LOGINXena.
I have had some strange experiences in my lifetime.Being born illegitimate into a family that kept me like a footnote. Being sent to a wedding that wasn't mine with twenty minutes of notice. And spending three years married to a man who looked through me at dinner every night.
But none of them — not one — came close to sitting in a police interrogation room while a man who shared a last name with the people who just destroyed my life slid a deal across the table like we were closing a business lunch.
"Yeah," I scoffed. "You must be out of your mind."
He chuckled. Actual amusement, like I'd said something genuinely funny. Then the smile faded and was replaced with a cold expression. A chill went down my spine..
"Some may say that." His eyes drifted to the door. "But it would be in your best interest to hear me out."
I followed his gaze. The small window at the top of the door framed three officers waiting like there was good news to be told. The detective was pacing. He looked personally invested in whatever was about to happen to me.
"I've heard the conditions here aren't particularly favorable to your gender," Dante added. His tone was conversational. Which made it worse somehow.
I looked back at him.
Okay. Fine.
"What do you want?"
The smile that returned to his face was satisfied in a way that was already irritating me. "Nothing much."
He snapped his fingers once.
The door opened. A man in black walked in carrying a file, set it on the table without a word, and left. Through the brief gap before the door closed I caught the detective's expression. He was fuming.
Interesting. I wonder how much he was paid to make sure I got arrested.
Dante's voice pulled my attention back.
"Ms. Cross."
I turned. He was watching me with that same cold pleasant expression.
He opened the file and slid it down the table toward me.
I looked at it then back at him.
He raised an eyebrow. "Go ahead."
I lifted my hands. The cuffs caught the light.
His mouth formed a small ‘oh’. He glanced toward the door like he was considering something, and for one moment I genuinely thought he was going to have them removed.
Instead, the man in black reappeared from nowhere, picked the file up without comment, and held the open pages in front of my face.
I stared at him.
Did this man have a single functioning nerve of empathy in his entire body? For someone who looked like he was a Greek god, he was remarkably unbothered by basic human inconvenience. Mine specifically.
I read the page anyway.
Then I read it again.
"You're not serious."
"Would you like to rot in jail?" he returned.
Ugh. I looked back at the document. A marriage contract. What was it with billionaires and marriage contracts? Could he not just — take me to dinner first? Ask like a normal person? Take me somewhere nice and then —
I stopped that thought before it finished forming and buried it.
I looked at the papers.
The jail option was genuinely off the table. I knew that. The video had already circulated, the crowd had already turned, and walking into a cell tonight with that story attached to my name would give it time to calcify into fact. My career. My reputation. Everything I had built without a single Cross family resource behind it — it would all be sitting exposed while I was in here.
But another contract marriage.
With another Yale?
I was still turning it over in my head when he spoke.
"You're hesitating." He said it without judgment. "I understand why."
I didn't respond.
"Adrian had three years to treat you like a person," he continued. "He chose not to. Your sister stood beside him tonight and pointed at you in front of everyone. And your family —" He paused, just briefly. "The family you stepped in to protect without being asked. They didn't defend you. They haven't visited. Not one of them."
The room was very quiet.
"So why," he added, "would you trust a stranger carrying the same last name as the people who you very much detest?"
I looked at him.
Did I detest them?
I turned the word over. Detest. Before tonight I would have said no. I would have said I was indifferent, that I had made my peace, that I didn't carry hate.
But sitting here in cuffs with my face on every phone in that ballroom and not a single Cross in this building —
I wanted to see Adrian on his knees begging. That image arrived with a clarity that surprised me.
I wanted to see it. I wanted it badly enough that I considered signing the contract at that moment..
Hannah —
I pushed the thought down before it could open. I wasn't ready for that one yet.
Dante stood. He moved around the table slowly, with no urgency, and stopped beside my chair. He put two fingers beneath my chin and tilted my face up to meet his eyes.
They were dark and steady. The eyes of someone who had made decisions like this one many times before and stopped losing sleep over them a long time ago.
"We want the same thing," he said quietly. "I'm not asking you to trust me. I'm not asking for anything that requires trust." His thumb moved once across my jaw. "I want the Yale family dismantled from the inside. So do you. That's enough. You don't need to believe in me. You just need to hate them."
He was right. That was the thing that settled in my chest with an almost uncomfortable steadiness.
I didn't need to trust him. I didn't need to feel anything about him. I needed leverage, I needed my name back, and I needed someone with enough power to fight what Adrian had already put in motion. Dante Yale, whoever he actually was, had just walked into a police station and cleared a room with a snap of his fingers.
He had resources and I had a motive. People had built empires on less of a foundation than that.
His hand moved — tracing a slow line down from my jaw, between the open lapels of my jacket between my breasts, coming to rest at my waist. He leaned down until his mouth was close enough to my ear that I could feel the warmth of it before he said a word.
Whatever he said, I didn't fully process it.
Because my entire nervous system had apparently decided that right now, in this specific moment, was an excellent time to completely abandon professionalism.
No. I straightened internally. Absolutely not. You are in handcuffs. In a police station. Focus.
I could use him. That was the operative word. He wanted Yale destroyed. I wanted Yale destroyed. Everything else was noise.
I looked up at him.
The silence between us had stretched long enough that he was watching me with something that might have been patience or might have been certainty. Like he already knew what I was going to say and was simply waiting for me to arrive at it.
"Where do I sign?"
Xena.Adrian had cleared the dining table completely — two laptops, a legal pad, three folders I didn't recognize, a pot of coffee between them he'd poured without asking. That was how he operated when he'd already decided something was happening. You sat down or you didn't.I sat down.He poured without looking up."Gerald confirmed Reeves has been running something through Yale longer than he's held the chair," he said. "Seven years before Gerald's appointment, at minimum. Based on the subsidiary restructure timeline.""Twenty-seven years," I said. "Victor traced it that far back."Adrian looked up."Dante's people have the financial channel mapped," I said. "A shell company connected to a dead lawyer named Ellison Graves. The registered correspondence address was a building in the Yale patriarch's private property portfolio."Something shifted behind his eyes."The patriarch," he said."Yes.""Not Gerald.""Gerald climbed into something that was already built," I said. "He didn't b
Gerald.Mason had stopped offering to call Reeves' secondary line.That was the first thing I noticed about the morning — not Reeves' continued silence, not Adrian's absence, just the small adjustment in Mason's behavior that told me he'd read the room correctly without being told to. He set the coffee down. He didn't ask if I needed anything else. He left.I'd trained good staff. That was one thing the last twenty years had given me cleanly, without complication.I looked at my phone.I'd called Adrian four times since yesterday afternoon. Four rings, each time, then voicemail, then nothing — no callback, no text, no acknowledgment that the calls had registered at all. I knew the gesture. I'd used it myself, on Reeves, twice now, in the last two days. There was a specific cruelty in recognizing your own move being run against you, a cruelty sharper than if Adrian had simply screamed at me and hung up.He'd learned that from me.I sat with that for longer than I wanted to.The thing
Herald.I didn't go to the car right away.The elevator came and went twice while I stood in the lobby of Gerald's building doing nothing that looked like anything from the outside — a man checking his phone, adjusting a cuff, the kind of stillness that passed for ordinary in a building full of people too busy to look twice at anyone not actively in their way.I wasn't checking my phone.I was thinking about the word don't.Don't you dare call me Adrian.I'd said it before I'd decided to say it, which had never happened to me before, not once, not in however many years I'd been doing this. Every word I'd ever spoken as Adrian had gone through a process first — a brief internal check, instinctive by now, fast enough that nobody watching could see it happen. Would the real one say this. Would the real one stand this way, hold this expression, choose this exact phrasing. I'd built an entire self out of that question, asked and answered a thousand times a day until it stopped feeling li
Reeves.The new house smelled like nobody had lived in it for a long time, which was correct, because nobody had.I'd bought it eleven years ago through a chain of paper that didn't connect to anything Graves had touched, didn't connect to the Yale name in any direction, didn't connect to a single property I'd otherwise used. I'd furnished it minimally and visited twice a year to make sure the pipes worked and the dust didn't accumulate past what a cleaning service could explain. It had never had a purpose beyond existing as a place that didn't exist.It had a purpose now.I stood in the kitchen with my phone in my hand and looked at the channel application, closed, the twelve words from this morning still sitting somewhere behind the closed screen whether I looked at them again or not.Do not contact Gerald.I hadn't.Gerald's name had appeared on my missed calls list four times since this morning. I'd let each one ring out. That was its own kind of message, the kind Gerald would ev
Adrian.She came back through the door at four in the afternoon, and I knew before she said a word that something had shifted.Not her face. Her face gave away exactly what she wanted it to and nothing more.I'd learned that about her over two days of watching her perform someone else with a precision that should have scared me more than it had. It was the bag. She'd left with it slung over one shoulder that morning, the posture of someone leaving for good. She came back with it set down by the door like she intended to be here long enough that carrying it around stopped making sense.I was at the desk when she came in."He's settled," she said. "Dante's people are good at this.""I heard." I set the pen down. "You didn't have to tell me that in person.""I know."She crossed the room and sat in the chair across from the desk, the same chair she'd sat in three nights ago when she told me the truth and I'd spent two days deciding what to do with it."I'm staying," she said."Here.""H
Xena.I found Dante in the kitchen.Not the study, not his office down the hall where Victor had been running calls all morning. The kitchen, standing at the counter with a mug he wasn't drinking from, the way I'd found him a hundred times before in a different kitchen with a different version of whatever this was between us.He looked up when I came in."He's sleeping," I said."Good."I sat at the island across from him. The counter was cold under my palms. Outside the window the afternoon had gone grey, the specific Chicago grey that meant rain later whether the forecast admitted it or not."He's staying here," I said.Dante didn't look surprised. "Victor already moved his things into the east room.""You didn't ask me.""I didn't think I needed to."I looked at him."He has nowhere else," Dante said. "No house. No staff he trusts after what happened. And he can't be alone for the next month regardless of where he goes." He set the mug down. "This is the room with the most security
Xena.“I said no.” Dante stared at me like I'd lost my mind. He stood at the entrance of his study room. For a moment it seemed like the room was holding its breath. “Xena…” I raised my hand, cutting him off entirely. “Don't do that.” His eyes narrowed on me.“After Gerald left, you acted all c
Dante.I didn't sleep.That wasn't unusual. But the reason was.Gerald had been gone for four hours. But his words hadn't left with him.I sat behind my desk staring at a financial report that seemed to blur together the more I'd tried to understand it.It was no use. My attention remained elsewher
Xena.“What did you just say?” Dante’s voice intensified as he pressed Gerald against the wall.Gerald grunted, struggling to get free. Meanwhile, his men still had their guns raised at Dante.And the Yale elder seemed not to give a fuck. Personally, I didn't care for the comment. But Dante...“Don
Dante."I just met Reeves."At first, I wasn't sure if I'd heard correctly. But after three seconds, I realized my brain was working fine."Are you sure you didn't see someone else?" I asked, immediately getting up and heading toward my wardrobe."Oh, because someone would just walk past me, lean i







