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Aurora's POV
The dress is too tight. That’s the first thing I notice when I look in the mirror... how the white fabric clings to my breasts and hips like it was made to show everyone exactly what they bought. My hands won’t stop shaking. I press them flat against my thighs and suck in a breath that tastes like expensive perfume and regret. You did this for Mom. For Jake. Remember that. The ceremony was barely an hour ago. Cold flowers, fake smiles, and whispers I pretended not to hear. “Kane girl sold herself.” “Black got a good deal.” I stood beside Nico Black, said vows I didn’t mean, and kept my chin up the whole time thinking about hospital bills, empty cupboards, and my little brother sleeping on the couch. Home from school because we couldn't afford school shoes. It was worth it. It has to be worth it. The penthouse bedroom is huge and cold despite the warm lighting. It smells like cedar and something sharper underneath...money, power, the kind of clean that costs more than most people make in a year. Floor-to-ceiling windows show the city glittering sixty floors below, and I’m standing here in a wedding dress that feels like it belongs to someone else’s life. I reach behind me for the zipper. Can’t reach it. Of course. I’m still struggling when the door opens without a knock. My stomach drops. I don’t turn right away. I hear the soft click of the latch, expensive shoes on thick carpet, and I tell myself to breathe before I face whatever comes next. When I finally turn, Nico Black is already watching me. He’s taken off his jacket. Tie loosened, top button open, sleeves rolled up to show strong forearms. He looks exactly like the kind of man who can ruin your life with a signature and a smile. Gray eyes move over me slowly, taking in every curve the dress is hugging too tightly. He doesn’t speak. Neither do I. He crosses the room without rushing, stops so close I have to tilt my head up. His fingers find the zipper at my back. One smooth pull and the dress loosens around my ribs. I exhale shakily before I can stop myself. “Breathing already?” he murmurs, almost amused. “I’ve been trapped in this thing for hours.” “Mmm.” His hand stays at the base of my spine, warm through the thin fabric. “You did well today.” I blink. “I stood there and signed a piece of paper.” “You didn’t cry.” He says it like it’s praise. “Some of them do.” Some of them. Like I’m just the latest in a line of girls who signed their lives away. I step sideways, putting space between us, and turn toward the window. The city lights blur a little. Somewhere down there Mom is in a real hospital bed and Jake has food in the fridge, and that’s why I’m here. That’s why I let this man put his name on me. “You should know,” I say, trying to sound steady, “I’m going to need a laptop. For my family’s finances. The medical stuff. I can’t handle it all on my phone.” Silence stretches. Then: “You’re negotiating. On your wedding night.” “I’m telling you what I need. There’s a difference.” Something shifts in his eyes. He steps closer again, hand lifting to brush a strand of hair from my face. The touch is gentle, but it makes my pulse jump. “You’ll have what you need,” he says softly. Then his fingers slide to my jaw, tilting my face up, and his mouth comes down on mine. It’s not gentle. His kiss is slow but demanding, tongue sliding against mine like he’s already claiming every part of me. Heat floods my body before I can stop it. My hands fist in his shirt. A small, traitorous sound escapes me. He makes a low noise in his throat and pulls me closer. The dress slips lower on my shoulders. His free hand slides down my back, pressing me against the hard line of his body, and I feel him... thick and ready...against my stomach. My mind is screaming this is just a contract, but my body is already softening, getting wet, nipples tightening against the fabric. Shame burns hot in my chest. I’m selling myself and my pussy is clenching for the buyer. The door opens. I jerk back, gasping. Nico doesn’t let go. His hand stays on my waist, holding me in place as he glances over his shoulder. A man stands in the doorway. Same face. Same gray eyes. Same height and build. But his hair is messier, tattoos crawl up his forearms, and a thin scar cuts across his jaw. He leans against the frame with his hands in his pockets, watching us with an intensity that makes my skin prickle. My voice comes out small and cracked. “Who… who is that?” Nico’s grip tightens slightly on my waist. His voice stays calm, almost casual. “My brother.” I wait for more. Nothing comes. “Your...” My throat closes. “You have a twin.” “Identical.” He says it like it’s nothing. The man... the brother...pushes off the doorframe and steps inside. His eyes drag over me slowly, taking in the loosened dress, my flushed face, Nico’s hand still possessively on me. A strange sensation rolls across my skin then... like another pair of hands ghosting over my shoulders, my breasts, between my legs... faint but real enough to make me gasp and press my thighs together. It comes from his direction. It makes no sense. It terrifies me. The brother’s jaw flexes. His eyes darken. I take one shaky step back from Nico. The weird feeling fades, but my heart is pounding so hard I feel sick. “What… what was that?” I whisper. Neither of them answers. The brother keeps walking toward us, slow and deliberate. And standing there in a half-undone wedding dress, sixty floors above a city that doesn’t care, I realize with cold, sinking horror that I didn’t read the fine print closely enough. This contract wasn’t just with one man. It was with both of them.The door to the penthouse had barely clicked shut behind us when the air changed. The event had left a charge on all three of us that the car ride home couldn’t burn off. Not the usual post-gala exhaustion or the sharp edge of adrenaline. This was thicker, deeper. The kind of heat that had been building since the lodge, since the quiet files Matteo kept leaving on my nightstand, since Nico started watching me like I was a map he was still trying to read but no longer fully controlled. Tonight, after watching me work that room like I belonged there, the heat between us had a different quality. Less about possession, less about who owned who. More about something that didn’t have a clean name yet. Something that felt dangerously close to real. I kicked off my heels in the entryway. The burgundy dress clung to my skin, still warm from the night, the slit up my thigh flashing as I moved. Nico’s hand found my lower back immediately, warm through the thin fabric. Matteo closed the door a
The biggest social obligation so far was at the old Metropolitan Club, the kind of place where the chandeliers had been hanging since before most of the guests were born. Heavy velvet drapes, marble floors that clicked under heels, air thick with expensive perfume and older secrets. This wasn’t a simple gala. This was where the real strings got pulled. Where families like the Blacks reminded everyone else who still ran the table. I wasn’t the same woman who had walked into that first event months ago. Back then I’d been mapping exits and memorizing faces while trying not to drown in the dress and the role. Tonight I walked in like I belonged in the dress. Like the role had grown into my skin. The deep burgundy gown hugged every curve, slit up one thigh just enough to draw eyes without screaming for attention. My hair was up, diamonds at my ears and throat that weren’t mine but felt like armor now. Nico’s hand rested at the small of my back as we entered, warm and steady, but I d
Nico felt it before I even realized how obvious it had become. We were in the living room that evening. Nothing special. Matteo and I had been trading another quiet look across the kitchen island earlier, the kind that carried the weight of another file left on my nightstand and the silent alliance we were building. Nothing romantic, just understanding. Shared purpose. But the bond didn’t care about intentions. It carried the new closeness between us like a signal. Nico was on the couch with his laptop when it hit him. I felt the exact moment through the connection... his cool presence sharpening suddenly, turning colder, then flaring hot with something raw and complicated. Jealousy. Not the clean, controlled kind he usually kept locked down. This was messy, immediate. The kind that comes when you think someone is taking what’s yours. He closed the laptop slowly. Too slowly, his gray eyes lifted and locked on me where I sat curled up with a book I wasn’t reading. Then they slid t
It started small. Two days after Irina left, I found a plain white envelope on my nightstand. No name, no note. Just a USB drive inside. I knew it was from Matteo the second I saw it. The bond carried a quiet warmth when I picked it up, like he was somewhere in the penthouse watching to see what I’d do. I locked myself in the bathroom, plugged it in, and opened the files. Nothing huge. Nothing that would get him killed if someone found it. Just small pieces, a port manifest from seven years ago with my father’s old company name listed as the receiver. A payment note with Elias Vale’s initials next to a transfer that matched the one I’d already found. A single line from an old email chain: “Thompson becoming difficult. D says handle it quietly.” I sat on the cold tile floor and stared at the screen until my eyes burned. Matteo had been watching this empire with the same eyes I had for much longer. He didn’t say anything when I came out of the bathroom. Just gave me a small nod ac
Irina arrived like she owned the afternoon. The elevator chimed mid-afternoon, and I heard Maria’s surprised greeting from the kitchen. I was on the couch with a book I wasn’t reading, legs tucked under me, when Irina stepped into the living room. Charcoal coat draped over one arm, dark hair swept up, that same razor-sharp elegance she carried everywhere. She looked like she could cut glass with a smile. “Aurora,” she said, voice smooth as good whiskey. “I was in the area, thought I’d drop by.” I set the book down slowly. “You don’t strike me as the type who just drops by.” Her smile curved. “Smart girl. I don’t. But some conversations deserve to happen in private.” Maria hovered near the doorway, uncertain. I gave her a small nod. “We’re fine, Maria. Thanks.” The older woman disappeared into the kitchen without another word. Smart as always. Irina dropped her coat over the back of an armchair and settled onto the couch across from me like she belonged there. She crossed her le
Matteo found me in the library the next afternoon. I was curled up in the big leather chair by the window, pretending to read the same page for the third time. The sun was coming in low and golden, catching dust in the air. My mind was still replaying the way Nico had gone completely still in that meeting room, the flush on his neck, the way Carlo had narrowed his eyes like he could smell something off but couldn’t name it. The door clicked shut behind Matteo. I looked up. He stood there for a second, hands in his pockets, just watching me. Not angry, not even annoyed. Just... assessing. Like I was a new map he was trying to read. “You did something yesterday,” he said quietly. No hello. Straight to it. I closed the book and set it on the small table beside me. “Yeah, I did.” He crossed the room slowly and dropped into the chair across from me. The same one he’d sat in when we talked about the bond before. He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, dark eyes steady on my face. “Du
I noticed the door on the third week. It was tucked away at the end of the east corridor, past the gym and the rarely-used guest suites. Unlike every other door in the penthouse, this one didn’t have a normal keyhole. Just a sleek digital keypad embedded in the matte black panel, glowing with so
I waited until the middle of the night. After Dante left, the penthouse felt poisoned. Every laugh he’d pulled out of me, every warm story, every careful syllable I’d collected sat heavy in my stomach like bad whiskey. I played the perfect wife through dinner...smiling, touching Nico’s arm, letti
AURORA'S POV Dante Black showed up at the penthouse unannounced the next evening, like he owned the damn building. Which, technically, he did. Maria nearly tripped over herself letting him in. I was in the kitchen grabbing a glass of water when I felt the shift in the bond...both twins reacting
The phone rang while I was standing in the middle of the living room like an idiot. It was Jake’s ringtone... that stupid little guitar riff he’d set as his contact years ago and never changed. My stomach dropped. For a second I just stared at the screen, heart hammering, before I swiped to answer







