LOGIN
The Wrong Door
TALIA
Unknown: 24 hours left. Bring the money or die.
A wave of iced chills rolled down my spine and I gulped down the last champagne left on my tray.
I can’t die. And I cannot lose my brother.
But when a man named Dex sat across from me in a booth that smelled like cigarettes 48 hours ago, and told me in a very calm tone that my brother's debt was now my debt. He said my brother had been stupid enough to put our mother's apartment up as collateral. He'd smiled when he said it. Like it was good news.
Like it wasn’t a ruin.
I looked around this ballroom, looking for my plan – Marcus Webb.
Marcus Webb is a philanthropist, semi-drunk on his third glass of champagne by eight-thirty, and he has a reputation for being sentimental about hard-luck stories. I just need five minutes and enough composure to ask him for a loan without crying. I've been rehearsing the speech in bathroom mirrors all evening.
But I couldn’t find him amdist the crowd of expensive perfumes and rich laughter. The band were playing a slow song that nobody gave a shit about.
I need to find Marcus, or my life is over.
And just when I decided to ho look for my saving plan, one of the senior staff pulls me aside, presses an expensive Macallan into my arms, and tells me it's a priority delivery to the penthouse suite, forty-second floor. VIP only.
"Which VIP?" I ask.
He's already walking away. "You'll know when you see him."
—
The scotch is worth more than my rent.
I know this because I Googled it just now in the elevator — 1962 Macallan, forty-two thousand dollars a bottle — and now my palms are so damp I'm terrified I'm going to drop it, and then I'll owe the gala and the loan sharks, and that thought alone makes my hands shake worse.
I adjust my grip. Breathe.
Unknown: 23:49 remaining.
The texts don't say who they're from. They don't have to.
My breaths were shaky, my nerve cells were trembling. I need to deliver this bottle fast and return to the gala, because I can’t afford to miss Marcus Webb.
The elevator dinged opened and revealed a hallway that feels nothing like the rest of the hotel. Quieter. The carpet is so thick it swallows sound whole.
There's only one door, and it's slightly ajar, warm amber light pooling through the crack, and I can hear — voices. One low and controlled. One on the edge of collapse.
I should knock. I know I should knock.
Instead, I push the door open with my shoulder, because my hands are full and because the staff said priority and also because I am not thinking clearly tonight. I am running on bad coffee, a desperation and twenty-three hours and forty-something minutes.
The room stops me cold.
It is exactly what people call luxury. The windows were ceiling high, glass for being see-through and just from whhere I was standing, I can see the whole city.
But that was not what caught my artention or stopped me in my tracks – it was Soren Vale.
I recognize him the way you recognize a landmark. Impossible not to. He's on the cover of Forbes every other quarter, the kind of man that financial journalists describe as ruthless when they actually mean terrifying and visionary. Tall, dark-suited, jaw set like he was carved out of something expensive and cold.
The Ice King. That's what they call him.
Right now, the Ice King is being cornered by a woman in a champagne slip dress, mascara streaked down both cheeks, holding her phone up between them like a weapon. Which, I realize with a slow, sickening drop in my stomach, it is.
"I have seventeen seconds of video, Soren." Her voice is shaking but her arm isn't. "Seventeen seconds that will end you. The board will pull out. The Singapore deal collapses. You know I'll do it."
"Cassandra." His voice is so flat it barely qualifies as human. "Think carefully."
"I have been thinking." A sob tears through the word. "You don't get to just —"
She hears me. They both turn.
The bottle in my hands suddenly weighs forty-two thousand dollars.
I should apologize. Back out. Pretend I have the wrong room, which I clearly do, I clearly have the catastrophically wrong room —
But Soren Vane looks at me.
Not the way men at galas usually look at waitstaff, which is to speak through us, around us, past the tray and toward whoever's holding something more interesting. He looks at me directly. Assessing. His eyes move from my face to the door I came through to the hallway beyond and back to my face, and I watch something happen behind his expression — not warmth, not relief, something more like calculation snapping into place.
He's not seeing me.
He's seeing a variable. A solution. Something to use.
Outside — far below, or maybe not so far, maybe right outside these windows — I hear it. Low at first, like static, then louder: the unmistakable swell of a crowd. Shouted questions. The white strobe-burst of camera flashes lighting up the glass forty-two floors up.
Paparazzi. Someone tipped them off. Someone always tips them off.
Cassandra's head turns toward the sound, and for one terrible second her face does something complicated — triumph and grief tangled together.
"Perfect timing," she breathes.
My phone buzzes.
23:41 remaining.
I take one step backward. The door is right there. The hallway is right there. I can put the bottle down on the console table by the entrance and disappear back into the elevator and forget any of this happened, and maybe on the way down I can still catch Marcus Webb before he switches from champagne to something that makes him less sympathetic —
Soren moves.
He took four stridesacross the room, moving like a man who has never once in his life considered that he cannot get whatever he wants. His hand finds my waist before I could even say anything. It was firm, certain, proprietary in a way that makes every nerve ending I have fire at once — and he lowers his face so his mouth is at my ear-level.
Then he spoke in a low and dangerous tone:
"Don't scream, and I'll make sure you never have to work a day in your life again."
I don't scream. I don't do anything. I think my lungs have forgotten their one job.
Then we're moving — he's moving us, makingme backward through the door then into the hallway. I hear Cassandra shout something behind us but the elevator at the end of the corridor is already open and there are people pouring out of it.
Cameras up, flashes going and the roar of voices crashing over me like a wave —
His hand slides from my waist to my jaw.
And then Soren Vane, the Ice King, the most untouchable man in any room he has ever stood in, kisses me.
The world goes white.
A hundred flashes. Maybe more.
Somewhere in the back of what's left of my mind, I think: the bottle. I dropped the bottle.
Forty-two thousand dollars.
I am so completely destroyed.
Peace OfferingTALIAI woke up before sunrise blinking at the light coming through the curtains. The room was really quiet. I could hear the ticking of the clock on the wall.The other side of the bed was still cold and untouched.Soren hadn't come back last night.I stayed awake for hours waiting for him. I kept telling myself I was just up because I had to see Eli today like he had promised.That empty space next to me bothered me more than I wanted to admit it was really hard to ignore. It felt like a criticism somehow. I felt like I did something wrong even knowing it.Old habits are really hard to get rid of.When Eli and I used to fight when we were kids and I knew that I was the one who was wrong I would wake up very early in the morning.I would cook for Eli and I. I would make pancakes with a lot of chocolate chips because that is what Eli liked. I would also make his favorite scrambled eggs. Strong coffee.The kind of breakfast that said I'm sorry without forcing either of
Crossed LinesTALIAMy mouth went dry. Soren hovered over me, so close I could feel the heat rolling off his skin, and every coherent thought in my head scattered like startled birds.“I….I was just” The words tangled on my tongue. I tried again, hating how breathless I sounded. “It’s not what you think.”Before I could force out anything better, Soren shifted. His body lowered, pressing me deeper into the mattress. Not crushing, but deliberate. Solid.His weight was really heavy on me. It felt totally overwhelming. When he grabbed my wrists and lifted them up over my head holding them there with one hand my heart almost stopped beating.I was breathing hard now my chest was going up and down, against his weight. I could feel his chest too. The thin fabric of my tank top did nothing to hide how aware my body was of every inch of him.“Soren,” I managed, voice shaky. “What are you doing?”His face was inches from mine, eyes dark in the low light. A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips
Midnight LinesTALIAI didn’t sleep.I lay there pretending, eyes closed, breathing slow and even like I’d seen in movies. Every shift of the sheets felt too loud. Every breath Soren took beside me registered like a touch.The room was really dark. The only light came from the city outside. It was shining through the windows. The bed in the room was huge. It felt big. At the same time it felt too small. Hours crawled by. My mind kept replaying the gala, the stranger’s hot whisper, Vera’s cold smile, Soren’s hand pulling me tight against him like I actually belonged there.Eventually his breathing deepened. The snores are almost gentle. I waited for another ten minutes just to be sure that he was really asleep then I carefully slid out from under the covers.For a moment I just stood there looking down at him.Soren Vane, the Ice King, looked… different asleep. The sharp lines of his face had softened. No calculating stare. No guarded mask.Just a man with dark lashes against his chee
Clause 17 ActivatedSORENThe drive back to the estate was quiet, but the silence wasn’t empty. It crackled. Talia sat across from me in the car, her hands folded tight in her lap, the black dress still somehow perfect despite the chaos of the night.I kept seeing that moment in the crowd the second she’d disappeared from my grip. The waiter’s face, the muttered threat. Dex’s reach had grown longer than I’d calculated. That changed things.By the time we stepped inside the house, the decision had already hardened. No more gradual progression. No more careful distance. Clause 17 was no longer a future contingency. It was now.Petra met us in the foyer, her expression carefully neutral. I gave her a short nod. “Move Talia’s things into the main suite. Tonight.”Talia’s head snapped toward me. “What?”I didn’t stop walking. She followed, heels clicking sharp against the stone. Good. Let her be angry. Anger was useful. Predictable.In my bedroom the lights were already turned down low, th
The Intended BrideTALIAThe gala was what I thought it would be and a bit more disappointing. The crystal chandeliers shone brightly over the marble floors.The air was filled with the smell of perfume and old rich people. People were chatting around us in a smooth way. Everyone was saying one thing. Thinking of another.I felt eyes on me the second we stepped through the doors. Not the casual glances you get when you’re carrying a tray of champagne. These were assessments. Weighing. Calculating how I fit into the picture beside Soren Vane.His hand rested at the small of my back as we walked through the crowd. It was a touch that seemed casual to other people but I could feel it all over my body. The warmth of his hand went through the fabric of my dress.His fingers were spread out enough to make me feel like he owned me. I told myself this was all part of a plan, it was strategic. Part of the performance.Still, my body didn’t seem to care about the difference. Every step we took
Terms of SurvivalTALIAI woke up with the taste of last night still bitter on my tongue and decided I wasn’t going to spend the day waiting for Soren’s next move.The estate felt different when the sun was out; it was still really pretty. It was still cold too. I put on my jeans and a plain sweater and went out of my room.I really wanted to find something that felt like it belonged to me. I wanted to find a part of the house that was not perfectly arranged by someone. A door that didn’t feel locked from the inside.It didn’t take long for the place to push back.The first hallway was fine. Sunlight came through the windows and made the light stone floors look almost warm.The doors that went out to the east terrace were glass. I tried to open them but the handle wouldn't move. A soft red light blinked on the discreet panel beside it.Authorization required. I tried another corridor that looked like it led toward the kitchen wing. Petra appeared at the end of it like she’d been summo
The Gilded CageTALIAThe estate arrives before I'm ready for it.We turn off the main road and the city disappears behind. Like it was completely gone, swallowed by tree line and darkness — and then the gates open and I see it.Glass and steel rising out of manicured ground like something that gre
The Lion's DenSORENThe boardroom is on the thirty-eighth floor and the elevator ride up is forty seconds of silence.I use it to observe.Talia is standing straight. Chin level. Hands loose at her sides — not balled this time, which tells me she made a decision somewhere between the suite and the
The Devil’s PlanTALIATwo million dollars.I keep staring at those words on page one like they'll rearrange themselves into something that makes more sense. Like maybe I misread. Like maybe it says two hundred or two thousand or anything that doesn't make my brain short-circuit.It says two millio
The Aftermath of a KissSORENThe cameras are still going when I pull back.I count — three seconds, maybe four — enough for the shot to be clean, enough for the story to write itself. Billionaire Soren Vane and Mystery Woman. By morning, it'll be on every entertainment feed that matters, and Cassa







