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Chapter 3: L'Anonyme

last update publish date: 2026-06-26 03:17:35

Louis POV

The transition from the glass tower of Miller-Ventures to the velvet-draped walls of L'Anonyme always felt like crossing into a different dimension. By 9:30 PM, the thunderstorm outside had slicked the city streets, but inside the club, the atmosphere was thick, warm, and scented with expensive amber, cedarwood, and rich leather. The rain hammered against the tinted windows, a muted percussion that somehow made the interior feel even more intimate, more removed from the world I left behind.

The club operated under a strict, unyielding set of rules designed to protect its elite clientele. No real names. No professional titles. Faces completely obscured behind silk or structured leather masks. It was an environment built entirely on anonymity, where the exhausting weight of daytime control could be stripped away at the door. The members here were the city's most powerful—CEOs, politicians, celebrities—all shedding their identities like winter coats.

I leaned back against the plush velvet cushions of a semi-private alcove, my fingers loosely tracing the rim of my glass. The soft, black silk mask pressed comfortably against my skin, hiding the frantic, easily flustered CEO who had spent the day shouting about European tech holdings and debating the merits of vegetarian catering. Here, I didn't have to be the brilliant trillionaire heir to the Miller fortune. I didn't have to carry the pressure of thousands of employees on my shoulders. The mask was liberating in a way I'd never anticipated when I first joined.

I just wanted to yield. I wanted someone else to dictate the boundaries, to command the room, and to let me step down from the throne I was forced to sit on every single day. The weight of the corporation was suffocating, and this was my only reprieve. My only chance to be something other than Louis Miller, the man who inherited an empire and desperately tried not to run it into the ground.

But turning off the analytical side of my brain was easier said than done. Even without my corporate title, I found myself watching the main lounge with a detached, critical eye. Dozens of wealthy members were scattered across the floor, posturing on leather sofas and trying desperately to look powerful. None of them caught my interest. They felt hollow, performing a version of dominance that lacked actual substance. I'd seen too many men like that in boardrooms—all bark, no bite. I needed something real.

The bartender smoothly slid a fresh drink across the polished mahogany counter right outside my alcove, drawing my attention. The amber liquid caught the low light, casting warm reflections across his white shirtsleeve.

"Is this yet another count of your night here, Mr. Miller?" he murmured, using the playful, inside-joke club nickname the staff reserved for me due to my high-roller status. "Still haven't gotten attached to someone enough to seal the contract and see the face behind the mask?"

I let out a quiet, self-deprecating chuckle, the sound low and entirely relaxed. "The rules are there for a reason," I replied, my voice dropping into a calm, quiet register I never used at the office. "The mystery is the entire point. Finding the right connection takes precision."

It wasn't entirely true. The truth was more complicated. I had been coming here for six weeks, ever since a colleague had whispered about this place in a moment of drunken candor. And every Thursday, at exactly 8:00 PM, I found myself gravitating to the same corner of the bar, hoping the same man would appear.

I'd never spoken to him. Not once. But I'd watched him. Week after week, from across the room, I'd watched the way he carried himself—the relaxed confidence, the quiet authority, the way the staff responded to him with genuine respect rather than practiced deference. He didn't perform power. He simply possessed it.

"Fair enough," the bartender smiled, bowing his head respectfully before moving down the bar to attend to another guest.

I took a slow sip of my drink, the liquid burning pleasantly down my throat. My gaze drifted back past the velvet curtains to scan the crowded lounge. I'd learned to spot him from across the room by now. The way he moved through the crowd, parting it without effort. The way he held himself like he owned the room without needing to prove it.

That was when I saw him.

He was standing near the far end of the marble bar, surrounded by a small group of the club's regular floor hosts. He wore an immaculate, midnight-blue suit that perfectly accented his tall frame, and a structured leather mask that emphasized the sharp, unyielding line of his jaw. His posture was completely different from the others in the room; he wasn't posturing or trying to command attention. He simply held himself with an effortless, absolute authority that made the entire space seem to tilt in his direction.

My breath caught. It happened every time. I'd been watching this man for six weeks, memorizing the way he moved, the way he smiled, the way his eyes crinkled at the corners when something amused him. And still, every Thursday, seeing him across the room sent a jolt through my chest.

As if sensing the weight of my stare, the stranger slowly turned his head. His eyes locked onto mine through the distance—steady, piercing, and completely unfazed. He held my gaze for a heartbeat, then two, and I felt my carefully constructed composure begin to crack. There was something familiar in the way he looked at me, something that made my skin prickle with awareness.

A sharp, unfamiliar thrill coursed straight down my spine. The relentless pressure of the office, the exhaustion of holding the reins for a multi-billion-dollar empire—it all seemed to crystallize into a single, desperate desire to let this specific man take control.

I set my glass down, my hand surprisingly steady despite the sudden rush of adrenaline. Tonight was different. I could feel it in the air, in the way my heart hammered against my ribs. I caught the eye of a nearby floor host, gesturing him over with a subtle, decisive movement of my wrist.

The host approached the alcove instantly, bowing his head. He was young, efficient, clearly trained to anticipate the needs of the club's elite members. "Sir?"

I reached into my vest pocket, pulling out a heavy, matte-black invitation card embossed with a silver crest—the exclusive token reserved strictly for the club's highest tier, signaling a direct, private invitation to a private room. The card felt warm in my palm, heavy with implication.

"The gentleman in the midnight-blue suit at the end of the bar," I murmured, my voice dropping into a quiet, commanding whisper. "Deliver this to him. Tell him I am waiting."

The host's eyes widened slightly as he recognized the emblem on the card, but he recovered his professional composure in a heartbeat. This was a significant gesture—the invitation was rarely extended, and never lightly. "Right away, sir."

I leaned back into the shadows of the velvet alcove, my heart hammering against my ribs as I watched the host cut a path through the crowd toward the stranger. For the first time all day, I wasn't the one managing the crisis or giving the orders. I was simply waiting to see if the master of the room would accept the invitation.

My fingers drummed nervously against my thigh. What if he refused? What if he didn't feel the same pull I did? Six weeks of watching, wanting, and I'd finally worked up the courage to make a move. The irony wasn't lost on me—I could command boardrooms and negotiate billion-dollar deals, but this single act of vulnerability had me trembling.

The host reached the stranger and leaned in to speak. I watched the man's expression shift, saw his eyes flicker toward my alcove. His posture changed almost imperceptibly—a subtle straightening of his shoulders, a tilt of his head that suggested interest.

Then he looked directly at me, and even across the crowded room, I could see the corner of his mouth curve into a slow, deliberate smile.

He didn't move. He simply raised his glass in my direction—a silent acknowledgment, a promise that hung in the air between us. The invitation card rested in his palm, dark against his pale fingers.

My heart stopped. Then started again, faster than before.

The host returned to my alcove, his expression carefully neutral. "He accepts, sir. He said he will join you shortly."

"Shortly," I repeated, the word tasting strange on my tongue. Not now. Not yet. The anticipation was unbearable and exquisite all at once.

I nodded, dismissing the host with a wave of my hand. My gaze remained fixed on the stranger across the room. He had turned back to his conversation, but I caught the way his shoulders relaxed, the way his fingers traced the edge of the invitation card with deliberate slowness. He was savoring this. Drawing out the moment.

And I was utterly, completely at his mercy.

I reached for my drink, my hand trembling slightly. The ice clinked against the glass, the only sound in my private alcove. The music from the main lounge swelled and faded, a distant pulse that matched my racing heart.

He would come. He had accepted. But the waiting—the exquisite torture of not knowing exactly when—that was the true test. I had spent my entire life controlling every variable, anticipating every move, staying three steps ahead of everyone in every room.

But not here. Not tonight.

Tonight, I would wait. I would yield. And when he finally decided to walk through those velvet curtains, I would be ready to surrender everything I had spent years protecting.

I settled deeper into the cushions, my eyes never leaving the silhouette of the man in midnight blue. The rain continued to fall outside, and somewhere across the room, the stranger raised his glass once more—a toast to the anticipation, to the unknown.

I smiled behind my mask and raised my own glass in return.

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