LOGINThe heavy click of the bedroom door closing echoed through the penthouse, leaving me alone in the vast, silent living room. I stood there for a long time, staring at the polished floor, my mind racing with everything Kiel had said. Rules. Control. Ownership. He spoke as if I were nothing more than a valuable asset he had acquired, a prize he had spent years waiting to claim.
But he didn’t understand—possessing someone’s body was easy. It was the heart and mind that were impossible to hold. And those, he would never get. I walked slowly toward the floor-to-ceiling windows, my reflection staring back at me—a woman dressed in silk, surrounded by luxury, yet caged more tightly than any prisoner in a dark cell. Outside, New York City glittered under the afternoon sun, millions of people moving freely, living their lives, unaware that just fifty floors above, someone was fighting to keep her identity alive. I traced the cool glass with my fingertips. It was thick, unbreakable, crystal clear. Beautiful, just like everything else in this place. Just like everything Kiel owned. Everything he touched turned to gold, but gold always weighed you down eventually. It wasn't freedom; it was just a heavier kind of chain. “Thinking of running?” The voice came from behind me, deep and smooth, cutting through the silence like a blade. I didn’t jump. I had sensed him coming long before he spoke—the change in air pressure, the faint scent of expensive cologne and cedar that clung to his skin. I didn’t turn around immediately. I kept my gaze fixed on the city below, refusing to let him see how much his presence affected me. “Thinking of how far I would get if I tried,” I answered honestly, my voice calm and steady. “Not very far, I imagine. You have seen to that.” Strong, warm hands settled on my waist, pulling me back against his chest until every curve of my body molded perfectly against his hard frame. His chin rested on the top of my head, and I could feel the steady, powerful beat of his heart against my back. He held me like I was something precious, something irreplaceable. And yet, he treated me like property. “You are smart enough to know you have nowhere to go, Riah,” Kiel murmured, his lips brushing against my hair, sending shivers racing down my spine. “And even if you could leave… you would come back. Because out there, you are nothing. In here… you are everything. You are my world.” I turned in his arms, forcing myself to look up into those storm-grey eyes that held so much power and so much madness. He was handsome, undeniably so—sharp jawline, dark hair, features carved with perfection. But beauty didn't change the fact that he was a captor. A captor who believed he was my savior. “A world made of gold bars and locked doors is still a prison, Kiel,” I said softly, deliberately placing my hands flat against his chest, not to hold him, but to create a barrier. “You call this love? You call this protection? This is possession. Pure and simple.” A dark, knowing smile curved his lips. He didn't deny it. He never did. “Call it what you want,” he whispered, his fingers lifting to trace the line of my jaw, his touch burning hot against my skin. “But remember this: I built these walls to keep the rest of the world out, not just to keep you in. There are wolves out there, Azariah. People who would eat you alive if they knew who you were, what you carry, whose name you bear. I am the only one who can keep you safe. The only one strong enough to handle you.” He leaned closer, his gaze dropping to my lips before locking back onto my eyes with an intensity that made my breath catch. “And yes… I possess you. Every breath, every heartbeat, every thought. I spent ten years dreaming of you, waiting for you, planning for this moment. Do you really think I would let anyone else have a single piece of you? Not even yourself.” I pulled away from him, stepping out of his hold, putting a few feet of distance between us. I needed space. I needed to breathe. Being close to him was intoxicating and dangerous; it made me forget my own arguments, made me want to believe his twisted version of reality. “Ten years,” I repeated, walking over to the sofa and sitting down, keeping my posture straight and proud. “You were a man, Kiel. I was a child. That isn't love. That is obsession. And obsession is never healthy. It breaks things. It breaks people.” He didn't follow immediately. He stood there, watching me with that hungry, unwavering gaze, his hands stuffed casually into the pockets of his tailored trousers. He looked relaxed, completely in control, like a king in his court. “Call it obsession if it makes you feel better,” he said, walking slowly toward me, each step deliberate and heavy with authority. “But I did not break you, did I? I made you stronger. I waited for you to grow, to bloom, until you were ready to be mine completely. I protected you from the moment I saw you. Even when you didn't know I existed.” He stopped right in front of me, towering over me, forcing me to tilt my head back just to meet his eyes. “I am the only thing standing between you and ruin, Azariah. Accept it. Embrace it. And you will find that being mine is the greatest luxury you will ever know.” I wanted to scream. I wanted to tell him that luxury meant nothing without freedom. That I would trade every diamond, every silk sheet, every inch of this penthouse just to walk down the street alone, just to choose my own meal, just to speak to whoever I wanted. But I knew better. Fighting him with words only made him dig his heels in deeper. He loved the challenge. He loved that I resisted, because it made his eventual victory taste sweeter. So instead, I changed tactics. I leaned back against the sofa cushions, crossing my legs, and looked at him with a cool, calculated expression. “Fine,” I said, my voice smooth and unbothered. “If I am yours, and everything here is mine because I am yours… then surely you won't mind if I start living like it? Because right now, this feels less like a home and more like a display case. You give me everything I need, yet you let me choose nothing.” His eyebrow lifted, intrigued. He liked it when I spoke like this—sharp, intelligent, challenging him on his own ground. “What are you asking for, Riah?” “Access,” I replied instantly. “Books I want to read, not just what you think I should learn. Music I enjoy. Paintings. News. I am not a doll, Kiel. I am your wife and your equal in business terms, even if you refuse to treat me as such. If you want my mind to be sharp enough to match yours, then you cannot starve it. You cannot control every single thing that enters it.” For a moment, silence stretched between us. The air grew thick, charged with tension. I held my breath, waiting for him to refuse, waiting for him to list another rule, another restriction. But instead, he knelt down in front of me, bringing himself to my level, his hands resting gently on my knees. His expression was serious, searching. “You think I filter the world because I think you are weak?” he asked quietly. “I do it because the world is cruel, Azariah. It is full of lies, corruption, and people who would use information to hurt you, to manipulate you, to turn you against me. I control what you see so that nothing can poison you. So that nothing can change how you see me.” “Or so that I never know anything that might make me leave you,” I countered softly. He smiled, a touch of sadness in it, but also absolute certainty. “You will never leave me. Not because I lock the doors, but because deep down… you know I am the only one who truly sees you. The only one who wants all of you—the good, the bad, the wild, and the fierce. Everyone else wants the polite, perfect wife. I want the woman who bit my lip on our wedding night. I want the warrior inside you.” He squeezed my knees gently before standing up again, offering me his hand. “Very well. You want more freedom within these walls? You want to choose? Prove to me you can handle it. You will have a wider selection of books, music, and films. But everything is still monitored. And one wrong move, one mistake, and the privileges are gone. Do you understand?” I took his hand, letting him pull me up, refusing to show how much this small victory meant to me. It wasn't much, but it was a crack in his armor. A small opening I could widen over time. “I understand,” I said firmly. “And I will prove that I am more than just a pretty thing you keep on a shelf.” He pulled me close again, his arm snaking around my waist, holding me tight against him. “I know you are,” he murmured against my forehead. “And that is exactly why I love you. And exactly why I have to keep you so very close.” He led me toward the dining area, where the table had been set again, this time for an early dinner. The sun was beginning to set outside, painting the sky in hues of purple, orange, and red, casting long shadows across the room. “Tonight,” Kiel said, guiding me into my seat before taking his own across from me, “we have dinner alone. No staff, no interruptions. Just us. And we will talk about your role in this empire. Because while you are here, safe and protected… you are also my partner. Whether you like it or not.” I paused, my hand hovering over the napkin. This was new. Rules, restrictions, protection—those I expected. But a role? A partner? “My role?” I asked carefully. He watched me, his expression intense and unreadable. “You are not just my wife, Azariah. You are half of this company. You are a Hartwell. Your name carries weight, history, and power. Eventually, you will need to understand everything I do. You will sit beside me at meetings. You will host events. You will represent me when I cannot be there. People will watch you. They will study you. And they will try to use you to get to me.” He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table, his eyes burning into mine. “That is another reason I control everything. I am training you. I am preparing you to be the Queen of this empire. Because one day… this will all be yours. And I need to know you are strong enough to hold it, to defend it, to rule it.” The realization hit me hard. He wasn't just keeping me captive. He was grooming me. Training me to take his place, to be his equal in every way, while ensuring I could never exist without him. It was the most twisted, beautiful, terrifying kind of love I had ever encountered. “You are building me into your image,” I said quietly. “Strong. Ruthless. Untouchable.” “I am helping you become who you were always meant to be,” Kiel corrected softly. “Powerful. Dangerous. And completely mine.” He lifted his glass of wine, waiting for me to lift mine. “To us,” he toasted, his voice low and commanding. “To the war we are fighting. And to the day you finally admit… you were made for me.” I lifted my glass, my hand steady despite the storm raging inside me. I looked at him—this man who was my jailer, my protector, my husband, and my obsession in return, no matter how much I denied it. “To the war,” I replied, clinking my glass against his. “And to the day you realize… you cannot own a queen. You can only hope she chooses to rule beside you.” The smile that spread across his face was brilliant, dark, and full of promise. He drank his wine, his eyes never leaving mine. The sun dipped below the horizon, plunging the penthouse into twilight, but the room felt brighter than ever. The rules were set. The boundaries were drawn. But the game had changed. It was no longer just about escape or obedience. It was about power. It was about who would bend first. And as I looked across the table at Kiel Sebastian Ashford, the most powerful man in the world, I knew one thing for certain: He thought he held all the cards. He thought he held the keys. But he didn't know that while he was busy locking the doors… I was already busy finding the keys to his heart. And once I had those… everything would change.The distant rumble of engines grew louder, echoing off the old brick walls of the industrial district. Sirens wailed in the far distance, but they did not sound like regular police or emergency response—they were sharp, coordinated, and moving straight toward our location.We stood huddled in the narrow alley, the map of glowing red points still burning across the sky above us. Every second that passed, those dots crept closer, tightening the circle around Ashford Tower and the tunnels beneath it.Kiel pulled me deeper into the shadow of a large metal storage container, his body pressed against mine to shield me, his eyes scanning every possible direction. Elias leaned against the wall, his head in his hands, still reeling from the revelation that his own actions had helped bring this storm down on us. Elara and Julian’s voices came through the hidden speakers, no longer from a position of power, but from the core chamber itself, where they were now working
The red lights blazed across the map painted in the sky, dozens of burning dots scattered across every continent like eyes watching us from the dark. The hum of the Protocol shifted again, no longer calm or waiting, but sharp and alert, sounding like a warning bell echoing through every street and building.We stood frozen in the middle of the quiet alley, the weight of the new truth settling heavy on our shoulders. We had escaped one trap, only to walk straight into a far bigger one.“They know,” I whispered, staring at the glowing marks. “All those groups, all those people… they know the Protocol is real. They know what it can do.”Kiel’s arm tightened around my waist, pulling me close against his chest, his eyes scanning every shadow around us. “And they will come for it. For us. For whatever power they can grab.”Elias did not look up from his device, his fingers moving so fast they blurred against the
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
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
Three Weeks Later...Time had moved strangely since that letter arrived. Three weeks had passed, but they felt like three months—or maybe only three days. I had lost count. The world outside our penthouse had kept turning, cities had risen and fallen in the news, busines
The morning sun hit the glass walls, painting the whole room in bright gold. I woke up not to silence, but to the smell of fresh coffee and the sound of papers shuffling nearby.Kiel was already there. He sat on the edge of the bed, fully dressed in a sharp grey suit, looking over a ta
Life inside the penthouse had settled into a strange new rhythm. It was a world filled with every luxury imaginable—soft silk sheets, fine meals, and views of the city that looked like a painting. But for me, it was also a gilded cage. It was beautiful, it was safe, and it was everything most peop







