LOGINThe room was too quiet.
Ivy stood just inside the door long after it had closed behind her, the muted click echoing louder in her head than it should have. The penthouse bedroom was nothing like she’d imagined—not ostentatious, not warm. It was controlled. Cold lines. Dark marble floors. Floor‑to‑ceiling glass that revealed the city far below, glittering and indifferent.
A gilded cage, she thought. And she was the bird.
Rafael’s words from earlier still clung to her like a threat pressed into skin.
If you try any games, you’ll lose. And when you lose, I’ll crush you.
He hadn’t shouted. That was the terrifying part. He’d said it like a fact. Like gravity.
Ivy exhaled slowly and forced herself to move. The bed dominated the room—king‑sized, black sheets pulled tight with military precision. Nothing here invited comfort. Even the armchair by the window looked sculpted rather than used.
This isn’t his room, she realized. This is mine.
That thought alone sent a chill down her spine.
She crossed to the window and rested her palm against the glass. The city felt impossibly far away, as if she’d been lifted out of her own life and suspended somewhere above it. Somewhere unreachable.
Her phone buzzed in her hand.
She startled, heart lurching, then looked down.
An unknown number.
She hesitated before answering.
“Hello?”
“Settling in?”
Rafael’s voice slid through the line smoothly, like a blade being drawn from a sheath.
“Yes,” she said carefully.
“Good.” A pause. “There are rules, Ivy. They’ll be explained to you. Some tonight. Some later.”
She tightened her grip on the phone. “You already threatened me. Is that part of the rules?”
A soft chuckle. “No. That was a courtesy.”
The call ended.
Ivy stared at the dark screen, pulse racing. Courtesy. The word felt twisted coming from him.
She dropped the phone onto the bed and paced the room, her thoughts spiraling. Sebastian Wolfe,a name whose shadow loomed over everything without him needing to step into the light.
And Rafael…
Rafael was the gatekeeper. The manipulator. The one who enjoyed reminding her how small her choices were.
A soft knock sounded at the door.
Her body went rigid.
“Come in,” she said after a moment.
The door opened to reveal a man she hadn’t seen before. Younger than Rafael. Sharper. He wore a tailored black suit, no tie, his posture relaxed in a way that felt intentional.
“Jaxon,” he said easily.
His gaze flicked around the room, then settled on her with something close to curiosity. Not hunger. Not cruelty. Calculation.
“Ivy.”
“I know.” A half‑smile. “Dinner will be ready in thirty minutes. You’re expected.”
“Expected,” she echoed.
“Attendance is one of the rules,” he replied lightly. Then, as if remembering something, he added, “And you’ll want to wear something appropriate.”
He gestured toward a door she hadn’t noticed earlier.
“The closet’s been stocked.”
With that, he left.
Ivy stood frozen for several seconds before moving toward the closet.
It was… obscene.
Rows of dresses in dark, expensive fabrics. Shoes lined with surgical neatness. Jewelry laid out like offerings. Everything in her size. Everything chosen.
None of it felt like hers.
She chose a simple black dress—long‑sleeved, modest, defiant in its lack of ornament—and dressed quickly. As she fastened the last button, she caught her reflection.
She looked composed.
She didn’t feel it.
Dinner was held in a private dining room adjacent to the penthouse. Rafael sat at the head of the table, Lucien positioned to his right.
Lucien.
His black eyes lifted when she entered, unreadable, unsettling. He didn’t smile. Didn’t speak.
Rafael gestured for her to sit.
“You’re late,” he said mildly.
“You said thirty minutes,” she replied.
His gaze sharpened, but after a beat, he nodded. “Fair.”
The meal was exquisite. She barely tasted it.
Conversation was sparse, controlled. Rafael spoke when he wished. Jaxon drifted in and out, offering comments that felt harmless until she realized he was always steering the topic away from anything personal.
Lucien said nothing.
At one point, Ivy felt his eyes on her. Not lingering. Assessing. Like she was a problem yet to be solved.
After dinner, Rafael stood.
“You’ll stay here,” he told her. “Security is everywhere. Don’t test it.”
She met his gaze. “And if I do?”
His smile was thin. “Then we’ll learn something about each other.”
She returned to her room feeling heavier than before. Alone again, but not unobserved.
She didn’t know how long she stood by the window before a soft sound made her turn.
The door was open.
Morning came without mercy.
Ivy woke to the quiet hum of the penthouse systems, a sound so steady it felt unnatural. No traffic. No voices. No life—only the low vibration of a place designed to exist above the world, not within it.
For a moment, she forgot where she was.
Then memory slammed back into place.
Rafael. The rules. The dinner table. The man who had stood in her doorway last night like a warning wrapped in silk.
She sat up abruptly, scanning the room.
Empty.
But the sense of being watched lingered, crawling under her skin.
She dressed slowly, choosing neutral clothes this time—dark trousers, a soft blouse. Not defiant. Not submissive. Balanced. She didn’t know who she was dressing for, but instinct told her appearances mattered here.
A soft chime sounded.
The door slid open before she could answer.
Jaxon stepped in, holding a tablet.
“Good morning, Ivy.”
She stiffened. “Do people knock here?”
He smiled faintly. “Eventually, you’ll stop asking.”
That earned him a glare, which he ignored easily.
“You have a schedule today.” He glanced at the tablet. “Breakfast. Orientation. A fitting. And a conversation you won’t enjoy.”
“Let me guess,” she said dryly. “With Rafael.”
“No.” His eyes lifted to hers. “With Lucien.”
Something cold slid down her spine.
Lucien was waiting in a sitting room on the far end of the penthouse. The space was dimmer than the others, lit by tall lamps instead of natural light. He sat alone, legs crossed, hands folded neatly in his lap.
Black eyes lifted as she entered.
“Sit,” he said.
Not unkindly. Not gently either.
She obeyed.
Silence stretched.
Lucien studied her the way one might examine a locked door—patient, methodical, already aware there was more behind it.
“You’re afraid,” he said finally.
She scoffed. “Is that supposed to surprise me?”
“No,” he replied. “What interests me is that you’re afraid—and still planning.”
Her heart stuttered.
“I don’t know what you think—”
“You haven’t tried to run,” he continued calmly. “That’s unusual. Most people test boundaries within the first twelve hours.”
“And what happens to them?” she asked.
“They learn,” Lucien said.
The word settled heavily between them.
“You should understand something, Ivy Harper,” he went on. “This arrangement exists because Sebastian Wolfe allows it to exist.
“And me?”
His gaze sharpened. “You are the variable.”
The meeting ended as abruptly as it began. No threats. No instructions. Just a quiet dismissal.
Ivy left the room more unsettled than before.
The rest of the day blurred together.
A seamstress arrived with silent efficiency. Measurements were taken. Notes were made. Ivy felt less like a person and more like a project.
At lunch, Rafael joined her.
“You spoke with Lucien,” he said casually.
“I didn’t have a choice.”
“No,” he agreed. “You don’t.”
She stared at her plate. “Why me?”
Rafael studied her openly now. “Because you were desperate. Because you've debts to pay. And because Sebastian Wolfe doesn’t make mistakes.”
That name again.
He rose, straightening his jacket. “Eat. You’ll need your strength.”
That evening, the penthouse changed.
Lights dimmed. Security increased. The air itself felt charged, as if the walls were bracing for impact.
Jaxon appeared at her door once more.
“You’re coming with us,” he said.
“Where?”
“A room you haven’t seen yet.”
They descended—not by elevator, but through a private corridor Ivy hadn’t known existed. It led to a circular room deep within the building. No windows. One table. Four chairs.
Rafael stood near the far wall.
Lucien took his place without a word.
Jaxon gestured for Ivy to sit.
She did.
Rafael spoke first. “Tomorrow, your engagement will be announced.”
Her breath caught. “Engagement?”
“Yes.”
Lucien’s gaze flicked to Rafael. Jaxon’s jaw tightened.
The room seemed to still.
A door behind Rafael opened.
Heavy footsteps echoed once. Twice.
Then stopped.
Ivy felt it before she saw him—the shift in gravity, the sudden sense that everything else in the room had just become secondary.
Sebastian Wolfe stepped into the light.
Tall. Immaculate. Eyes like a storm held behind glass.
His gaze locked onto hers.
And for the first time since this nightmare began, Ivy understood something with terrifying clarity.
This was the man she was bound to.
And he had been watching her long before the accident.
Ivy waited two days before returning to the hospital.Not because she wanted to.Because she had to.The penthouse was watching her now.Every movement.Every visit.Every excuse.After the confrontation over the photograph, Sebastian had become quieter.Which somehow felt worse.At least when he argued, she knew where she stood.Now he watched.Observed.Waited.As if he knew she was planning something.As if he was waiting for her to make a mistake.Unfortunately for him, she was getting better at hiding things.The opportunity came on a rainy Thursday afternoon.Lucien was in a meeting.Jaxon was buried in security reports.Sebastian had left the penthouse for the first time in days.And Rafael...Rafael was nowhere to be found.Again.The realization bothered her more than she wanted to admit.Lately he seemed to disappear at the strangest times.Always with an explanation.Never with enough detail.The hospital visit itself was routine.Emily was awake.Alert.Recovering.For alm
The atmosphere inside the penthouse changed after the photograph.Nobody said it out loud.Nobody needed to.The tension followed everyone from room to room like a shadow.For the first time since arriving, Ivy noticed the cracks.Not in the building.In them.The four men who always seemed united suddenly weren't.Conversations stopped when she entered.Arguments started behind closed doors.And Sebastian looked like a man carrying the weight of an approaching disaster.Which only made her angrier.Because if he had answers, he still wasn't giving them.Three days passed.Three days of silence.Three days of avoiding Sebastian.Three days of replaying that photograph over and over in her mind.By the fourth morning, Ivy was exhausted.Not physically.Emotionally.She sat alone in the library, pretending to read while her thoughts spiraled.The accident.Emily.Her father.Sebastian.Nothing fit together.Every answer seemed to create three new questions.The sound of footsteps pulled
Nobody spoke.The photograph remained on the table between them like a live grenade.Ivy stood rigidly across from Sebastian, her heart pounding so hard she could hear it.For days she had doubted.Wondered.Questioned.Now she wanted answers.And for once, she wasn't backing down."Well?" she asked.Sebastian's gaze remained fixed on the photograph.Rain hammered against the windows behind him.The storm outside had finally reached the city.Inside the penthouse, another storm was gathering."You followed the guards."It wasn't a question.Ivy laughed bitterly."That's your concern right now?"His jaw tightened."You left without authorization.""There it is."She threw her hands into the air."Every single time.""Ivy—""No."Her voice cracked through the room."Answer the question."Silence followed.Lucien looked away.Jaxon rubbed a hand across his face.Even Rafael seemed uncomfortable.That alone told her everything she needed to know.Because they all knew something.And none
Ivy spent the entire night staring at the message.By morning, it still hadn't disappeared.You need to know what really happened to Emily.The words sat heavily in her chest.She should have shown Sebastian.Or Jaxon.Or anyone.Instead, she deleted the notification and memorized every letter.Because deep down, she already knew what they would say.It's a trap.The problem was that it might also be the truth.And right now, truth felt far more dangerous.Breakfast was unusually quiet.Lucien was on a call.Jaxon sat behind a tablet reviewing security reports.Sebastian hadn't arrived yet.Only Rafael seemed relaxed.At least on the surface.Ivy watched him over her coffee.He noticed immediately."You're staring.""You're suspicious."Rafael chuckled."Those aren't the same thing.""Maybe they should be."His smile faded slightly.Not much.Just enough for her to notice.There it was again.That feeling.The sense that he was carrying secrets heavier than everyone else's.Before she
The lockdown lasted three days before Ivy stopped pretending it was temporary.The guards remained.The restricted access remained.The cameras remained.Every morning she woke hoping something would be different.Every morning it wasn't.By the fourth day, she had stopped asking questions.That worried Sebastian more than her anger ever had.Anger meant she was still fighting him.Silence meant she was planning something.Unfortunately for him, she was.Ivy sat in the lounge, a book open in her lap and completely unread. Beyond the glass walls, a storm rolled over the city, dark clouds swallowing the afternoon skyline.The penthouse felt smaller lately.Not physically.Emotionally.Every conversation seemed guarded.Every glance carried meaning.Everyone was hiding something.The only question was who was hiding the most.She heard footsteps approaching and looked up.Jaxon.A tablet tucked beneath one arm.Coffee in his other hand.He stopped near the sofa."You haven't turned a pag
The penthouse felt different the next morning.Not louder.Not quieter.Different.Like the walls themselves had shifted overnight.Ivy noticed it immediately.The guard stationed outside her door wasn't one she recognized.When she stepped into the hallway, another stood near the elevator.Armed.Watching.Waiting.Her stomach tightened."Seriously?"The guard didn't answer.He didn't even look at her.That somehow made it worse.By breakfast, she'd counted six new security personnel.Six.Inside the penthouse.Not downstairs.Not in the building.Inside.The message was impossible to miss.Sebastian wasn't taking chances anymore.Ivy found him standing near the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city.He looked as composed as ever.Dark suit.Perfect posture.Cold control.As if he hadn't turned the penthouse into a fortress overnight."As much as I enjoy feeling like a prisoner," she said dryly, "this is getting ridiculous."Sebastian didn't turn around immediately."The brea
The room was dark.Not the comforting kind—no shadows to hide in, no corners untouched. Just controlled dimness, calibrated to blur edges and sharpen sensation.Sebastian stood near the bed.Ivy stood frozen at the center of the room.No one spoke.Rafael closed the door.The sound echoed louder th
The penthouse was too quiet.Not the comfortable kind of quiet that came with safety or rest, but the heavy kind that settled into Ivy Harper’s bones and refused to move. Night pressed against the glass walls, in the city sprawling below in a thousand restless lights, and for the first time since s
The morning light crept through the thin blinds, casting narrow stripes across the polished floor. Ivy Harper sat on the edge of the bed, arms wrapped tightly around herself, as though the motion alone could hold her together. The night had been long, unrelenting, and each memory pressed against he
The city never slept, but inside the penthouse the silence felt deliberate — chosen, controlled, suffocating.Ivy stood near the glass wall, arms folded tight across her stomach as if holding herself together. Below, headlights crawled through the streets like veins of white fire. She had counted t







