Mag-log inSilence stretched between us, thick and heavy, charged with a tension so sharp it felt like it could cut through the expensive air of the penthouse.
Kiel stood by the bedroom door, one hand still resting on the handle, the other holding his suit jacket over his arm. He looked at me, his grey eyes dark and gleaming, like a predator who had just found out his prey was not only capable of running… but capable of biting back. “I undress for no one but myself,” I had said. And I meant every word. I stood my ground in the middle of the vast living room, my chin held high, the heavy wedding gown still clinging to my body like a second skin. I did not look away. I did not fidget. I let him look, let him study me, and made sure he saw exactly what I was: not a frightened bride, but a woman who had just walked into a war zone and was already planning her strategy. A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips. It wasn’t the polite, charming smile he wore for the cameras. This was raw, unfiltered, and terrifyingly seductive. He let go of the door handle and walked toward me. Slow. Confident. Every step calculated to dominate the space, to remind me of the sheer size and power of him. He stopped just inches away, close enough that I could smell the whiskey and expensive cologne clinging to his skin, close enough that the heat radiating from his body warmed the cool air around me. He towered over me, but I refused to crane my neck to look up. I kept my gaze level, staring straight at the center of his chest, right where his heart beat steadily beneath the white fabric of his shirt. “You have quite a mouth on you, wife,” Kiel murmured, his voice low and rough. He reached out, and instead of grabbing me or demanding anything, his fingers lightly traced the intricate beading on the shoulder of my dress. “I wonder… does it always speak this boldly? Or do you save all your fire just for me?” “I speak to anyone who tries to treat me like an object,” I replied coolly, finally lifting my eyes to meet his. “And right now, you are doing a very good job of that.” His fingers moved lower, brushing along the line of my collarbone, sending a trail of fire across my skin. I didn’t flinch, though my pulse betrayed me, hammering faster against my ribs. “You are an object, Azariah,” he said softly, cruelly, yet with a hint of something else—admiration. “The most valuable object in my entire collection. Do you know how much I paid for you? Not just in money… but in years. In patience. In every law I rewrote and every man I destroyed just to make sure you stood here tonight.” He leaned down, his face hovering right in front of mine, his gaze dropping to my lips before snapping back to my eyes. “Value implies price, Kiel. I have a worth, yes. But I am not owned.” “We shall test that theory,” he whispered. Before I could react, his hands moved to the back of my dress. I stiffened, ready to push him away, ready to fight, but he didn’t force anything. His fingers found the zipper, and instead of yanking it down like a man claiming his prize, he paused. “You said you undress only for yourself,” he said, his voice dropping to a velvet growl. “Fine. Then I am merely assisting. Because right now… you look uncomfortable. And I prefer my possessions comfortable. Happy. Taken care of.” He waited. He actually waited for my permission. It was a small thing, but in his world of absolute control, it was a concession. A crack in his armor. I weighed my options. Fighting him physically was useless—he was twice my size and strength. But fighting him mentally? That was where I could win. Slowly, deliberately, I turned my back to him, exposing the line of my spine, the delicate skin vulnerable to his gaze and his touch. “Then assist,” I said, my voice calm and challenging. “But do not think this means I belong to you.” I felt his chuckle vibrate through the air behind me. “Keep telling yourself that, my love. It makes the reality taste so much sweeter.” He pulled the zipper down. The sound was loud in the quiet room—a slow, sliding hiss that signaled the barrier between us breaking. The heavy silk and lace fell away, sliding off my shoulders, pooling around my waist, leaving my back bare, exposed to the cool air and to his burning eyes. I expected him to touch me immediately. To grab. To claim. To do exactly what he had promised he would do. But Kiel surprised me. He didn’t touch my skin. Not yet. Instead, I felt his breath against the back of my neck, warm and intoxicating. His hands rested on the fabric still around my waist, holding the dress up, keeping me covered, but his lips brushed against the sensitive spot right below my ear. “So beautiful,” he murmured against my skin, his voice thick with desire. “So strong. So full of fire. Do you have any idea how hard it was to wait? To let you grow up, knowing that one day, I would be the one to strip every layer away? Not just this dress… but every defense you’ve built.” I shivered despite myself, my knees threatening to buckle, but I locked them tight. “You waited because you had to,” I countered, turning around slowly to face him, letting the dress drop completely to the floor. I stood there in only my delicate lace undergarments, braver than I felt, staring him down as if I were fully clothed and he was the one exposed. “Don’t mistake patience for virtue, Kiel. You are still a tyrant. You just have a longer game plan.” His eyes swept over me—over the black lace that barely covered me, over the curves he had dreamed of for years, over the defiant look in my eyes. He looked at me like a man starved, like I was the only source of life in the entire world. And then, he did something I never expected. He dropped to his knees. The most powerful man in the world. The Golden Tyrant. The man who commanded armies and economies. He sank to his knees on the cold marble floor right in front of me, his hands gripping my hips, his face level with my stomach. I froze. My breath hitched in my throat. “Call me a tyrant all you want,” he said, his voice rough and raw, his thumbs rubbing circles into the skin just above my waistband. “But remember this… a tyrant rules his people. A king rules his kingdom. But me? I kneel only for you.” He looked up at me, his grey eyes burning with an intensity that stole the breath from my lungs. “I own everything, Azariah. Companies. Banks. Land. Laws. But you… You owe me. You have owned me since you were eight years old, and you smiled at me like I wasn’t a monster.” The confession hit me harder than any blow ever could.Eight years old. He had said he waited ten years. He meant it. He had been planning this, obsessing over this, loving this since I was a child. It should have terrified me. It should have made me run. But instead, it only fueled my fire. I placed my hands on his shoulders, not to push him away, but to hold my ground. To show him I wasn’t scared of seeing him like this. “If I own you,” I said slowly, clearly, “Then stand up, Kiel. Kings do not kneel. And I do not want a man who worships me. I want a man who stands equal to me.” A flicker of shock passed through his eyes, quickly replaced by a deeper, darker hunger. He stood up in one fluid motion, rising to his full height, pulling me flush against his body in the same movement. There was no space left between us now. Every curve of my body pressed against the hard, unyielding muscle of his. “Equal?” he growled, his hands sliding down my back, gripping my thighs and lifting me effortlessly until my legs wrapped instinctively around his waist. “You want equality? Fine. But understand this, wife… when two equals collide, there is only war. And I intend to win every single battle.” He carried me across the room, kicking the bedroom door shut behind him with his foot.Click. The sound echoed. The lock turned. We were sealed inside. Just us. The king and his queen. The prisoner and her jailer. The obsessed and the object of obsession. He laid me down on the massive bed covered in black silk sheets, the cool fabric caressing my skin. He hovered over me, his weight resting on his forearms on either side of my head, trapping me perfectly. “Last chance,” Kiel whispered, his fingers tracing the line of my jaw, down my throat, between the valley of my breasts. “You can still beg me to stop. You can still tell me you hate me. You can still fight.” I reached up, my fingers tangling in his dark hair, pulling his face down closer to mine until our noses touched. I looked him right in the eye, challenging him, daring him. “Begging is for the weak, Kiel Ashford. And hate? Hate is just passion with nowhere to go. If you want me… then take me. But don’t expect me to lie here and be silent. Don’t expect me to melt. And don’t expect me to fall in love.” He let out a harsh breath, a sound half groan, half triumph. “We shall see,” he repeated, his voice breaking. “We shall see.” He kissed me then. But this time, it wasn’t just brutal claiming. It was everything. It was ten years of waiting. It was years of rules, laws, and loneliness. It was the realization that the woman beneath him was not the doll he was promised, but a warrior equal to his own darkness. He kissed me with a hunger that bordered on pain, his hands roaming everywhere, learning every inch of me, memorizing every reaction. When his hand slid between my legs, touching me where I was already wet despite my defiance, I gasped, my hips arching off the mattress instinctively. “You hate me?” he taunted against my lips, his fingers moving with expert precision, finding that sensitive spot that made my mind blur. “Your body doesn’t hate me, Azariah. Your body knows who it belongs to.” “My body… is just a shell,” I managed to say, though my voice was breathless and wrecked. “You will never… get my mind.” He bit my lower lip, hard, making me cry out, before soothing the sting with his tongue. “Then I will spend the rest of my life conquering it,” he vowed darkly. He moved then, positioning himself at my entrance. He was big, heavy, hard, ready to take everything. He looked into my eyes one last time, checking for fear, checking for surrender. He found neither. He found only fire. “Hold on, my queen,” he whispered. “The game has only just begun.” He pushed inside me. I expected pain. I expected the rough, fast claiming of a man who takes what is his. Instead, he moved slowly. He stretched me inch by agonizing, delicious inch, giving me time to adjust, giving me time to feel every single part of him buried deep inside me, connected to me in a way no law or contract could ever replicate. He filled me completely. He surrounded me. He was everywhere. “Look at me,” he commanded, his voice strained, his forehead resting against mine. “I want you to see who is with you. I want you to know that no matter what happens… it is me. Only me.” I looked. I looked into those stormy grey eyes and saw everything—the cruelty, the power, the obsession, and buried deep beneath it all… a terrifying, consuming love. When he moved, it was powerful and deep. He set a relentless rhythm, driving me up toward the edge of pleasure faster than I had ever imagined possible. My hands clawed at his back, not pushing him away, but holding on, meeting him thrust for thrust, matching his intensity with my own. I hated him. I feared him. But God help me… I felt alive. “Harder,” I whispered against his mouth, throwing his own dominance back at him. “Don’t hold back, Kiel. If you want to conquer me… do it properly.” A growl tore from his throat, animalistic and raw. He grabbed my hands, pinned them above my head with one of his, and drove into me harder, deeper, hitting that perfect spot inside me that made me see stars. “You want it hard? You want it rough?” he gritted out, sweat slicking his skin, his eyes wild. “Then take it. Take everything I give you. And remember this feeling tomorrow morning. Remember who made you scream. Remember who owns every part of you.” “I remember… who I am,” I gasped, my body tightening around him as the pleasure built and built, a tidal wave ready to crash. “And I remember… that I am not yours… not fully.” “Yet,” he roared. He drove into me one final time, burying himself so deep I thought we would merge into one being, and I shattered. I cried out his name, the sound torn from my throat, my body convulsing around him, drowning in the pleasure he gave me. He followed me seconds later, spilling himself inside me, marking me from the inside out, shaking above me, holding onto me like I was the only thing keeping him grounded to the earth. We lay there afterward, tangled together, breathless, sweating, hearts pounding in sync. Kiel didn’t move. He didn’t leave. He collapsed half on top of me, his head resting in the crook of my neck, his heavy arm draped possessively over my waist, keeping me trapped. For a long time, there was only the sound of our breathing and the distant hum of the city far below us. I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, my body sore and aching in the most wonderful way, my mind racing. I had fought him. I had challenged him. I had not broken. And yet… I was more tangled in his web now than I had ever been. Kiel shifted, lifting his head slightly to look at me. His expression was softer now, stripped of the tyranny, stripped of the games. He traced the mark he had left on my shoulder—a bruise that would stay for days, a physical reminder of tonight. “You asked me earlier why I changed the contract,” he said quietly, his voice rough and low in the dark room. I turned my head to look at him, my eyes searching his. “Yes. You said it wasn’t just for business.” He nodded, his thumb brushing over my lip. “It wasn’t,” he whispered. “I changed it because Victor was going to destroy you. He was going to break you, lock you away, and kill the light inside you just because he could. I couldn’t let that happen.” His eyes darkened, turning serious, intense. “I am a monster, Azariah. I admit it. But I am your monster. And I would burn the whole world down before I let anyone hurt you. Even if I have to lock you up to keep you safe… even if I have to make you hate me… I will keep you alive. I will keep you mine.” He kissed my forehead, lingering there, his breath warm against my skin. “Sleep now, wife. Tomorrow… the real rules begin. Tomorrow… you will learn exactly what it means to be Bound To His Obsession.” He pulled me closer, wrapping me tight in his arms, surrounding me with his scent, his warmth, his power. I closed my eyes, my hand resting over his heart, feeling its steady beat. He thought he was locking me away. He thought he was the one in control. But as sleep finally began to pull me under, I smiled to myself. He didn’t realize it yet. He didn’t understand it yet. But he was right about one thing. I was strong. I was a fighter. And I was not a possession. He thought he had won the first battle tonight. But I had let him win. Because while he was busy conquering my body… I was already busy conquering his heart. And when I was done… he would be the one begging for freedom.The red light blazed brighter, weaving itself between the blue and gold streams until they stopped pulling apart and began to merge into one brilliant, warm glow. The hum in the air shifted from a heavy command into something lighter, like a heartbeat finally finding its right rhythm.My hand tightened around Kiel’s, and I could feel the energy flowing through both of us at once—not forcing, not demanding, but waiting.Elias’s fingers flew across his device, his eyes going wider with every line he decoded, as if he were uncovering a secret buried deeper than the bedrock itself.“This is impossible,” he breathed, his voice shaking with awe. “Adeline didn’t just leave a third choice. She built a whole new foundation into the system. She knew one day the original rules would become a trap. She knew the price would be too high.”Elara’s voice returned, but this time it held no authority, only raw sho
We stepped out of the tunnel entrance into the early morning light, breathing in fresh air that felt clearer than it had in months. Behind us, the Genesis Protocol hummed in its new quiet state, and the hold Elara had over everything was broken. It felt like the end of a long war, like we had finally won.But the twist was only just beginning.We walked toward the edge of the industrial district, planning to reach our safe house and begin the work of rebuilding. Kiel kept one hand on my arm and the other near his weapon, still cautious even though the alarms had gone silent. Elias followed close behind, his face still heavy with the weight of his mistakes.“For the first time in years,” Kiel said quietly, “we do not have to look over our shoulders. The system no longer marks us as enemies. Elara and Julian have no power left.”I nodded, feeling a lightness in my chest I had not known was possible. “We can start over. We can m
White light flooded the chamber, bright and steady, washing away the cold blue glow that had served Elara for so long. The deep, heavy hum softened into a clear, even tone, like a breath released after holding it for too long. Every line of energy across the walls shifted, rearranging itself into patterns older and simpler than any we had seen before.Elara stumbled back, her hand slipping from the core. For years, she had felt its power flow through her, felt it answer her every thought. Now that the link was severed. She stared at her own fingers as if they had suddenly turned foreign, her face draining of color.“What have you done?” she whispered, more confused than angry now. “You broke the connection. You destroyed the control I built.”“I did not destroy anything,” I said, stepping forward until I stood at the edge of the platform. “I restored it. You changed its purpose. You turned a guardian into a master. Now i
The new moon hung low, a thin dark shape against the sky, leaving only faint starlight to guide our way. We drove the old sedan until the paved roads ended, then left it hidden deep in thick brush, covering it with branches and leaves. From there, we moved on foot, following old trails that wound through hills and forests, staying well away from highways and settlements.Every step was careful. Every sound made us pause. Marcus had warned us that Elara’s network reached almost everywhere, but in these remote areas, the Protocol’s reach was thinner. Still, we moved as if eyes were watching from every tree.We reached the outskirts of the city just before dawn. The sky turned pale gray, and the distant glow of streetlights painted the horizon. We slipped into the maze of old industrial districts, where buildings stood empty, and streets were rarely patrolled. This was the forgotten edge of the city, the kind of place no official records noticed.Our fi
Three months passed at Hartwood Manor. The seasons shifted, turning the green hills into deeper shades of summer. We settled into a rhythm of work and study, every day bringing us closer to understanding the truth behind the legacy.We found more documents hidden in locked cabinets and hollowed books. They told of factions within the old order, people who had disagreed with the shift toward control. Some had vanished, some had been disgraced, some had fled. One name appeared repeatedly: Marcus Voss, a former senior keeper who left the system twenty years ago and disappeared without a trace.“He saw the corruption early,” Kiel said one evening, spreading papers across the oak table. “He wrote that Elara and Julian were altering the Protocol’s purpose step by step. He warned that they would turn it into a tool of domination. When no one listened, he took what he could and ran.”“Could he still be alive?” I asked.&l
The road stretched on for hours, winding deeper and deeper into the countryside. The smooth highways turned into narrower roads, then into cracked asphalt lanes, and finally into a rough dirt track that bounced and rattled the old sedan with every foot we traveled. Tall trees closed in on both sides, their branches weaving together overhead to make a dark green tunnel. There were no houses here. No streetlights. No signs of human life at all. Only forest, hills, and the quiet hum of nature are undisturbed.I watched the passing trees, my mind still replaying every moment from the last twenty-four hours. The gala. The confrontation. The revelation of the Genesis Protocol. My mother was standing there, cold and powerful, looking at me like I was nothing more than a failed experiment. Elias is turning his back on us. Julian’s smug certainty that he knew exactly how this story would end.And Kiel. Beside me now, driving steadily, his hands loose on the wheel but his
The clock on the far wall ticked steadily, each second dragging out like a lifetime. It was eleven fifty five. The whole room had shifted. The casual laughter and wandering conversations had faded. Everyone moved toward the center, toward the raised platform where the ceremony always took place.
The air inside Ashford Tower did not just feel busy. It felt charged. It vibrated with a frequency only those deeply connected to the empire could understand. It was the hum of billions of dollars in motion. It was the quiet breath of power waiting to be unleashed. It was the sharp, electric tensio
The days following Julian Vane’s visit carried a different kind of silence. It was no longer the heavy, suffocating quiet of waiting for danger, nor the sharp, tense stillness of secrets held between us. This silence was lighter. It was the calm that comes after the storm has broken, when t
The invitation was sent exactly as I had asked.It was short, formal, and left no room for misunderstanding. I wrote every word myself, sitting at the heavy oak desk in the secret archive room, with Kiel standing silently behind me, his hands resting on my shoulders. I could feel the tension rollin







