LOGINLeon Knight’s POV
The contract was signed. The girl with the death wish and the desperate eyes was now bound to me by twelve pages of navy leather and her own signature. She got what she came for. I got what I needed. A clean reason on paper for the next six months of financial moves that were going to look very suspicious to very dangerous people. Simple. Neat. Done. I had Miss Thorne handle the security reports before we even reached the elevator. Whatever Nickie had done to get past the lobby was going to be filed away as a classified isolated incident and never spoken of again. Reputation first. Always. The elevator ride up to the penthouse was quiet. Nickie stood straight with her eyes fixed on the steel doors like she was waiting for something to jump out of them. I watched her reflection. She was small. But the anger was still there under everything, sitting low and quiet, waiting. I was fairly sure she was calculating the price of my briefcase. The penthouse doors opened and she stepped out and her eyes went everywhere at once. The ceilings, the stone floors, the sculpture in the corner that I bought three years ago purely because it would be worth four times the price by now. She looked at it the way people look at things they want to either clean or steal. “Don’t touch anything,” I said, walking to the media console. “Everything in this room costs more than your debt.” She flinched. Then came back fast. “I wasn’t going to touch anything, Leon. I’m just trying to figure out which cushion could pay off my student loans.” I noted that. The wit. Quick, unfiltered, slightly reckless. In any other situation it would be a problem. Right now it might actually be useful. She needed to seem like a real person in public and real people were rarely this easy to script. I pulled up the cover story on the console. “We need a narrative,” I said. “Listen carefully. We met three weeks ago at the Children’s Art Foundation benefit gala. You volunteer there. You spilled wine on my suit. You apologized badly. I found it charming. We kept it private. It only came out now because keeping it quiet stopped being practical.” Nickie stared at me. “Wine. I hate wine. And I don’t volunteer anywhere, I barely sleep. Why can’t we say we met at a library?” “Billionaires don’t meet people at libraries.” “Why not?” “Because we buy the building and turn it into a private lab. Keep going.” She chewed her lip. “Okay but think about it for a second. You’re forty three. I’m twenty four. How does anyone believe I just fell for you at a charity gala? No offense.” “None taken. Wealth cancels age. It always has.” “That’s depressing.” “That’s accurate. Moving on.” She threw her hands up. “Fine. But can the story at least sound like a human wrote it? Found her lack of social grace charming sounds like your PR team describing a robot.” Then she just started talking. Fast and messy, some version of a story where she broke into his R&D lab to look at plans for a quantum processing core and he caught her and instead of calling security he gave her a puzzle and she solved it and that was when he fell for her mind but her body kept getting in the way. She did not stop for air. I watched her. The nerves were running everything now, that particular kind of panic that comes when someone realizes they are fully trapped and their brain starts throwing anything at the wall. The corner of my mouth moved. Just slightly. Less than a second. She stopped talking immediately. Her eyes, which I was now noticing were a very unsettling shade of green, locked onto my face. She saw it. She actually caught it. “Stop looking at me like that,” I said, turning back to the console. The amusement was already gone. I don’t know why it appeared in the first place. “The story is set. We move to logistics.” The next few hours were not something I would choose to repeat. My stylist came and measured her. That jacket she had worn into my building was not going to appear in public again. Then the rings. I had a tray brought up. Emerald cut, cushion cut, solitaire, all of them designed to make people stop walking. “Pick one,” I said. She looked at the tray like it was a math problem. “Any of them? They’re all huge. That one.” She pointed at a two carat solitaire. “Too small. It looks uncertain. The cushion cut. Ten carats.” “That’s the size of a small country.” “Put it on.” She put it on. It sat on her finger like an anchor. Cold and heavy and exactly right for what we needed it to say. Then the photos. A photographer. Us standing close, me looking at her, her looking just slightly past me. Then the handholding. That was the worst part. “Loosen your grip,” I said. “You’re holding my hand like I stole something from you.” “You kind of did,” she muttered. “Look at me. Smile. Not like that. That looks like a hostage photo. Think about your dad walking out of that hospital. Use that.” It was painful. Her hands were small and warm and the whole thing felt completely absurd. I do not do absurd. I do not do warm. I run a company worth eleven billion dollars and I was standing in my own penthouse practicing handholding with a girl who had slid under my lobby turnstile four hours ago. But it had to be perfect. This was not a relationship. This was a defense strategy. And defense strategies do not fail. I sent her down to the guest suite with simple instructions. Memorize the story. Don’t leave the building. Be ready. I sat down with the compliance reports. My phone buzzed. Marcus Vance. Board member. One of the more difficult ones. The message was short. The board has concerns about the undocumented nature of your engagement. We want a formal meeting with the girl. Tomorrow. Ten in the morning. The merger depends on how well she performs. Don’t disappoint us. I put the phone down. The board wasn’t going to wait six months to test this. They were starting tomorrow. I had paid two million dollars for a fiancée who couldn’t hold my hand without looking like she was being arrested. And now she had less than twelve hours to become convincing. Nickie Chen was about to find out that getting the money was the easy part. Surviving my world was something else entirely.Nickie's POVI finished the data at two in the morning.Not Thursday morning. Wednesday night bleeding into Thursday at two AM with cold coffee and my dad asleep in the east room and Leon somewhere in the penthouse doing what Leon did when it was late and the company needed things.I read through the corrected Meritus file one final time.Everything aligned. Every transposed column fixed. Every corrupted data point identified and corrected and documented with a full explanation of what it had been, what it should have been, and how the error had been introduced. Eighteen months of deliberate damage undone in three weeks by someone who had built the original and knew every inch of it.My name was on it.Nickie Chen. Lead bio-engineer. Corrected version. Date and signature.I closed the laptop and sat in the quiet kitchen and looked at the city through the floor to ceiling windows.Tomorrow was Friday.In thirty something hours Victoria Knight was going to walk into a shareholder meetin
Chapter 22Leon's POVI called my lawyer at eight in the morning.She had already seen the filing."Victoria moved fast," she said. "The shareholder list she's working with includes three members who have been unhappy since the merger negotiations stalled. She's been cultivating them for months.""How many does she need," I said."Simple majority," she said. "She has the three unhappy ones. She needs two more to make it viable.""Walsh," I said."Walsh is clean," she said. "He won't move without evidence. The question is the two middle members. Chen and Hartley. They've been quiet through all of this.""Quiet means uncommitted," I said."Yes," she said. "Which means they're available to whoever makes the better case by Friday."I looked at the window."The hospital payment," I said. "How does she frame it.""Personal benefit," she said. "She argues you used company operational funds to pay for the medical treatment of a personal associate. The association being Nickie. The implication
Chapter 21Nickie's POVMy dad found the mug ring on Leon's desk the next morning.I don't know how he got in there. I don't know why Leon's office door was open. What I do know is that I was in the kitchen making breakfast and I heard my dad say interesting and I walked down the hall and found him standing in the middle of Leon's office looking at the ring shaped stain on the fourteen thousand dollar desk with the expression of a man who had just learned something useful."Dad what are you doing in here," I said."The door was open," he said."That doesn't mean come in," I said."In my experience open doors are invitations," he said. He looked at the desk. "Someone put a mug here without a coaster.""I know," I said."Was it you," he said.I said nothing.He turned and looked at me with the eyes that saw everything."It was you," he said."We should go have breakfast," I said."Nickie," he said."Dad.""A man lets someone put a mug on his fourteen thousand dollar desk," he said. "Tha
Chapter 20Nickie's POVI woke up the next morning and the first thing I did was panic.Not about Leon. Not about the kiss or what came after or the way he had looked at me when I finally stopped pretending. That part felt surprisingly solid for something that had happened less than twelve hours ago.I panicked because my dad was getting discharged in three days.And my dad was going to come home.To where.I sat up in bed and looked at the two mugs on my bedside table and thought about this for the first time with complete clarity. When my dad left the hospital he was going to need somewhere to recover. His apartment, the one I had been paying for while he was in the hospital with the last scraps of my savings, was a fourth floor walkup with no elevator and a bathroom that required navigating two steps to get into the shower.That was not going to work for a man recovering from a cardiac procedure.I needed a plan.I got up and went to the kitchen and Leon was already there which was
Leon's POVMy father called at four.I let it ring.He called again at four fifteen. I watched the screen until it stopped and then I put the phone face down on my desk and looked at the city through the window and thought about a man I hadn't spoken to in three years calling twice in twenty minutes because his plan had just collapsed in a boardroom and he needed to manage the damage.He called a third time at four thirty.I picked up.Silence on both ends for a moment. The particular silence of two people who have a great deal to say and no language built between them to say it in."Leon." His voice was older than I remembered. That was the first thing."Richard," I said. I hadn't called him dad in fifteen years. He had stopped deserving the word around the time he packed a bag on a Tuesday and left two boys in a house with a woman who responded to abandonment by gripping everything harder."I want to explain—""I don't need an explanation," I said. "I need you to instruct your lawye
Nickie's POVCole Knight looked like Leon the way a copy looks like an original.Same height, same dark hair, same way of holding himself that said he had grown up being told he was important. But where Leon's stillness was something he had built, something earned and deliberate, Cole's was performance. I could see it immediately. The slight tension around his jaw. The way his eyes moved just a fraction too fast.He was nervous.Good.Leon walked toward him and I stayed one step behind and slightly to the side, close enough to be present, far enough to watch Cole's face without him realizing I was reading it."Cole," Leon said. No warmth. No hostility. Just his name."Leon." Cole's voice was smooth. He had clearly practiced this. "You look well.""You're here as a proxy observer," Leon said. "Nothing more. You have no speaking rights and no voting rights in today's session."Cole smiled. It was a good smile. Practiced and easy. "I'm aware of the terms."His eyes moved to me again and
NICKIE'S POVThe moment the hospital billing department called for the third time that morning, I felt like I was going to lose it. My dad's heart was running out of beats and my bank account was empty and the rejection letter from Knight Industries was sitting on my kitchen table like a verdict.
Nickie's POVI found him in the kitchen at six in the morning making coffee like the night hadn't happened.Suit already on. Hair already perfect. Standing at the counter scrolling through his phone with the focused expression of someone who had slept eight hours instead of none.I had not slept at
Nickie’s POVThe dress Leon had picked for me was cream colored and fitted and probably cost more than three months of my old rent. I stood in front of the mirror and barely recognized myself. I looked calm. Expensive. Put together.I was none of those things.The smile was the one I had practiced.
Nickie’s POVWhen Leon told me the board was meeting me tomorrow morning my stomach dropped straight through the floor.The cold fear from signing the contract turned into something worse. Something shaky and loud and very hard to breathe through.The next few hours were the closest thing to tortur







