets beneath their perfect folds. Elara stood beside Jax in a sleek black gown that clung to her curves, feeling every eye in the room on them as whispers spread like poison through the crowd. The same people who had attended her parents’ funeral now smiled with false sympathy, their gazes sharp and calculating. Jax’s hand stayed possessively on her lower back, fingers digging in just enough to remind her she was his in this den of vipers.Sienna approached them first, elegant and dangerous in a blood-red dress, her smile never reaching her eyes. “My dears, you look stunning together. The perfect power couple.” Her words dripped with double meaning, eyes flicking between them with barely concealed hunger for whatever game she was playing. The air felt thick with unspoken threats as the orchestra played on, masking the danger swir
The sterile hospital corridor smelled of disinfectant and fear as Elara rushed toward Kai’s room, Jax’s hand gripping hers like a lifeline. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead like angry hornets, casting harsh shadows on the pale walls. Kai lay in the bed looking pale and broken, machines beeping steadily around him. His eyes lit up when he saw her, but the pain in them cut Elara deep. Someone had tried to silence him permanently for digging too deep into the port secrets.Jax stayed close, body tense and ready for violence, his jealousy simmering just beneath the surface as Elara leaned over the bed to squeeze Kai’s hand. The sight of her touching another man, even her injured ex, made Jax’s jaw clench tight enough to crack. The air in the small room grew thick with unspoken tension as Kai whispered what he had discovered before the attack.Kai’s voice was weak but urgent. “Sienna… she’s been running everything from the shadows. Your mother found out and tried to stop her. That’s
The sun beat down mercilessly on the manicured lawns of the Beverly Hills cemetery, turning the black dresses and suits into ovens. Elara Voss stood beside the twin caskets, her legs threatening to give out beneath her. The air smelled of fresh flowers and expensive perfume, but underneath it all l
The motel room smelled like old cigarettes and damp carpet, the kind of place Elara Voss had only seen in movies about people running from their lives. Jax locked the door and shoved a rickety wooden chair under the handle with a sharp scrape. He pulled the thin curtains tight, blocking out the fli
Elara Voss froze in the doorway of her parents' luxurious Beverly Hills bedroom, her bare feet rooted to the cool marble floor. The coppery stench of blood hit her first, thick and nauseating, before her eyes could fully process the horror. Her mother lay sprawled across the king sized bed, designe
The stolen car skidded to a stop outside a remote cabin deep in the hills north of San Diego. Rain hammered the roof like bullets as Jax killed the engine. They had lost the pursuing vehicle after a terrifying ten-minute chase, but the adrenaline still coursed through Elara’s veins like fire. Her h







