LOGIN“You’ve got some nerve showing up here again,” Kai Lennox said, voice low and edged with warning as he slid a fresh scotch across the polished bar top exactly at 11:47 p.m. “One night, remember? I don’t do encores for suits who think they own the city *and* my ass.”
Damien Vale didn’t sit. He stood at the end of the bar in the same charcoal three-piece suit from the night before, jacket unbuttoned now, tie gone, the top two buttons of his black shirt open to reveal the hard line of his collarbone. Steel-gray eyes pinned Kai in place like he was already bent over something. The rooftop bar was dead quiet—last call long over, the neon Eclipse sign flickering softly behind him, rain streaking the glass walls.
“I remember,” Damien replied, voice dark velvet dragged over gravel. He picked up the glass, took a slow sip, then set it down without breaking eye contact. “But I also remember how you screamed my name while you came all over my hand. So tell me, bartender… are you really going to pretend you haven’t been hard since you opened tonight?”
Kai’s jaw flexed. The lie was right there on his tongue—he *had* been half-hard all shift, phantom ache from last night’s bruising stretch making every movement a reminder. He gripped the edge of the bar, tattoos flexing along his forearms. “Walk away, Vale. I’m closing up. Find someone else to ruin.”
Damien’s mouth curved into the ghost of a smirk. “Make me.”
The challenge hung between them like smoke. Kai tried. He really did. He turned his back, started wiping down the counter with sharp, angry strokes, muttering under his breath about rich assholes and one-time rules. But Damien rounded the bar like he owned it, big hand catching Kai’s wrist and spinning him around before Kai could finish the protest.
Their chests collided. Kai’s breath hitched.
“Last night was supposed to be it,” Kai growled, even as his body betrayed him, hips already pressing forward.
“Tell that to your cock,” Damien murmured against his ear, free hand dropping to palm the obvious bulge in Kai’s tight black jeans. “It’s been leaking for me since I walked in.”
Kai’s resolve cracked like cheap glass. He shoved Damien back a step—just enough to flip the lock on the service door—then let himself be crowded against the bar. Glasses rattled. A bottle of top-shelf vodka tipped and rolled away.
“Fine,” Kai bit out, voice rough. “But this is the *last* time. No marks. No staying over. You fuck me and you leave.”
Damien’s answer was a low, hungry sound as he spun Kai around and bent him over the bar top in one fluid motion. Kai’s chest hit the cool wood, cheek pressed to the polished surface, ass up and offered. Damien’s hands were everywhere—yanking Kai’s jeans and briefs down to his thighs in one rough tug, spreading his legs wider with a knee.
“Spread for me,” Damien ordered, voice thick. He dropped to his knees right there behind the bar, mouth hot and filthy as he dragged his tongue up the crease of Kai’s ass without warning.
“Fuck—*Damien*—” Kai’s moan broke on the name he swore he wouldn’t say again. The wet heat of Damien’s tongue circled his hole, licking, sucking, pushing inside like he had all the time in the world. Kai’s fingers scrabbled for purchase on the bar edge, tattoos standing out stark against his knuckles.
Damien ate him open like a man starving, two thick fingers joining his tongue, scissoring fast and deep until Kai was dripping and shaking. Only then did Damien stand, suit pants shoved just low enough to free his heavy, leaking cock. The condom and lube packet appeared from his jacket pocket—prepared again, the bastard.
He pushed in with one brutal thrust, burying himself to the hilt.
Kai’s shout echoed off the empty rooftop. The stretch burned perfectly, that same thick length from last night now slamming home like it belonged there. Damien didn’t ease up. He fucked Kai hard and fast, hips snapping, the wet slap of skin loud in the silent bar. One hand fisted in Kai’s messy brown hair, yanking his head back; the other gripped his hip hard enough to leave fingerprints.
“Still think you can say no to me?” Damien panted, pounding deeper, angling to nail Kai’s prostate on every stroke. “Look at you—bent over your own bar, taking my cock like you were made for it.”
Kai’s eyes fluttered shut, mouth open on a broken moan. “Harder—shit—*harder*, you fucking tease—”
Damien obliged. He leaned over Kai’s back, teeth scraping the side of his neck, and bit down—hard. Not enough to bleed, but enough to bloom a dark, possessive mark right where Kai’s shirt collar would barely hide it tomorrow. Kai came with a strangled cry, untouched cock pulsing between his stomach and the bar, cum striping the wood in thick ropes.
Damien fucked him through it, hips stuttering, then buried himself deep and came with a guttural groan, grinding like he could leave part of himself inside.
They stayed locked together for a long moment, breathing ragged, rain pattering louder against the glass now.
Damien pulled out slowly, tied off the condom, and tucked himself away. He helped Kai straighten, turned him, and kissed him once—slow, filthy, tasting like sin and scotch.
Kai touched the fresh bruise on his neck, eyes narrowed even as his legs still trembled. “I said no marks.”
Damien’s steel-gray eyes glittered with dark satisfaction. “You said a lot of things tonight.” He brushed a thumb over Kai’s swollen bottom lip. “See you tomorrow, Lennox.”
He turned and walked out without another word, leaving Kai half-dressed, marked, and already aching for the next time the clock hit 11:47.
One night.
They both knew the lie was getting thinner by the second.
The war had started.But for the first time, the brothers fought side by side.And Damien stood in the middle, feeling the last pieces of his old world break away.The shocking betrayal was still coming.But the family war had just begun.Kai looked at Damien, ribs still tight, voice low. “Family. Right. You’re standing in the middle of your two sons right now? You’re the father who trusted the man who raised Kaicen? You’re the one who’s lost everything? The person you trusted most is gone? He’s the enemy now? He’s our half-brother? He raised Kaicen? He’s the real father? But he’s been feeding Victor the reforms? He’s been buying the board? He shot at us? Right there? The family dynamic collapses right now.”Kaicen nodded slow, still staring at the lawyer. “Family unit. We fight Victor to
The room felt smaller than ever. The beeping continued. The sirens were gone. But the words kept echoing.The half-brother was here.And Damien was in the middle, feeling everything break at once.Damien sat on the bed, staring at Kai and Kaicen. “I’m standing in the middle of my two sons? You’re my half-brothers? But the man who raised Kaicen? He’s my father? No, he’s Victor’s half-brother? He’s the real father? The man who protected our family once? But he’s been feeding Victor everything? The reforms? The changes? The board votes? That’s why the board is scared? That’s why Victor got bail so fast? That’s why he’s declaring war right now? He shot at us? Right there? The family dynamic collapses.”Kai rubbed his face, ribs still hurting. “You’re standing in the middle of your two sons right now? You’re th
The room felt smaller than ever. The beeping continued. The sirens were gone. But the words kept echoing.The half-brother was here.And Damien was in the middle, feeling everything break at once.Damien sat on the bed, staring at Kai and Kaicen. “I’m standing in the middle of my two sons? You’re my half-brothers? But the man who raised Kaicen? He’s my father? No, he’s Victor’s half-brother? He’s the real father? The man who protected our family once? But he’s been feeding Victor everything? The reforms? The changes? The board votes? That’s why the board is scared? That’s why Victor got bail so fast? That’s why he’s declaring war right now? He shot at us? Right there? The family dynamic collapses.”Kai rubbed his face, ribs still hurting. “You’re standing in the middle of your two sons right now? You’re the father who trusted the man who raised Kaicen? You’re the one who’s lost everything? The person you trusted most is gone? He’s the enemy now? He’s our half-brother? He raised Kaicen
The room went quiet again.Only the beeping of the IV machine and the distant sirens.The real legacy was out.And the brothers could not stop staring at each other.The family was falling apart in seconds.Kai looked at Damien, voice low. “The family dynamic collapses. You’re the half-brother of the man who tried to destroy us? You raised Kaicen? You’re the real father? But you’ve been feeding Victor the reforms? You’ve been buying the board? You’re the enemy now? You shot at us? Right there?”Damien shook his head slow, eyes on his father through the window bars. “He raised Kaicen? He’s the real father? The half-brother of Victor? The man who’s been secretly working with him the entire time? He’s been feeding Victor everything? The reforms? The changes? The board votes? That’s why the b
The alarms kept going outside.The new enemy was in cuffs now.But the brothers could not stop shaking.And the war had just gotten louder.Damien’s father sat in the police car, hands cuffed behind his back, but his voice still carried through the open window. “I’ve been feeding Victor everything. The reforms. The changes. The board votes. I’ve been on his side the entire time. He’s my brother. We always protected each other. Even when you were kids.”Security slammed the door. Sirens screamed down the street. The hospital hallway filled with noise again. Kai lay back on the bed, arm in cast, ribs tight, heart still racing from the bullet that missed him by inches.“Dad shot at us,” Kai said, voice flat. “Right there. In this room. The man who was supposed to protect us. He’s been secr
The room felt smaller. The news was still playing on the TV in the corner. Victor’s face on the screen, declaring war.“Victor declares war on ValeTech publicly,” the reporter said. “He says Damien Vale’s father has been working with him the entire time. Secret payments. Board members. He has proof. The company is in danger.”Damien looked at Kai, then at his father. “We’re not losing this. Not like this.”Kai squeezed his hand. “We’ve got each other. That’s what matters now.”They sat there, the three of them, listening to the news, the father who wasn’t gone, the enemy who was free, and the new war just starting outside the hospital windows.A knock came at the door. Not loud. Just one tap, like someone asking if it was okay to enter.Damien looked up. “Who is it?&rdqu
The police station buzzed with quiet activity under harsh fluorescent lights. Damien sat in a small room with the real Kai beside him. Their hands were free now, but the weight of the night still pressed down on them. Across the hall, in another room, the man who looked exactly like
The city lights outside the windows kept shining, steady and bright, but inside the penthouse everything felt quieter. Kai’s head rested on Damien’s chest. Damien’s hand moved slowly up and down his back, like he needed the motion to keep himself calm. The te
They stayed frozen in the bedroom for what felt like forever. Kai sat on the edge of the bed, sheet wrapped around his waist, staring at the floor. Damien stood a few feet away, hands hanging at his sides like he didn’t know what to do with them. The air between them felt thick, like it was pressin
They left the studio together. Damien’s hand stayed on Kai’s lower back the whole way to the dressing room at the back. The second the door closed, Damien pushed Kai against it.“You let him touch you again,” Damien said, voice low and ro







