LOGINThe tension inside Blackwood & Vale lingered long after Roman Ellis walked through the doors.
Vivian could still feel it hours later. It sat in the air like smoke after a fire — invisible but impossible to ignore. From her desk outside Damien Blackwood’s office, she watched associates move carefully through the litigation floor, their voices lower than usual, their movements quicker whenever Damien stepped out of his office. Nobody wanted his attention on a normal day. Today was worse. Because Roman Ellis had managed to do something very few people ever accomplished within the walls of this firm. He irritated Damien Blackwood. Personally. Vivian glanced toward the glass office where Damien stood on a call near the windows overlooking Manhattan. His back faced the room, broad shoulders tense beneath a charcoal suit jacket while one hand loosened the knot of his tie slightly. That alone told her enough. Damien never loosened his tie before six. “You’re staring.” Vivian looked up sharply to find Chloe Bennett leaning against her desk holding two coffee cups. “I’m working,” Vivian replied. Chloe handed her one anyway. “You only look that focused when you’re stressed.” “I’m always stressed.” “Fair point.” Vivian accepted the coffee with a quiet sigh while Chloe lowered her voice conspiratorially. “So.” “No.” “You don’t even know what I was going to ask.” “You were going to ask about Roman Ellis.” Chloe looked offended. “Well now I definitely am.” Vivian tried ignoring her, opening the Morrison case files again. It didn’t work. “Is he really as ruthless as people say?” Chloe asked. “Yes.” “And rich?” “Very.” “And unfortunately attractive?” Vivian took a slow sip of coffee. “That’s irrelevant.” Chloe nearly choked on her own drink. “Oh my God. That means yes.” Before Vivian could respond, Damien’s office doors opened. The entire floor straightened instinctively. Damien walked out with effortless authority, sleeves rolled neatly to his forearms again, expression unreadable as his eyes moved directly toward Vivian. Not Chloe. Vivian. “Conference room. Five minutes.” Then he disappeared down the hallway. Chloe stared after him dramatically. “You know,” she whispered, “one day he’s either going to marry you or ruin your life.” Vivian nearly inhaled coffee the wrong way. “Neither of those things are happening.” “Mm-hm.” Chloe walked away unconvinced. Vivian gathered her files quickly before heading toward the main conference room, mentally preparing herself for another brutal strategy meeting. Inside, several senior attorneys were already seated around the long black table, laptops open, tension visible across exhausted faces. Damien stood near the screen at the front of the room. Waiting. The conversations stopped immediately when Vivian entered. Not because of her. Because Damien’s attention shifted toward her the second she walked in. “Sit,” he said simply. She took the seat directly beside him. Unfortunately, that seat always felt hotter than the others. Damien pressed a button on the remote in his hand, projecting financial reports across the screen. “Morrison Holdings is preparing for litigation,” he began. “Ellis is positioning them aggressively, which means they’re expecting us to settle.” One of the senior associates frowned. “Will we?” Damien’s expression remained calm. “No.” The room fell silent. Vivian watched him carefully while he spoke. This was the version of Damien Blackwood the legal world feared. Sharp. Composed. Untouchable. Every word precise. Every movement deliberate. He dismantled opponents with the same calm efficiency other people used to organize paperwork. “And if Ellis pushes public exposure?” another attorney asked cautiously. “Then we bury him in procedure before he gets near a courtroom.” The confidence in his voice should’ve sounded arrogant. Instead, it sounded inevitable. Damien turned slightly toward Vivian. “I want a complete review of Ellis’s previous litigation strategies.” “I already started.” His gaze lingered for half a second too long. “I know.” Something strange tightened in her chest. Damien trusted very few people. But when it came to work, he trusted her completely. And somehow that felt more intimate than it should. The meeting lasted another hour before finally ending. One by one, the attorneys filtered out until only Vivian and Damien remained inside the conference room. Silence settled heavily between them. Vivian organized her files carefully. “You antagonized Ellis today,” she said without looking up. Damien leaned against the edge of the table. “He antagonized me first.” “You could’ve refused the meeting professionally.” “I did.” “You threatened him professionally.” “That too.” Despite herself, Vivian smiled faintly. Damien noticed immediately. His eyes narrowed slightly. “There it is again.” She looked up. “What?” “That look.” “What look?” “The one that appears right before you decide I’m being unreasonable.” “You are being unreasonable.” A pause. Then, unexpectedly: “You still stayed.” The words caught her off guard. Vivian looked at him fully then. Damien’s expression remained composed, but something quieter existed beneath it tonight. Fatigue, maybe. Or something worse. For a moment, neither spoke. The city lights reflected softly against the conference room glass around them, rain streaking down the windows behind Damien’s silhouette. Too close, Vivian thought suddenly. Everything about this felt too close. She stepped back first. “You have dinner with the Harrington board at eight,” she said professionally. Damien’s jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. And there it was again. That strange disappointment she occasionally saw whenever she created distance between them. Before either could say another word, Vivian’s phone buzzed in her hand. Unknown number. She frowned slightly before answering. “Vivian Cole speaking.” “Good evening, Ms. Cole.” Roman Ellis. Her posture stiffened instantly. Across the room, Damien noticed immediately. And watched her carefully. “I hope I’m not interrupting,” Roman continued smoothly. “How did you get this number?” “I have excellent researchers.” Vivian walked toward the far side of the room instinctively. “That’s mildly concerning.” Roman laughed softly. The sound was warm. Easy. Dangerously charming. “I actually called for a professional reason.” “I’m listening.” “I’d like to request several Morrison documents your firm hasn’t released yet.” “That request should go through legal channels.” “It already did.” “And?” “And your boss rejected it in under four minutes.” Vivian closed her eyes briefly. That sounded exactly like Damien. “Then I’m afraid there’s nothing more I can do.” “Maybe not professionally.” Her brows pulled together slightly. Across the room, Damien’s expression darkened. He couldn’t hear Roman’s voice. But he could read Vivian well enough to know the conversation wasn’t ordinary. Roman continued. “Tell me something honestly, Vivian.” The use of her first name felt intentional. Careful. Calculated. “Yes?” “Is Damien Blackwood always this impossible…” A pause. “…or does he save the worst of himself for me?” Vivian glanced up instinctively. Directly into Damien’s eyes. And somehow, standing there between one man on the phone and another watching her silently from across the room, she felt something dangerous begin shifting beneath the surface of her carefully controlled life. Something complicated. Something that already felt impossible to stop. She knew what it was, but can't quite admit it yet. "Well, every man has his own ways" she answered carefully. "As expected, you wouldn't give your boss away that easily" he said "Anyway, I'll keep in touch" he continued before ending the call.Vivian was already standing before Damien finished speaking. “What?” Across the table, Roman’s expression sharpened immediately. Damien’s voice remained controlled through the phone, but she could hear tension beneath it now. “My office was searched.” Searched. Not robbed. The distinction mattered. “When did this happen?” Vivian asked quickly. “Within the last hour.” “Was anything taken?” A pause. “Yes.” Her stomach tightened instantly. “What?” “Get back here first.” Then the line disconnected. Vivian lowered the phone slowly, pulse uneven. Roman watched her carefully from across the candlelit table. “What happened?” She grabbed her coat immediately. “Someone broke into Damien’s office.” Roman’s expression darkened slightly. “And?” “He says something was taken.” For the first time that evening, Roman no longer looked relaxed. Interesting. Very interesting. He stood as Vivian reached for her bag. “I’m driving you.” “That’s not necessary.” “It’s raining,
Roman Ellis was waiting exactly where he said he would be. Vivian spotted him immediately through the glass entrance of Blackwood & Vale, standing beneath the glow of the lobby lights while rain poured steadily outside behind him. One hand rested casually in the pocket of his dark overcoat, the other holding an umbrella as several people passing by glanced at him with quiet recognition. He looked calm. Effortlessly calm. Like the kind of man who never doubted himself. And somehow that made Vivian more nervous than she wanted to admit. The elevator doors opened behind her with a soft metallic sound. Roman turned instantly. Then smiled. Not arrogantly. Not theatrically. Just genuinely enough to make something uncomfortable move through her chest. “You came.” Vivian folded her arms lightly. “You sound surprised.” “I’ve learned not to underestimate Damien Blackwood’s ability to interfere with things.” Her stomach tightened unexpectedly at Damien’s name. Roman noticed imm
The entire office knew. Vivian realized it within thirty minutes of returning upstairs. People tried pretending otherwise, of course. Associates suddenly became fascinated by their laptops whenever she walked past. Conversations stopped half a second too late. Chloe kept giving her dramatic looks from across the litigation floor like she was personally watching a romance scandal unfold in real time. And Damien? Damien became unreadable. Which was infinitely worse than anger. He disappeared into meetings for most of the afternoon, speaking only when necessary, his voice colder than usual during conference calls while the entire thirty-second floor operated under visible tension. Vivian tried focusing on work. Really tried. But concentration became impossible when her mind kept replaying the moment she said yes. Not because she regretted it exactly. But because of Damien’s face afterward. Or rather— the complete lack of expression on it. That unsettled her more than shout
The atmosphere inside Damien Blackwood’s office turned suffocating after Chloe’s announcement. Roman Ellis was downstairs. Waiting. Refusing to leave without seeing Vivian. For a long moment, nobody spoke. Chloe stood awkwardly by the glass doors looking like she regretted entering the office at all, while Vivian remained frozen beside Damien’s desk, painfully aware of the dangerous silence settling across the room. Then Damien smiled. Not warmly. Not pleasantly. The kind of smile that made senior associates reconsider career choices. “Interesting,” he said quietly. Vivian immediately straightened. “Damien—” “No,” he interrupted calmly, “actually, this should be interesting.” His composure unsettled her far more than anger would have. Because Damien only became this controlled when he was furious enough to hide it. Chloe cleared her throat nervously. “I can ask security to remove him if you want.” Damien’s gray eyes never left Vivian’s face. “No,” he said softly. “
Vivian barely slept. By the time morning sunlight pushed weakly through her apartment windows, the confidential file Roman sent still haunted her thoughts. Professional misconduct. Abuse of authority. A female associate disappearing from Blackwood & Vale four years ago. And Damien’s name attached to all of it. Nothing about it made sense. Not completely. Because despite Damien’s impossible personality, Vivian had never once seen him behave inappropriately toward anyone at the firm. Cold? Yes. Ruthless? Absolutely. Difficult beyond reason? Constantly. But dangerous in that way? She couldn’t reconcile it. Which frustrated her more than she wanted to admit. Her phone buzzed across the kitchen counter while she poured coffee. One message. Roman Ellis. I assume you have questions. Vivian stared at the screen for several seconds before locking her phone without replying. Because yes, she had questions. Too many. And somehow she no longer knew which man was more dangerous
Vivian didn’t answer immediately. And somehow, the silence itself became dangerous. Roman waited patiently on the other end of the line while Damien stood only a few feet away, motionless enough to make the entire office feel unnaturally still. Two men. One waiting for her answer. The other silently dreading it. Vivian suddenly hated how aware she was of both of them. “Dinner,” she repeated carefully into the phone. “Yes.” “You barely know me.” “I know enough to be interested.” Damien’s expression hardened almost imperceptibly. Vivian noticed. Of course she noticed. She also noticed the unsettling satisfaction in Roman’s voice — like he understood exactly what kind of position he’d placed her in. And worse? He sounded intentional about it. Vivian turned slightly away from Damien instinctively. “That isn’t a good idea.” “Because of the case?” “Because of everything.” Roman was quiet for a second. Then: “You still haven’t said no.” Damien looked away sharply tow







