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The Rules

Author: Shmoukh
last update publish date: 2026-01-04 19:32:27

I didn’t sleep.

The apartment was silent in a way that felt intentional, as if sound itself had signed a non disclosure agreement. The city glowed beyond the glass walls, alive and indifferent, while I lay awake counting the ways I’d miscalculated.

At six sharp, my phone vibrated.

Wake up.

No greeting. No name. Just a command.

I dressed in the first thing I found black, of course and stepped out into the hallway. Adrian was already there, sleeves rolled, tie perfectly knotted, watching the sunrise like it owed him something.

“You’re late,” he said without looking at me.

“It’s six on the dot.”

He turned. “You’ll learn that my time starts before the clock.”

I bit back a response. Words were ammunition. I needed to ration mine.

He handed me a tablet. “Your schedule.”

Meetings. Appearances. Dinners with people whose names carried weight. My name newly his attached to every line.

“I’m not your assistant,” I said.

“No,” he agreed. “You’re my message.”

We rode the elevator down together, the mirrored walls reflecting a woman I barely recognized. Calm face. Steady eyes. Someone who hadn’t signed her freedom away twelve hours earlier.

The car waited. Driver silent. Windows tinted.

“Rule one,” Adrian said as we pulled into traffic. “You don’t contradict me in public.”

“And in private?”

He glanced at me. “You don’t contradict me.”

I smiled thinly. “That’s not a rule. That’s a fantasy.”

His jaw tightened. Good. He could bleed too.

“Rule two,” he continued, unfazed. “You don’t explain yourself. Mystery protects you.”

“From who?”

“Everyone,” he said. “Including me.”

The building we stopped at was all glass and arrogance. Inside, eyes turned. Whispers followed. A hand settled lightly at the small of my back possessive, precise.

Adrian leaned down. “Smile.”

I did. Cameras flashed.

In the boardroom, men studied me like a variable they hadn’t accounted for. Adrian spoke numbers. I watched faces. Who leaned in. Who flinched. Who hated me on sight.

During a pause, one of them smiled too widely. “Mrs. Blackwood, how does it feel marrying into power?”

I met his gaze. “Power doesn’t marry,” I said. “It acquires.”

Adrian’s hand tightened. The man laughed, uneasy.

On the way out, Adrian pulled me aside into an empty corridor. “You enjoyed that.”

“I survived it.”

“That wasn’t survival,” he said quietly. “That was instinct.”

“Careful,” I replied. “You might start liking me.”

“I don’t like weapons,” he said. “I sharpen them.”

The car ride back was longer. He took calls. I memorized exits.

At the penthouse, he stopped me before I could retreat to my room. “Rule three,” he said. “You don’t disappear.”

“I wasn’t planning to.”

“You will,” he said. “Everyone does. Eventually.”

He studied me like a chessboard, then handed me a slim folder. Inside photos. Names. Dates. Men I’d refused. Men who hadn’t accepted it.

“This is why you’re here,” he said. “This is what I stop.”

“And the price?”

He met my eyes. “Me.”

I closed the folder. My hands were steady now. “Then don’t expect gratitude.”

“I expect compliance.”

I stepped closer, close enough to feel the heat he pretended not to have. “You’ll get cooperation,” I said. “As long as you remember something.”

“What’s that?”

I smiled without warmth. “Weapons misfire.”

For the first time, Adrian Blackwood looked amused.

“Good,” he said. “Rule four never forget who you’re aiming at.”

He turned away.

I stood there, heart pounding, and understood the next truth.

If I was his weapon,

then I would choose my moment.

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