LOGINDinner passed in charged silence, broken only by the soft clink of silverware and the distant hum of the city below. The meal was exquisite—slow-roasted lamb, rich wine sauce, vegetables cooked to perfection—but I barely tasted a bite.
Every time I looked up, Kiel was watching me. His grey eyes were sharp, assessing, intense. He measured every movement, every expression, as if I were a piece he was carefully shaping to fit exactly where he wanted me. “You eat like you are afraid to take what is yours,” he said suddenly, setting his fork down with a deliberate click. He leaned back in his chair, swirling deep red wine in his glass. The liquid caught the fading light, glowing like rubies. “I am not afraid,” I replied calmly. “I am simply not hungry.” “Lies.” A slow, knowing smile touched his lips. “A queen does not hold back. A queen takes, consumes, and demands more. You were raised to be polite, soft, and to blend in. But that is not who you are. And it is certainly not who I am making you become.” He stood up, moving with fluid, commanding grace, and walked around the long table until he stood behind my chair. I felt his presence before I saw him—heavy, warm, impossible to ignore. His large hands settled firmly on my shoulders, squeezing gently. His thumbs pressed deep into the tense muscles at my neck, sending a strange mix of relaxation and alertness through me. “Stand up,” he commanded softly. I obeyed immediately, rising to my feet and turning to face him. There was barely an inch between us. His scent surrounded me—expensive cologne, aged wine, cedar, and something uniquely, undeniably him. It filled my senses, clouding my thoughts. “From this moment on, everything changes,” Kiel said, his voice deeper, serious, thick with purpose. “You think I locked you away to hurt you? To control you just for power? Partly, yes. I admit that freely. But mostly… I locked you away to protect you from the wolves out there. And now that you have shown me the fire I knew you had… I am going to teach you how to be the wolf instead of the prey.” My breath hitched. “You want me to be cruel? Ruthless? Exactly like you?” A dark, dangerous smile curved his lips. He reached out, tracing the line of my cheek with the back of his finger. His touch burned against my skin. “I want you to be stronger than me,” he corrected, his gaze locking onto mine with absolute certainty. “One day, I will not be here to stand between you and the world. One day, I will not shield you, fight for you, or destroy anyone who looks at you wrong. I need to know—when I am gone, nothing and no one can ever break you. That is the greatest gift I can give you. Strength. True power.” He stepped back and gestured toward the wall of floor-to-ceiling windows. Outside, New York was a glittering ocean of lights, stretching endlessly into the dark. “Come. Walk with me.” I followed him out to the balcony. The night air was cool, sharp with the smell of rain and concrete. This was the only place I was allowed outside, yet now it felt less like a cage and more like a vantage point. Kiel rested his hands on the thick glass railing, looking out over his empire. He looked majestic, untouchable, like a god surveying his creation. “Do you know what power really is, Riah?” he asked, still looking at the horizon. “Most think it is money, armies, titles. They are wrong. Those are just tools. Power is knowing exactly who you are, exactly what you want, and having the absolute will to take it, keep it, defend it—no matter the cost.” He turned to face me then, his expression severe, eyes glowing in the dim light. “You have power by birthright and by marriage. Hartwell and Ashford—two of the oldest, strongest names in this country. But right now, you hold that power like a fragile glass. You are afraid it will break. You are afraid to use it. You need to hold it like a weapon. Like a crown that belongs only to you.” “And how am I supposed to learn that,” I challenged, my voice steady despite the tremble in my chest, “when you control every single thing I do? How do I learn freedom when I am a prisoner here?” He stepped closer, invading my space until I had to tilt my head back to meet his eyes. He towered over me, broad and imposing, yet there was a strange tenderness in his gaze. “Because I am your teacher,” he said simply. “And here, within these walls, you have absolute authority. Everyone who works for me works for you too. Staff, security, accountants, managers—they answer to you as much as to me. If you want something done, you do not ask. You command it. If you want something changed, you demand it. If someone disobeys you or looks at you wrong… tell me, and they will wish they were never born.” His voice dropped lower, rougher, thick with possessiveness. “But never forget the most important rule: the only person above you… is me. Because I am the one who placed the crown on your head. I am the one who made you powerful. I am the one who gives you everything.” The realization hit me hard. He wasn’t just keeping me captive to satisfy an obsession. He was grooming me. Training me. Shaping me into the partner he needed—strong enough to stand beside him, dangerous enough to protect what was ours, yet dependent enough that I could never exist without him. It was terrifying and seductive all at once. “You are building an empire within an empire,” I whispered. “And I am the center of it. The jewel. The queen you built yourself.” “You are the heart of it,” he corrected fiercely. “Without you, all this is just stone and steel and paper money. Cold, lifeless, meaningless. Without you, I am just a rich man with too many enemies. You give it purpose. You give me purpose. You are the reason I built it all, even if you didn’t know it until now.” He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a sleek, black tablet. It looked expensive, powerful. He held it out between us, watching my reaction closely. “Here. This is your key. It connects to everything I have—security feeds, staff schedules, accounts, reports, communications. Everything you need to run this house. Everything you need to learn how I run the world.” I took it carefully. It was heavy, cool, humming with unseen energy. I looked up at him, genuinely surprised. “You are giving me access? After days of telling me I wasn’t ready, that I couldn’t be trusted?” “You proved you were ready yesterday,” Kiel said, covering my hand over the device with his own warm, firm grip. “When you demanded more than being a doll on a shelf. When you showed me you have a mind and the courage to speak it. But remember—everything you do here, I see. Every message, every file, every search, every command. It is all recorded, it all comes to me. One wrong move… and this vanishes. Your privileges vanish too. You go back to being the doll. And the punishment will be severe.” He leaned down, his lips brushing the sensitive skin below my ear. A shiver raced down my spine. “Do not make me take it back, wife. Because if you disappoint me now… I will not be gentle. Do you understand?” I pulled back slightly and looked him dead in the eye. “And if I succeed? If I learn fast. If I prove I can handle this power. If I show you I am worthy of being your partner… what then?” His eyes darkened instantly, swirling with desire, pride, and absolute devotion. “Then I will give you the world,” he promised, his voice deep and rough with emotion. “Every single part of it. You want to travel? We travel. You want board meetings? You sit right next to me. You want to meet our associates? You meet them as my equal. I promised you everything, Azariah. And I always keep my promises.” He took the tablet gently and tucked it under his arm, then offered me his hand. I took it without hesitation, letting him lead me back inside. The glass door slid shut, sealing us in again, but the atmosphere had shifted completely. What felt like prison bars hours ago now felt like fortress walls. A training ground. A place where something dangerous and powerful was being forged. “Tonight, your first real lesson begins,” Kiel said as we walked toward the library doors. “No more mindless entertainment. No more silly books. You will read the reports I send you. You will memorize names and faces. You will learn who is loyal, who serves only money, and who waits in shadows to stab us in the back and take everything we have.” He pushed the heavy doors open. I stepped inside and caught my breath. The library was vast, lined floor to ceiling with dark wood shelves and thousands of rare, leather-bound books. Warm lamps cast a soft, golden glow. In the center stood a massive mahogany desk, polished to shine, piled high with thick folders and binders filled with secrets. “Kiel?” I said softly, stopping just inside. He turned, eyebrow raised. “Yes, my queen?” The title made my heart skip, even though I knew it was just another way to claim me. “If I am truly to learn power,” I said, lifting my chin to meet his gaze, “there is one condition. You must answer my questions honestly. No lies. No half-truths. No saying ‘because I said so’. If I am to understand this world, I need the truth. All of it.” Silence stretched between us, thick and heavy. I held my breath, afraid I had asked for something he would never give. Honesty was rare in his world. He was a man built on secrets and control. But then, a slow, wicked grin spread across his face. “Honesty,” he mused, stepping closer until he stood right before me again. “That is a dangerous request from a woman married to a man like me. I am not known for giving people the whole truth. It is bad for business. Bad for control. But…” He tilted his head, looking at me with new respect. “Very well. I accept your terms. You ask. I answer. I will not lie. But be warned… the truth is often darker, sharper, harder to bear than the pretty lies I tell to protect you. Once you know it… you cannot un-know it. And it will change how you see everything. Including me.” “I can handle it,” I replied instantly, confidently. “I am a Hartwell, remember? We do not run from the truth.” “Good. Then let us begin.” He guided me to the desk and pulled out the heavy leather chair. I sat down, and he walked around to the other side, placing the tablet and a stack of folders before me. “Sit straight,” he instructed gently but firmly. “Posture is power. How you hold yourself tells people exactly how much power you have. Slump, and you look weak. Sit tall, shoulders back, head high… and you look like you own the room. Eventually, you will.” I adjusted my position immediately—back straight, hands folded neatly in my lap, gaze fixed on the mountain of papers with determination. He stood behind me for a moment, hands resting on the back of my chair, leaning over so his chest was near my shoulder. His breath was warm against my neck as he pointed to the first thick binder. “First rule of power,” he whispered, his voice sending deep vibrations through my bones. “Never let them see you doubt yourself. Even when you are terrified. Even when you do not know the answer. Even when you feel completely out of your depth. You act like you know everything. You act as if you belong. You act like you own the room, the building, the city… and eventually, you will.” He moved to the front of the desk and sat on the edge, crossing his arms over his chest, watching me like a master watching his masterpiece come to life. “Open the first file, wife. Let’s begin your education.” I reached out and lifted the cover. Inside were names, dates, numbers, charts, contracts, and secrets. Secrets that could ruin lives, bankrupt companies, start wars. As I scanned the first page, I realized something terrifying and exhilarating: Kiel Sebastian Ashford was not just teaching me how to survive him, or his world. He was teaching me how to become him. He handed me the keys to his kingdom, showed me every lock, every trap, every hidden passage. He built me into a creature equal to himself—powerful, dangerous, intelligent, ruthless. When I glanced up at him, I saw absolute devotion, absolute control, absolute love in his eyes. The game had shifted entirely. I wasn’t just fighting for freedom anymore. I wasn’t just fighting to escape. I was fighting to rule beside him… or to rule over him.And I was determined to win.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 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
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







