LOGINGia did not sleep for a single second.
By the time the digital clock on her nightstand finally flickered to seven in the morning, her eyes were burning, dry and strained from staring at the plaster ceiling. The image of the blackmail text remained vividly seared into her retinas. Every loop of her thoughts led back to the same terrifying conclusion: her scholarship, her academic standing, and her entire escape from a life of crushing financial struggle were hanging by a single, invisible thread. If that photograph went public, the Vance Foundation Board would strip her funding before her Monday morning lectures even began. High-society institutions did not protect the reputations of scholarship outsiders; they erased them to protect their own.
Unable to handle the suffocating quiet of the guest room any longer, Gia dragged herself out of bed. Her muscles felt heavy, stiff with a volatile cocktail of exhaustion and residual adrenaline. She washed her face with freezing water, staring at her reflection in the grand bathroom mirror. Her lips still looked slightly flushed, a phantom warmth lingering on her skin that made her stomach violently churn with a mix of intense guilt and a terrifying, deep-seated memory of surrender.
She walked down the long, concrete corridor toward the kitchen, the floor-to-ceiling windows displaying a bright, cloudless California morning that felt entirely unearned.
Gia stood at the massive marble island, her hands trembling slightly as she went through the motions of preparing a pot of black coffee. She didn't bother with sugar or milk, needing the bitter, sharp kick of the caffeine to ground her racing mind.
"Morning, sleepyhead!"
Gia flinched, nearly spilling the hot liquid over her knuckles as Chloe bounded into the kitchen. Her best friend was the absolute picture of casual, wealthy comfort, wearing oversized silk pajamas with her blonde hair tied up in a loose, messy bun. She looked entirely untroubled by the world, a stark contrast to the invisible vice grip tightening around Gia’s throat.
"God, I have the absolute worst headache from last night," Chloe groaned, sliding onto one of the high leather barstools and resting her chin in her hands. "The bass in that house was practically lethal. Did you see what time Leo finally came home? His car was in the garage when I checked a minute ago."
"No," Gia lied smoothly, her voice hollow as she kept her gaze strictly locked onto the dark surface of her coffee mug. She hated herself for the ease of the deception, but the alternative was catastrophic. "I went straight to bed after I got back from the terrace. I was completely exhausted."
"Yeah, you looked a little out of it," Chloe murmured, reaching for a bowl of fresh fruit on the counter. "Honestly, I don't even remember the drive back. I was so dead to the world."
"Good morning, girls."
The deep, gravelly baritone cut through the quiet kitchen like a physical blow. Gia’s entire spine went rigid, every muscle locking up in a defensive instinct she couldn't control.
Leo walked into the kitchen, carrying himself with the effortless, slow grace of a predator completely in control of his territory. He was already fully dressed for the day, wearing a crisp, tailored white linen shirt with the top two buttons casually undone, the sleeves rolled up precisely to his forearms to reveal the heavy leather strap of his watch. His dark hair was perfectly styled, showing absolutely no sign of the frantic, wild mess it had been on the dark terrace hours prior. He looked immaculate, aristocratic, and utterly untouchable.
"Morning," Chloe mumbled, grabbing a strawberry. "You're up early. Don't you usually sleep in on Sundays?"
"Had a few foundation files to review before tomorrow's board alignment," Leo replied casually, his voice smooth and entirely devoid of the raw, dangerous roughness from the night before.
He stepped behind the marble island, his long strides bringing him closer to where Gia sat. He didn't look at his sister. Instead, his amber-flecked eyes slid slowly over to Gia, tracking the sharp, uneven hitch in her breath as he approached. His gaze dropped to her mouth, lingering on her lower lip for a fraction of a second, a quiet, visual reminder of his thumb pressing against her skin in the dark, before rising back to meet her eyes.
"You look remarkably pale, Gia," Leo murmured, leaning against the counter and lifting a freshly brewed espresso cup to his lips. "Did you have nightmares? Or did the noise from the party keep you awake?"
"I slept perfectly fine," Gia snapped quietly, her fingers tightening around her mug until her knuckles turned entirely white. She forced her voice to remain steady, refusing to give him the satisfaction of seeing her break in front of his sister.
Chloe laughed, entirely oblivious to the thick, suffocating wave of electricity passing across the counter. "Oh, don't mind her, Leo. She’s probably just obsessing over the macroeconomic presentation tomorrow. Gia takes her funding way too seriously. She acts like the board is going to kick her out if she breathes wrong."
"Is that so?" Leo tilted his head, a faint, wicked curve touching the corner of his mouth. He took a slow sip of his espresso, his dark eyes flashing with a dangerous, mocking amusement. "The board appreciates dedication, Chloe. But a top recipient should also know how to manage her liabilities."
Underneath the heavy marble island, completely hidden from Chloe’s sight, Leo extended his long leg.
Gia felt the sudden, firm pressure of his bare foot nudge against her ankle. Before she could pull away, his toes slid deliberately up the side of her calf, a slow, possessive, and agonizingly steady caress that traveled upward against her skin.
A sharp gasp caught in Gia's throat. She choked it down at the last second, her entire body freezing as a violent surge of raw adrenaline and traitorous, liquid heat crashed through her core. Her chest rose and fell in shallow, rapid movements. She stared across the table directly into Leo’s eyes, her gaze wide with a mixture of pure terror and furious defiance.
Leo didn't blink. He sat there comfortably, resting his elbow on the marble counter, his face a flawless mask of innocent, detached composure. He looked like the picture-perfect, reliable older brother, while beneath the wood, his foot continued to relentlessly slide against her leg, testing her limits, driving her right to the absolute edge of a panic attack.
Every tiny movement of his skin against hers felt incredibly explicit in the bright, unforgiving morning light. The stakes were terrifyingly real; Chloe was sitting less than two feet away, casually chewing on a piece of fruit, completely unaware that her brother was establishing absolute, physical dominance over her best friend right under her nose.
"Gia? Seriously, are you okay?" Chloe asked suddenly, leaning forward and staring at her friend's face. "Your cheeks are completely flushed. You look like you're running a temperature."
Gia swallowed hard, the lump of panic in her throat feeling as large as a stone. She desperately tried to pull her leg back, but Leo’s foot shifted, his ankle locking against hers with just enough weight to keep her pinned beneath the table. He was forcing her to play his game, forcing her to endure the suffocating proximity without making a sound.
"I'm fine," Gia managed to choke out, her voice sounding entirely strained to her own ears. She forced a rigid, artificial smile onto her lips, her eyes never breaking away from the dark, victorious glint in Leo’s stare. "Chloe is right. I think I'm just... feeling the weight of my debts to the foundation."
Leo slowly lowered his espresso cup, the clink of the porcelain against the marble sounding like a definitive gavel.
"Don't worry so much, Gia," Leo murmured, his voice dropping an octave, carrying a heavy, double meaning that vibrated straight through her chest. "The foundation always collects what it's owed. You just have to learn how to comply with the terms."
The sweeping notes of the orchestra suddenly sounded like a funeral dirge.Gia stumbled over her own feet, her breath leaving her lungs in a sharp, terrified rush. The blackmailer was here. Someone in this room of billionaires, legacy donors, and university elite was actively hunting them.Leo did not let her fall. His arm locked around her waist like a vice, hauling her flush against his solid chest and forcing her to catch the rhythm of the waltz."Do not stop moving," Leo commanded quietly, his voice a low, gravelly vibration against her ear. "Smile, Gia. Look at me like you belong exactly where you are."Gia forced her stiff facial muscles to obey, pasting a brilliant, fragile smile onto her lips. She looked up into his amber-flecked eyes, her heart hammering wildly against her ribs. Every single person they spun past felt like a potential executioner. Was it Arthur Sterling? Was it his cousin Julian, seeking revenge for the terrace? Or was it someone entirely unknown, a shadow hi
The grand ballroom of the Vance hilltop estate did not look like a party. It looked like a battlefield dipped in gold.Crystal chandeliers hung from vaulted ceilings, casting a brilliant, unforgiving light over the university’s most powerful alumni. Men in tailored tuxedos and women in dripping diamonds held crystal champagne flutes, their voices blending into a low, aristocratic hum. These were the titans of industry. These were the people who funded the Vance Scholarship.And every single one of them turned to stare as Leo walked through the arched double doors with Gia anchored to his side.Gia’s heart hammered a frantic, bruised rhythm against her ribs. She wanted to shrink into the shadows. She wanted to pull her hand away from the heavy, burning weight of Leo’s grip on her waist. But the memory of the blackmail photo flashed in her mind, locking her joints. She forced her spine straight and kept her chin leveled, letting him guide her directly into the center of the room."Leo.
The garment box resting on the guest bed looked like an execution order.It was wrapped in heavy, textured charcoal paper, embossed with the minimalist gold logo of an ultra-exclusive boutique on Rodeo Drive, a place where a single dress cost more than Gia’s mother made in six months.Gia stood over it, her hands clenched into fists at her sides. She didn't want to open it. She wanted to pack her canvas duffel bag, run down the service stairs of the Vance penthouse, and take the first bus back to her cramped apartment. But the silent, digital threat sitting in her phone’s call history kept her anchored to the floorboards. Choose your master. Leo’s words from yesterday morning echoed in her mind, a cold, sharp reminder of the invisible collar he had slipped around her neck.With a ragged breath, she pulled the silk ribbon. The lid came off, revealing layers of crisp black tissue paper. Beneath them lay a gown of deep emerald silk.When she finally put it on, the mirror in the guest roo
The distinct, electronic chime of the front entrance intercom cut through the heavy silence of the kitchen, breaking the invisible wire stretched between them."Oh, that must be the premium groceries I ordered for our smoothie bowls," Chloe said, setting her strawberry down and sliding off her barstool. She stretched her arms casually, completely blind to the emotional wreckage sitting right next to her. "They always take forever at the security gate. Be right back, Gia."The second Chloe’s silk pajamas vanished around the corner of the corridor, the domestic illusion of the kitchen shattered.Gia stood up so fast her barstool shrieked violently against the hardwood floor. "Stop it!" she hissed, her voice trembling as a volatile mix of rage, panic, and unwanted heat flooded her chest. "Are you absolutely out of your mind? She was sitting right there!"Leo didn't flinch at her outburst. He set his empty espresso cup down with a slow, agonizingly deliberate clink and stepped around the
Gia did not sleep for a single second.By the time the digital clock on her nightstand finally flickered to seven in the morning, her eyes were burning, dry and strained from staring at the plaster ceiling. The image of the blackmail text remained vividly seared into her retinas. Every loop of her thoughts led back to the same terrifying conclusion: her scholarship, her academic standing, and her entire escape from a life of crushing financial struggle were hanging by a single, invisible thread. If that photograph went public, the Vance Foundation Board would strip her funding before her Monday morning lectures even began. High-society institutions did not protect the reputations of scholarship outsiders; they erased them to protect their own.Unable to handle the suffocating quiet of the guest room any longer, Gia dragged herself out of bed. Her muscles felt heavy, stiff with a volatile cocktail of exhaustion and residual adrenaline. She washed her face with freezing water, staring a
Gia’s back hit the cold stone balustrade, the rough marble biting through the thin silk of her top. Leo didn't stop until he was inches away, a solid wall of pure, furious heat blocking out the rest of the world. The dark, sweet scent of bourbon and raw sandalwood rolled off him, entirely overwhelming her senses."What do you care who I talk to, Leo?" Gia fired back, her voice shaking but her eyes defiant as she forced herself to look up into his dark, unyielding stare. "You don't own me. Go back inside to your friends.""You spent the last hour trying to see how far you could push me, Gia," Leo murmured, his voice a low, gravelly vibration against her skin. He stepped flush against her, his thigh pinning hers against the railing, completely trapping her. "Letting him touch you, looking right at me while he did it. You wanted to know what would happen? Well, look at me.""I don't want you," she lied, her chest heaving, her breath catching as his shadow completely consumed her."Liar,"







