LOGINSebastian Wolfe did not rush.
He never had to.
The room seemed to recalibrate itself around him—the air heavier, the silence sharper. Rafael straightened almost imperceptibly. Jaxon’s casual ease vanished, replaced by alert precision. Even Lucien shifted, his attention narrowing, sharpening.
Ivy felt it all.
She stayed seated, though every instinct screamed at her to stand, to move, to do something. Sebastian remained near the doorway, his presence filling the space without effort, dark eyes fixed on her as if she were the only thing worth observing.
Ivy swallowed.
“So,” she said, forcing the word past her throat, “you finally came to see me.”
A faint curve touched his mouth. Not a smile. An acknowledgment.
“I’ve been watching you for a while now,” Sebastian replied. “You just weren’t aware.”
He moved then, unhurried steps carrying him closer. Ivy’s pulse spiked with each one until he stopped across the table from her.
Up close, he was worse.
Not cruel-looking. Not cold in the obvious way. His danger lay in control—in the stillness of him, in the sense that nothing ever truly surprised him.
“You’re calmer than I expected,” he observed.
“Shock wears off,” Ivy said. “Fear doesn’t.”
“Honest,” he murmured. “Good.”
She clenched her hands beneath the table. “Why me?”
Sebastian tilted his head slightly, studying her as if she’d asked something more interesting than she realized.
“Because you have a debt to pay” he said.
Her breath left her in a sharp rush.
Her voice shook despite her effort.
She stood abruptly, chair scraping back. “Apart from owing my landlord and my sister's hospital bills I owe no one".
Sebastian rose as well, closing the distance between them until she had to tilt her head back to meet his gaze.
"Ivy Harper,” he said quietly. “I chose you because you are going to pay for everything that was done to us.”
Her chest tightened.
“You’re offering me a year of my life,” she said. “A marriage in name. Control. Surveillance. That’s not endurance—that’s a prison.”
“A temporary one,” he replied. “With an exit.”
She laughed bitterly. “And I’m supposed to trust that?”
He considered her for a long moment.
“No,” Sebastian said. “You’re supposed to trust that I keep my word.”
A pause.
“I always do.”
The weight of that promise felt heavier than any threat Rafael had thrown at her.
He stepped back, giving her space she hadn’t realized she was holding her breath for.
“Tomorrow morning,” he continued, “the world will learn we’re engaged. In three weeks, we’ll be married.”
Her heart slammed against her ribs. “That’s insane.”
“Efficient,” he corrected.
“And if I refuse?”
His eyes darkened—not with anger, but with certainty.
“You won’t.”
She hated that he was right.
Sebastian turned toward the door, then paused.
“One more thing,” he said. “You’re not here because I wanted a wife.”
She stiffened.
“I don’t need one,” he went on calmly. “You’re here because there is a threat moving against me. Against my name,Against my empire.”
Her stomach dropped. “And what do I have to do with that?”
He looked back at her, expression unreadable.
“They’re looking for leverage,” Sebastian said. “And they won’t expect me to hand it to them willingly.”
Realization struck like ice water.
“I’m bait.”
“You’re a shield,” he corrected. “And a test.”
“For who?”
“For you,” he said softly.
Sebastian addressed them without looking away from Ivy.
“She’s OURS now.”
“I haven’t—”
“You have,” he said, gently but firmly. “You just haven’t said the words yet.”
Lucien watched her closely, something like approval flickering in his dark gaze.
Rafael nodded once. “I’ll make the arrangements.”
Jaxon smiled faintly. “The press will love her.”
Sebastian finally turned away.
As he reached the door, Ivy found her voice.
“What happens after the year is over?
He paused.
“That,” Sebastian Wolfe said, “depends entirely on you.”
The door closed behind him.
Ivy stood in the center of the room, heart pounding, the truth settling deep in her bones.
She had stepped into a world ruled by wolves.
And the most dangerous one of all had just claimed her.
The penthouse never slept.
It only waited.
Ivy realized that on the fourth night—when the silence stopped feeling accidental and started feeling arranged. Every corridor light stayed on just long enough for her to pass. Every door opened before she touched it. Every meal appeared exactly when hunger began to gnaw, not before, not after.
Someone was watching her patterns.
She sat on the edge of the bed, bare feet pressed into cold marble, arms wrapped around herself. The room was too big. Too deliberate. The walls were glass and steel and shadows, and nothing in them felt like comfort. This wasn’t a bedroom. It was a stage.
A soft knock came at the door.
Not a question. A notification.
Rafael entered first.
Tall. Immaculate. Expressionless. His presence changed the temperature of the room without him touching a thing. He didn’t look at her the way men used to—no heat, no curiosity. His gaze assessed. Measured. Like she was a variable already solved.
“Mr. Wolfe will be late,” he said.
Ivy nodded, unsure why her throat felt tight.
Rafael stepped aside.
Jaxon followed—leaner, eyes sharp, movements easy in a way that made her nervous. He leaned casually against the doorframe, arms crossed, gaze lingering openly this time. Not hungry. Not emotional.
Interested.
Lucien came last. Silent. Black-eyed. Watching everything without reacting to anything. When his gaze met Ivy’s, it stayed there a fraction too long, like he was memorizing her.
Three men.
Not guards. Not servants.
They didn’t block the exit.
That somehow made it worse.
“You don’t have to stand there,” Ivy said quietly. “I’m not going anywhere.”
Jaxon smiled—but it never reached his eyes.
“We know.”
They didn’t move.
Minutes passed. Then more.
Ivy became acutely aware of herself—the thin fabric of her clothes, the sound of her breathing, the way the room felt smaller with them in it. None of them touched her. None of them spoke again.
They didn’t need to.
This wasn’t about force.
It was about inevitability.
When they finally left, it wasn’t dramatic. Rafael gave a nod. Jaxon pushed off the wall. Lucien turned last.
The door closed.
Ivy exhaled like she’d been underwater.
Sebastian Wolfe didn’t appear that night.
But his presence did.
It lingered in the way the lights dimmed automatically when her pulse spiked. In the way the balcony doors sealed themselves when she stepped too close. In the file she found the next morning—lying openly on the desk like it had always belonged there.
Her name was on the tab.
Ivy Harper.
Inside were pages of information that made her stomach twist.
Not just her age. Her education. Her medical records.
But things no stranger should know.
Night terrors.
Aversion to raised voices.
The way her hands shook when men stood too close behind her.
She flipped the page with trembling fingers.
A note was scrawled in the margin.
Predictable stress response. Matches projection.
Projection.
As if she were a study.
She didn’t hear him enter.
Sebastian Wolfe never announced himself.
“You shouldn’t read that.”
She spun around.
He stood near the window, suit jacket off, sleeves rolled, calm as if he’d been there all along.
“You shouldn’t have it out,” she shot back.
A pause.
Then, “Fair.”
He crossed the room slowly. Not predatory. Not rushed. Controlled. Every step intentional. He picked up the file and closed it with a finality that felt absolute.
“Do you want to ask me why I know these things?” he asked.
Yes.
The word burned on her tongue.
But something colder stopped her.
“No,” she said instead. “I want to know why they’re watching me.”
His gaze flicked—briefly—to the door.
“They’re not watching,” he said. “They’re waiting.”
“For what?”
“For you to stop pretending this is accidental.”
Her chest tightened. “You planned this.”
“I plan everything.”
She searched his face for cruelty. Found none. Just certainty.
“That doesn’t scare you?” she whispered. “To control people like this?”
Sebastian tilted his head slightly.
“Control isn’t what scares people, Ivy. Chaos does.”
Her name sounded practiced on his tongue.
As if he’d been saying it long before they met.
That night, she woke from a dream she couldn’t remember—heart racing, skin damp, lungs burning.
The lights turned on instantly.
Too instantly.
She sat up, shaking.
A shadow moved near the doorway.
Lucien.
He didn’t come closer. Didn’t speak.
Just stood there.
“How did you know?” she demanded.
His answer was immediate.
“We were told.”
“Told what?”
“That this would happen.”
By who?
The question stayed unspoken.
Lucien left without another word.
Ivy lay back against the pillows, staring at the ceiling as something cold settled into her bones.
This wasn’t surveillance.
It was rehearsal.
The next morning, she overheard voices in the hallway.
Sebastian’s. Low. Precise.
Another man—Rafael, she thought.
“She reacts exactly like he said she would.”
A pause.
Then Sebastian again.
“Good. Then nothing’s changed.”
Ivy pressed her hand to her mouth.
He.
The word echoed.
Someone else was part of this.
Someone who knew her well enough to predict her fear.
The floor beneath her certainty cracked.
And for the first time since stepping into Sebastian Wolfe’s world, Ivy felt something worse than captivity.
She felt recognized.
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 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
The penthouse felt different.Not quieter in a peaceful way — quieter like something fragile had cracked and everyone was pretending not to see it. The city stretched endlessly beyond the glass walls, lights flickering like distant stars, but inside the room the air carried a tension that refused t
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







