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SASKIA POV
The bass didn’t just play through the speakers; it vibrated right through the soles of my heels, thumping against my ribs like a warning. The air inside The Vault tasted like expensive gin, smoky tobacco, and heavy perfume. It was suffocating, but it was exactly what I needed.
I adjusted the silver, velvet-trimmed mask over my eyes. It felt heavy, but it was my armor tonight. For the past twenty-one years, I had been Saskia Beaumont—the perfect daughter, the quiet heiress, the girl who smiled for the cameras while her stepmother slowly drained her spirit. Tonight, I was no one. Just a girl celebrating her birthday in a room full of beautiful, faceless strangers.
"Another one," I said, sliding my empty glass across the marble bar.
The bartender didn’t ask questions. He just poured the amber liquid and pushed it back to me.
"You're drinking fast for someone who keeps looking at the exit," a deep, quiet voice murmured from my left.
I froze, my fingers wrapping around the cold glass. I hadn't noticed him sit down next to me. He wore a matte black mask that covered the upper half of his face, leaving only a sharp, stubbled jawline and a pair of intensely dark eyes visible. He wore a tailored black suit, but he had undone the top two buttons of his shirt, giving him a dangerous, relaxed look. He didn’t look like the boys I went to college with. He looked like a man who knew exactly how much power he held in a room.
"I’m not looking at the exit," I lied, turning my head slightly to face him. "I'm just enjoying the view."
A faint, amused smirk touched his lips. "Is that so? Because you've checked your watch three times in the last ten minutes, and you haven't taken a single sip of that drink since I sat down."
I felt a sudden, sharp heat climb up my neck. I raised the glass to my lips, took a long swallow, and winced slightly at the burn. "There. Satisfied?"
"Impressive," he said, his voice a low, smooth baritone that somehow cut right through the loud music. "But you still look like you’re running from something."
If only you knew. Tomorrow, the lawyers would read my father’s final will. Tomorrow, my stepmother would try every trick in the book to keep me under her thumb. But that was tomorrow's problem. Tonight, I wanted to be reckless. I wanted to feel alive.
"Maybe I am," I said, leaning an inch closer. The scent of him hit me then—something dark, woody, and expensive. "Are you going to stop me?"
"Depends on where you're running to," he replied. He didn't move away. His dark eyes locked onto mine through the cutouts of our masks, holding me captive. "And who you're running with."
"I haven't decided yet," I whispered, my heart suddenly hammering against my ribs, much faster than the bass of the music.
He didn't say another word. Instead, he stood up, picked up his drink, and tilted his head toward the back corridor of the club—the hallway that led to the private VIP rooms. It wasn't an invitation made with words, but the sheer confidence in his posture made my breath catch in my throat.
Just one night, I told myself. One night to forget everything.
I stood up, my knees slightly shaky, and followed him.
The corridor was much quieter, the walls lined with dark velvet panels that muffled the sound of the dance floor. He opened a heavy mahogany door at the very end of the hall and stepped inside, holding it open for me. The room was small, lit only by a dim, amber wall sconce. A leather sofa sat against the wall.
As soon as the door clicked shut behind me, cutting off the noise of the club completely, the atmosphere changed. It became heavy, thick with tension.
He set his glass down on a small side table and turned around. "You're very brave for following a stranger into a dark room, sweetheart."
"You don't feel like a stranger," I said, though my hands were trembling behind my back.
"No?" He took a slow step forward, closing the distance between us until I had to tilt my head up to look at him. He was tall, his broad shoulders casting a shadow over me. "What do I feel like?"
"Like trouble," I breathed.
He let out a low laugh, the sound vibrating in his chest. "You have no idea."
He reached out, his long fingers brushing against the edge of my silver mask. His touch was warm, sending a sharp jolt of electricity straight down my spine. I gripped the fabric of his shirt, pulling him closer, desperate to drown out the voice in my head telling me to be careful.
When his lips met mine, all thoughts of my family, the inheritance, and tomorrow vanished. The kiss was slow at first, a firm, testing pressure that made me gasp. He used that moment to deepen it, his hands moving to my waist, gripping me tightly against his hard chest.
"You're trembling," he murmured against my lips, his breath hot.
"I'm fine," I gasped, my fingers tangling in his dark hair, pulling him back down. "Don't stop."
He didn't. He lifted me effortlessly, setting me down on the edge of the leather sofa. His hands were everywhere—tracing the curve of my hip, sliding up the silk of my dress, leaving a trail of fire in their wake. Every touch was dominant, demanding, and utterly intoxicating. I had never felt anything like this. It wasn't the clumsy, hesitant touch of the guys I knew. He handled me like he owned me, and for the first time in my life, I wanted to submit to someone else's control.
"Look at me," he commanded softly, his voice rough.
I opened my eyes, my vision slightly blurred by heat and desire. He was looking down at me, his gaze fierce, burning right through his mask. He reached up, his fingers hooking under the strap of my dress, slowly sliding it down my shoulder. His lips followed, kissing a path down my neck, biting gently at the sensitive spot where my shoulder met my throat. I arched into him, a soft cry escaping my lips.
The rest of the night became a blur of friction, heavy breathing, and skin against skin. In the dim amber light of the locked room, we moved together with a desperate, unspoken hunger. There were no names exchanged, no promises made—just the raw, overwhelming sensation of his body over mine, driving out every fear I had ever carried.
Hours later, the room had grown cold.
I woke up with my cheek pressed against the leather sofa, my breath shallow. The amber sconce was still glowing faintly. I sat up, clutching the torn strap of my silk dress to my chest.
The room was empty.
I looked around, my heart sinking into my stomach. He was gone. The only proof that he had ever been there was the lingering scent of tobacco and leather on my skin, and the quiet ache between my thighs.
I found my shoes scattered on the floor, my silver mask lying near the table. I picked it up, my fingers tracing the velvet edge. It was over. The clock on my phone read 4:00 AM.
I stood up, adjusting my ruined dress as best as I could, and walked out into the empty hallway.
"Hey, miss! You need a cab?" the doorman asked as I stepped out into the freezing morning air.
"Yes, please," I said, my voice hoarse.
SASKIA POVThe frantic rattling of the door handle sliced through the thick, heavy heat between us. Evander froze, his lips still pressed against the racing pulse at my throat. His hands tightened on my hips for a fraction of a second, his knuckles digging into my skin before he slowly, deliberately let go."Mr. Sinclair!" Brenda’s voice came through the thick wood again, louder this time, her usual professional calm completely replaced by panic. "They're coming up the east elevator right now. Victoria has the court bailiffs with her!"Evander stepped back. The transformation on his face happened in the blink of an eye. The raw, territorial dark look vanished, replaced instantly by the cold, calculating mask of the billionaire CEO. He reached up, smoothing down his vest and fastening the buttons of his suit jacket with perfectly steady hands."Fix your clothes, Saskia," he said, his voice flat, low, and utterly calm. It was the tone he used when a multi-million-dollar deal was hanging
SASKIA POVJulian pulled his hand back instantly, straightening up as if he had been burned. His chair scraped loudly against the hardwood floor. He looked at Evander, his face turning pale before a defensive stiffness took over his posture.Evander walked into the office, his large frame filling the space completely. He didn't just walk; he stormed in, closing the distance between the doorway and the desk in a matter of seconds. He didn't look at me. His eyes were locked entirely on Julian, burning with a quiet, lethal intensity."Mr. Sinclair," Julian said, his voice shaking slightly but holding its ground. "I was just—""I don't care what you were doing," Evander cut him off, his voice dangerously quiet. He stopped right at the edge of the desk, towering over the younger lawyer. "I gave you a direct order to stay away from Miss Beaumont. I told you that any further communication regarding this estate goes through my corporate legal team. Do you have a hearing problem, Mr. Vance?""
SASKIA POVThe desk phone continued to buzz, its sharp electronic tone slicing through the heavy, dark silence that had settled over us. Evander didn't move. His hands remained wrapped around the armrests of my chair, his chest rising and falling against the edge of the glass table. His dark eyes held mine captive, refusing to let me look away."Aren't you going to get that?" I whispered, my voice barely carrying over the noise."Let it ring," he murmured, his face so close I could feel the heat of his breath against my lips."Evander, we're at the office," I said, placing my hands flat against his chest to keep some distance between us. His heart was beating with a heavy, frantic rhythm beneath the expensive fabric of his vest. "Your secretary knows we're in here. If you ignore the phone while the door is locked, it looks suspicious."He let out a sharp, frustrated breath through his nose. He stayed still for one more agonizing second, his eyes burning down into mine, before he final
SASKIA POVThe elevator ride back to the top floor felt twice as long as the ride down. The air inside the metallic box was thick and suffocating, completely dominated by Evander’s silent, freezing rage. He kept his eyes fixed on the digital floor indicator, his jaw clenched so tightly that a tiny muscle kept jumping near his ear."You did that on purpose," Evander said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble that cut through the hum of the elevator.I didn't turn my head. I kept staring at the silver doors, my hands clasped tightly in front of my blazer. "Did what on purpose?""Defied me. In front of the staff. In front of him.""His name is Julian, Evander. And I didn't do it to defy you," I said, finally turning to face him. "He has the financial records we need to bury Victoria. Am I supposed to tell him to go away just because you don't like the way he stands near me?"The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime. Evander didn't answer. He marched out into the executive corridor, hi
SAKIA POVThe elevator ride down to the main lobby was dead silent. Evander stood beside me, his hands clasped loosely in front of him, staring straight at the shiny metallic doors. His posture was stiff, completely detached. Looking at him now, nobody would ever guess that his mouth had been burning against my skin just minutes ago.When the doors slid open, the quiet atmosphere of the upper floors vanished.The ground floor lobby was crowded. Victoria stood right in the center of the polished marble floor, looking entirely in her element. She was flanked by two men holding large professional cameras and a woman holding a digital voice recorder with the *Financial Chronicle* logo printed on the side. A few security guards stood a few feet back, looking nervous and unsure of whether they should intervene."Ah, there they are," Victoria announced, her voice carrying beautifully across the wide room. She didn't wait for us to approach. She marched right up to us, her heels clicking aggr
SASKIA POVThe metallic click of the lock sliding into place sounded like a gunshot in the quiet room.I stood by the small glass table, my breath hitching as Evander turned around. The cold, calculated CEO who had just dismissed a junior lawyer was gone. In his place was a man whose dark eyes burned with a dangerous, volatile heat. He crossed the room in three long, predatory strides, stopping so close to me that I could feel the tension radiating off his chest."You smiled at him," Evander said, his voice a low, rough growl that vibrated through the small space between us.I forced myself to stand my ground, tilting my head up to meet his fierce gaze. "He's trying to help me, Evander. He actually found proof that Victoria is stealing from my father's accounts.""I don't care what he found," Evander snapped, his jaw clenching tightly. He reached out, his large hands gripping the edge of the glass table on either side of my hips, effectively trapping me against it. "I told you that my
SASKIA POVThe rain was coming down in sheets by the time the sleek, black town car pulled up to the gates of the Sinclair estate. I stared out the window, my hands gripping my small duffel bag. It was the only thing I had left. When I went back to my apartment after the meeting with Robert, my key
SASKIA POVThe mahogany conference table in the law firm of Harrison & Associates was long enough to seat twenty people, but today, only three of us occupied it. The silence in the room was heavy, punctured only by the aggressive tapping of my stepmother’s long, manicured nails against the wood."C
SASKIA POVThe grand father clock in the main hallway struck midnight, each chime echoing through the silent mansion like a heavy heartbeat. I couldn't pace my room anymore. The memory of Evander’s hands on my face from the other night, followed by his instant, icy dismissal the moment Mrs. Gable w
SASKIA POVThe dining room table was absurdly long. I sat at one end, staring at a plate of seared salmon and asparagus that I was too stressed to eat. Evander sat at the exact opposite end, a glass of dark red wine beside his plate, his attention focused entirely on his tablet. The only sound in t







