LOGINPOV: Damien
I tossed the quarterly reports onto the center of the table. The sharp smack made the head of acquisitions flinch in his expensive suit.
"This is garbage," I said, leaning back in my chair. "You actually call this a projection?"
The guy stammered, frantically wiping sweat off his forehead. He was terrified of me, and honestly, he should be.
I ran the tech branch of the Black empire. I didn't get this seat by playing nice or holding hands with the board members.
"The algorithm failed to account for the market shift, Mr. Black," he squeaked out.
I let out a dry, humorless laugh. "The algorithm failed because you gave it trash data."
I didn't have the patience for incompetence. I didn't have the patience for much of anything these days.
"Fix it by Friday, or pack your desk," I told him.
I stood up, signaling the brutal end of the meeting. Everyone scattered like roaches when the lights turn on.
They couldn't get out of the room fast enough. It was always exactly like this.
I walked back to my private office and slammed the door shut. The heavy silence was an instant relief to my pounding head.
I poured myself a black coffee and walked over to the floor-to-ceiling windows. The city looked like a massive, glowing circuit board from up here.
People thought Dominic was the ruthless one in the family.
The truth is….. Dominic was the face, the strategist amongst us.
I, however, was the executioner. When a competitor needed their servers completely wiped or their stock tanked into the dirt, they called me.
I liked machines. Machines actually made perfect sense.
They did exactly what you told them to do. They didn't lie, and they definitely didn't leave you behind.
Unlike people. People were a completely different story.
My phone buzzed on the desk with a text from Dominic about some corporate merger. I ignored it.
Dominic was obsessed with this new war against the Vales. Taking their discarded trash and parading it around to make a point.
It was a stupid, messy game. But I backed my brother no matter what.
I always backed my brothers. We were the only ones we could ever count on in this miserable world.
The media thinks the Blacks were born with silver spoons shoved in our mouths. They don't know the actual truth.
They don't know what it felt like to be six years old and watch your own parents walk out the front door.
They just left us. No note, no long goodbye, absolutely nothing.
Just a couple of packed bags and a locked front door on a random Tuesday afternoon.
Dominic practically raised me and the others after that horrible day. He built this massive empire so we would never be helpless again.
That kind of betrayal changes a kid. It rips out the part of your brain that believes in fairy tales and love.
Love is a total scam. It's just a massive vulnerability waiting to be exploited by someone smarter than you.
I put up walls so high and thick that nobody could ever climb them. I kept everyone at a very safe distance.
Women were strictly temporary in my life. Fun for a night, maybe two, and then they were gone before breakfast.
I didn't do attachments. I absolutely did not do messy emotions.
I was perfectly fine in my isolated little tower of code and money.
Until last night. Until her.
My mind aggressively dragged me back to the kitchen.
Sophia.
I rubbed my temples, trying to physically erase the image of her shivering against the counter.
It wasn't working at all. She was stuck in my head like a bad line of malicious code.
When I walked into the kitchen and saw her crying, something weird happened inside me.
My chest actually tightened. It was a physical, painful reaction.
I didn't care about Marcus Vale's pathetic ex-wife. I didn't care about anyone's ex-wife.
But seeing her so broken triggered something I didn't even know was hiding in my system.
It was this primal, violent need to stand in front of her and block out the entire world.
I wanted to track down Marcus and permanently rearrange his teeth. I wanted to burn his entire mansion to the ground.
Marcus Vale was a complete joke. A weak man playing dress-up in his daddy's suits.
The fact that he had a woman like Sophia and threw her out like garbage? It proved he was completely brain-dead.
It made zero logical sense for me to care. I didn't even know the girl.
So, I went on the offensive. It was my default setting when I felt threatened by something I couldn't control.
I shoved a glass of whiskey at her and told her to stop being pathetic. I was brutally harsh.
I told her to stop crying over trash that belonged in a dumpster.
It sounded mean. It was meant to sound mean.
But honestly? It was the only way I knew how to put a protective shield around her.
Softness doesn't keep you alive in our cutthroat world.
I needed her to find her anger. Anger is a weapon you can actually use.
Sadness just makes you a walking target for predators.
When she snapped back at me, her eyes flashing in the dark?
Yeah. That was the exact moment I realized I was completely screwed.
I told myself I was just following Dominic's master play. Keeping the new weapon sharp for the upcoming war.
But who was I even kidding?
When I reached out and touched her face, my hand was practically burning.
I wanted to pull her against me and show her what it felt like to actually be wanted by a real man.
Not used or discarded on a wet street. Fiercely wanted.
But I couldn't do that. I was broken in dark ways she couldn't even begin to understand.
She needed a safe place to land and heal. I was a walking minefield.
I let out a harsh breath and turned away from the massive window.
I had to stay away from her. I had to treat her like the project she was supposed to be in this house.
If I let her in, she would ruin me. She would effortlessly tear down the walls I spent twenty years building.
Or worse. I would completely ruin her.
I walked over to my desk and forcefully opened my laptop. Work. That was exactly what I needed right now.
I needed to bury myself in numbers and data until I forgot the way she smelled like rain and vanilla.
My office door clicked open without a single knock. Only one arrogant person did that.
Dominic walked in, looking entirely too smug for ten in the morning.
"The Vale stock dropped four percent at the opening bell," Dominic said, dropping onto my leather couch.
"Good for us," I muttered, refusing to look up from my screen.
"Sophia is awake. I'm taking her shopping," he continued smoothly. "You should come. Show some family solidarity."
I finally looked up at him. He was playing a very dangerous game, and he didn't even know the half of it.
"I'm busy," I said flatly. "Keep your stray dog out of my way."
Dominic just smirked at me. He didn't believe a word I just said.
He knew me better than anyone alive. He probably saw the exact way I looked at her when she arrived last night.
"Suit yourself," Dominic said, standing up and brushing invisible lint off his suit. "Just remember, Damien. She's strictly off-limits."
He walked out, leaving me alone with the quiet hum of the computer servers.
Off-limits. Right. Sure thing, boss.
I cracked my knuckles and stared at the empty doorway for a long minute.
Sophia wasn't a pawn. And I definitely wasn't playing by his rules anymore.
I told myself again to stay far away. To let Dominic handle the messy Vale drama.
But the memory of her tear-stained face flashed in my mind again, hitting me like a physical punch.
She was a walking disaster. A beautiful complication I seriously did not need in my structured life.
Yet, my feet were already moving toward the door before my brain could stop them.
What was I doing?
I was going to ruin everything. I knew it in my gut.
But for the first time in my life, I really didn't care.
Sophia's POVI pulled Damien back before he reached Marcus.Not gently. I grabbed his arm with both hands and put my entire weight into stopping him and he could have shaken me off without effort, he was twice my strength and entirely consumed by something I had never seen on his face before, but he stopped."Damien," I said. "Dominic needs you alive and not in prison for what you're about to do."His chest was heaving. His eyes were on Marcus and Marcus was backing away now, gun still raised but shaking, surrounded by Zane and Elijah and the wreckage of his own hired men."Damien," I said again. Softer this time. "Look at me."He looked at me.Whatever he saw in my face did something. The fury didn't disappear but it stopped being the only thing in his eyes.Behind us, sirens. Close. Zane had called them the moment the first shot landed, I learned later, the same efficient calm that ran every part of his life applied even to the worst moment of the night.Marcus dropped the gun and r
Damien's POVI stepped in front of Sophia before Marcus finished his sentence."You're not getting anywhere near her," I said.Marcus smiled. The smile he used to wear in boardrooms before he became a punchline. "Damien Black. Defending what's mine again.""She was never yours," I said. "And tonight you're about to find out exactly how far away from yours she actually is."Behind Marcus, six men were spreading out across the street with the controlled efficiency of people who did this professionally. Not security guards. The same kind of people Zane had warned us about weeks ago, when mercenaries had tried to grab Sophia from a spa.Marcus had hired the real thing this time.I felt Sophia's hand close around my arm."The laptop is inside," she said quietly. Just for me. "Mei is with it. I need to get back to her.""You're not going back in there," I said."Damien—""Margaret Park has been selling information to every side of this for fifteen years," I said. "I don't know what room is
Sophia's POVThe earpiece crackled once. Soft enough that I almost missed it.Then Damien's voice, low and urgent. "Sophia. Don't react. Mrs. Park isn't just working for Diana. She's been taking money from the Vale fraud account for fifteen years. She's not loyal to anyone in that room."I kept my face exactly where it was.Diana was mid sentence, explaining the structure of the offshore accounts connected to Victoria's grandfather, and I made myself nod at the right places while every instinct in my body recalibrated around the woman standing quietly by the door with her hands folded in front of her like she was waiting to clear plates.She had served me breakfast that morning.I had thanked her."You're not listening," Diana said, catching the shift in my attention."I am," I said. "I'm just thinking about how many people in this story have been pretending to be something they're not."Diana's eyes moved past me to Mrs. Park.A small flicker. Almost nothing. But I caught it because
Damien's POVI was out of the car before the words finished landing in my earpiece.Zane grabbed my arm through the open door. "Damien wait—""She just told her my mother died for finding out about a dead child." My voice didn't sound like mine. "I'm not waiting.""If you walk in there you blow whatever control Sophia has built in that room," Zane said. Fast and low. "She's handling it. Listen to her handle it."I stood half out of the car with one foot on the pavement and forced myself to breathe and listened.Sophia's voice came through clear and steady in a way that didn't match anything I felt right now."You're telling me my parents didn't just find financial fraud," she said. "They found out you had a child who died under suspicious circumstances connected to the Vale family. And Victoria had them killed to bury that.""Yes," Diana said."Why didn't you tell anyone," Sophia said. "Twenty one years and you let your sons believe you abandoned them rather than tell them you were pr
Sophia's POVRichard Black was smiling.That was the detail that broke something open in the room. Not the threat. Not Mrs. Park standing beside Diana with the calm of someone who had finished a job well. The smile.A man whose sons believed he had been controlled, manipulated, removed from his own life by a woman he had never stopped loving. Standing there. Smiling for the camera.I looked at Damien's face.He was looking at the photograph the way you look at a wound you didn't know you had until someone pointed at it."He's not a hostage," Dominic said quietly. "He's a participant.""Maybe he's performing," Remy said. "Maybe she's making him smile.""Look at his eyes," Zane said. He had already enhanced the image on his screen, sharpened it, pulled it apart pixel by pixel the way he did everything. "Nobody forces that. That's relief."Nobody said anything for a moment."Bring the girl," Dominic read again. "Come alone."He looked at me."No," Damien said before anyone else could spe
Damien's POVThe drive back was twenty minutes of silence and thinking.Mei sat in the back with her bag on her lap looking out the window like someone taking in a city she had decided to assess rather than admire. Sophia sat beside me with the laptop against her chest and her eyes on the road and her mind somewhere I could see but not reach.I let her have it.At the fifteen-minute mark she said "Miss Chen."I glanced at her."Linda Marsh," she said. "She's been in that house for eleven years. She would have been there when I arrived. When I left. Every dinner, every argument, every conversation I had with Marcus and Victoria in that house for three years." She paused. "She knew everything about me before I knew anything about myself.""Yes," I said."Diana built a file on me," she said. "Before the marriage. Before any of this." She looked at the laptop in her hands. "She's had eyes on me for three years and I never knew.""She didn't count on you ending up here," I said."No," Soph
Sophia's POVThe dress I was wearing cost more than the car I’d been forced to leave behind at the Vale estate.It was a deep, shimmering emerald silk that clung to every curve like a second skin. Dominic had picked it out himself, claiming it was the color of envy."Perfect for tonight," he’d said
Sophia's POVHoly fuckity fuck. There was no way you could call the Black estate a house. It was a whole fortress made of glass and steel, the whole building reeled of intimidation.Dominic’s driver took my cracked suitcase like it was a lump of dirt and disappeared into the shadows of the foyer. D
Sophia's POVThe rain wasn't stopping. If anything, it got louder, mocking me with every heavy drop that hit the plastic roof of the bus stop.I stared at my phone's screen blankly. As though staring at it continuously was going to make a single dollar pop up.How was I supposed to even get a bus?
Sophia's POV"Get out."Two words. That was all it took for my entire life to faceplant into the dirt.I stood there, staring at the man I’d called my husband for three years, and for a second, I actually thought I’d misheard him.Because I was the one who just walked in on him. I was the one stand







