LOGINSYNOPSIS KISSED BY THE BILLIONAIRE I CAN'T STAND Elena Brooks spills champagne on billionaire Alexander Knight at his charity gala. Instead of a lawsuit, he summons her to his office and reveals the truth that destroys her world. Her father didn't leave debt behind from bad business decisions. He was deliberately destroyed by Alexander's father James after discovering evidence of massive financial crimes inside Knight Holdings. And his death on the Williamsburg Bridge two years ago wasn't an accident. Alexander was supposed to meet him that night. He arrived twelve minutes too late. Now Alexander needs the hidden files Thomas Brooks left behind before he died. Files locked in a Brooklyn storage unit only Elena can access. In exchange, he offers to clear every dollar of her father's debt and pay her five hundred thousand dollars. Elena agrees. But not just for the money. The moment they shake hands, her apartment is broken into. A photograph of her sleeping sister arrives as a warning. And among her father's scattered papers, Elena finds a photograph of a woman with her father's handwriting on the back. She knows everything. Keep her safe. The woman vanished three months after Thomas was fired. Before disappearing, she sent Alexander one message. Thomas had a daughter. James knows about her too. She's already a target. The message was sent four days before her father died. Elena isn't just the daughter of a man who found the wrong files. She's the loose end James Knight has been watching for two years. And now he knows she's coming for the truth.
View MoreThe champagne hit Alexander Knight's chest before Elena Brooks even registered she had fallen.
Three hundred people watched.
Twelve cameras caught it.
And in the ten seconds of absolute silence that followed, Elena did the only thing her exhausted, desperate, completely ruined brain could think of.
She laughed.
Not a polite laugh. Not an embarrassed laugh. A real one, short and shocked, that escaped before she could stop it. The kind that comes out when your body doesn't know whether to cry or run, so it picks the worst possible option instead.
The sound cut through the silence like a knife.
Elena slapped her hand over her mouth immediately, but it was too late. The laugh was already out there, already floating through the Plaza Hotel ballroom, already landing on the ears of three hundred of New York's most powerful people.
And on Alexander Knight himself.
He stood completely still, champagne soaking through his white dress shirt, spreading dark and wet across his custom tuxedo jacket. His grey eyes, sharp as cut glass, moved from the stain on his chest to the woman kneeling on the floor in front of him.
He didn't shout. He didn't move. He just looked at her.
Elena Brooks, twenty-four years old, dark hair and wide brown eyes and complete professional disaster, looked back up at him from the floor with her hand still pressed over her mouth and champagne dripping from her fingers.
She had a habit, when she was terrified, of making things worse.
"I am so sorry," she said, her voice coming out steadier than she felt. She grabbed a napkin and pushed herself to her feet. "I didn't see you, the couple in front of me just stopped and I couldn't, it just."
She stopped talking because he still hadn't moved.
Alexander Knight was the kind of man who took up space without trying. Not because he was loud or aggressive, but because every room he entered seemed to quietly rearrange itself around him. Tall, dark-haired, with a jaw carved from something expensive and eyes that gave nothing away.
"Your name," he said.
Completely, dangerously quiet.
Elena had heard about this. His employees whispered about it in service corridors when they thought nobody was listening. The quieter Alexander Knight spoke, the worse things were about to get.
"Elena Brooks. I run Brooks Events, I am the coordinator for tonight and I am genuinely, deeply sorry, Mr. Knight."
He pulled out his phone without responding.
"Brooks Events," he said, typing something. "Your father's company."
The past tense hit her somewhere tender.
"It was his," she said carefully. "It's mine now."
Alexander looked up from his phone. Something shifted in his expression, fast and unreadable, gone before she could name it.
"How much debt?" he asked.
Elena blinked. "I'm sorry?"
"Brooks Events." He tilted his head slightly. "How much are you carrying?"
Heat rushed up Elena's neck. Around them, people pretended not to watch while absolutely watching. Phones were already out. She could hear cameras clicking from the press corner.
"That's not really relevant to."
"Three hundred thousand," he said, cutting her off. "Give or take. Am I close?"
Elena's mouth closed.
He was exactly right.
"How did you." she started.
"I looked you up. I look up everyone involved in my events. Standard practice." He slid his phone back into his pocket. "Your father took out three business loans in the eighteen months before he died. You've been servicing the interest for two years without touching the principal."
Elena felt the blood drain from her face.
The ballroom noise continued around them. Glasses clinking. Conversations humming. A string quartet playing something delicate in the corner. But inside the small, terrible circle between her and Alexander Knight, everything had gone very still.
"Careful, Miss Brooks," Alexander said, his voice dropping even lower now. "I've destroyed companies for far less than this. I'd hate for yours to be next."
He turned and walked away.
The crowd parted for him without question, like water moving around a stone.
Elena stood alone in a puddle of champagne, napkin clutched in her shaking hands, her face burning and her heart hammering.
Her phone buzzed in her apron pocket.
Unknown number. One text message. Four words.
"Go home. Right now."
Elena looked up fast, scanning the ballroom.
Whoever sent it was already gone.
The bank was exactly where Daniel said it would be.Three miles down a main street that looked like it had been the same main street for seventy years and was comfortable with that. A hardware store. A diner with hand-painted lettering on the window. A post office with an American flag that moved slightly in the cold morning air.The bank sat at the end of it. Small and local and the kind of institution that knew its customers by name rather than account number.They parked outside at 8:57 AM.Elena sat in the passenger seat for a moment looking at the building through the windshield.Daniel was in the back seat. Alexander beside him. The two of them had barely spoken on the drive but it was not an uncomfortable silence. More like two people who were still measuring the distance between where they were and where they might eventually get to, and had the sense to do that measuring quietly rather than rushing it.Catherine had stayed at the house.She had stood in the doorway as they le
Elena turned the key over in her palm.Small and brass and ordinary in the way that important things often were. She had learned that from her father. The most significant things rarely announced themselves."What bank," she said."Three miles from here," Daniel said. "Main street. It opens at nine."Elena looked at the clock on the kitchen wall.8:14 AM.She set the key on the table and looked at Daniel."Sit down," she said.He looked at her."Please," she added. "There are things I need to understand before we walk into any more rooms with things my father left behind."Daniel pulled out a chair and sat.Alexander sat across from him.Elena sat between them.Catherine moved from the doorway to the counter, put the kettle on without asking, and said nothing. The specific usefulness of someone who understood that the most helpful thing she could do right now was make tea and stay quiet.Elena looked at Daniel."How did you meet my father," she said."Through my mother," Daniel said.
They came up the stairs in silence.Catherine first. Then Elena. Then Alexander, whose footsteps on the old wooden steps were so controlled and deliberate that Elena could hear the effort in them. The effort of a man preparing himself for something he had no framework for and was building one in real time.The sitting room was empty when they came through the hallway door.The fire had been tended. Someone had added wood while they were downstairs. The flames were higher now, throwing more light across the room, and in that light Elena noticed things she had missed on the way through.The photographs on the hallway wall she had wanted to stop and look at.She stopped now.Her father, young and serious, standing outside a building she didn't recognize.Margaret Knight beside him, laughing at something outside the frame.Catherine in the background, watching both of them with that same sharp still expression she wore now, like she had always been the person observing rather than the per
The inside of the house smelled like wood smoke and old books.And something else. Something Elena couldn't immediately identify but recognized somewhere beneath conscious thought.Her father's study. When she was small.She stopped just inside the door and breathed it in without meaning to.Catherine Brooks led them through a hallway into a sitting room where a fire burned low in a stone fireplace. Two chairs and a small sofa arranged around it like people had been sitting here having important conversations for a very long time.She gestured for them to sit.Elena sat on the sofa. Alexander beside her. Close enough that she was aware of him the way she was always aware of him now. Like something she had stopped trying to move away from.Catherine sat across from them and folded her hands in her lap."Ask your questions," she said. "In whatever order they come. I have been rehearsing the answers for twelve years."Elena looked at her.At this woman who was her grandmother.Who had ex












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