LOGINThe Lion's Den
SOREN
The 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 lobby and chose performance over panic. The dress helps. Mira always delivers. But the dress isn't doing the work her spine is doing right now.
She's terrified. I can see it in the slight tension at her jaw and the way she breathes just a fraction too carefully. But if you didn't know to look you wouldn't find it.
Interesting.
The elevator opens. I put my hand on the small of her back and feel her go rigid for exactly one second before she releases it. Adjusts. Falls into step beside me like she's been doing it for months.
Good girl.
I don't say it. But I think it.
The room is already full when we walk in.
Twelve chairs. Nine occupied. Three men standing by the window with coffee they're not drinking. The ambient temperature of the room is what I'd call hostile — the particular cold of people who've already agreed on something and are waiting for you to arrive so they can say it to your face.
Marcus Hale speaks first. He's been on this board eleven years and in that time has never once surprised me. "Soren. We weren't expecting —"
"My fiancée." I say it before he finishes. Cleanly. No preamble. "I assumed introductions were appropriate given the nature of tonight's agenda."
The word fiancée does exactly what I intended. It moves through the room like a current — heads turning, expressions recalibrating. Gerald Foss actually puts his coffee down.
Talia steps forward and extends her hand to Hale with the specific composure of someone who has decided to be unreadable. "Talia Jett." Her voice is steady. "I've heard a great deal about this board."
She hasn't heard anything. She learned their names in the elevator when I gave her forty seconds of briefing. But the way she says it lands like familiarity and Hale shakes her hand with the automatic reflex of a man who has just been slightly wrong-footed.
I watch the room recalibrate in real time.
There's something they weren't expecting in her specifically. She isn't polished in the way money produces polish — she has no socialite softness. What she has is a kind of stripped-down directness. A rags-to-something quality that reads in this particular room of inherited wealth as either offensive or compelling.
From the way Gerald Foss is sitting up straighter it's reading as compelling.
I keep my hand at her back throughout introductions. Not possessively — just present. Constant. The gesture of a man who reaches for someone without thinking about it. I've calculated exactly how that reads and I execute it without error.
We sit. The meeting begins.
For forty minutes, I let the room talk. Budget review. Expansion timeline. The Singapore deal which Cassandra thought she had leverage over, was actually restructured around her potential interference for the last two weeks. I answer questions with the particular calm that tends to unnerve people who came prepared for a fight.
Talia sits beside me and says very little. When she does speak, it's brief and precise. At one point, Foss asks her opinion — a test dressed as courtesy — on the optics of the Asian market expansion and she says it depends whether you're entering as a partner or a conqueror and then stops talking.
The table is quiet for a moment.
I don't look at her. But I want to.
Then Arthur Sterling leans forward.
Sterling has been on this board for four years. He was placed here by a competing interest group I've been managing carefully since his appointment. He is the only person in this room who came tonight not to be convinced but to find a crack.
"Congratulations are in order." His tone is flat. Pleasant in the way that isn't. "Though I have to say — the timing is rather sudden. An engagement announcement the same night as — what was it — some scene with a socialite in the penthouse corridor?"
"The scene you're referencing was a former acquaintance behaving erratically." I meet his eyes. "The announcement timing was mine. I don't schedule sentiment around board convenience."
Sterling smiles. "Of course not." He lets a beat pass. "Then you won't object to a proper celebration. The Masquerade Ball is in ten days. A vow exchange is symbolic and natural in front of the relevant witnesses. Proves the union is in good faith." He spreads his hands. "Just good optics. You understand optics, Soren."
The room is very still.
Every person at this table knows what Sterling is doing. Some of them are hoping it works. I run a quick count — votes if this goes sideways — and then I do the thing that clearly nobody expects.
I smile.
"We'd be delighted." I turn to Talia. My hand finds hers on the table. "Ten days is plenty of time."
Talia looks at me and her expression doesn't break. But her hand under mine is ice cold.
—
We make it to the elevator before I feel the shift.
She holds it together through goodbyes. Through the lobby. Through the revolving door and the night air and the moment the limo door closes behind us.
Then she tells me.
Not dramatically. Not falling apart. She says it the way someone speaks when they've been holding something so heavy for so long that putting it down looks almost like nothing.
We have your brother. Pay now. Tonight. Or he's a ghost by morning.
The limo moves through the city. I look at her face — pale now under Mira's careful work. The composure she carried through that boardroom was cracking at the edges.
My jaw tightens.
I pick up my phone. One contact. Two rings.
"Clean it up." My voice comes out low and even. "All of it. Use whatever force is necessary."
I end the call.
Talia is watching me with an expression I can't fully categorize. Fear. Relief. Something else underneath both.
I hold her gaze.
"You're safe now Talia." I let the words land. Then: "But remember — you belong to me. Not the sharks."
She doesn't answer.
Outside the city moves past in streaks of cold light as we head to ma mansion and I look away first.
This time I let her have it.
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
Controlled EnvironmentsSORENSleep was never a given, but tonight it was impossible.I stood at the tall window in my room, the grounds below swallowed by darkness except for the precise lines of security lighting cutting through the trees. The glass was cool against my fingertips.I kept seeing the moment Talia looked up from that folder, her face pale, eyes wide with the particular shock of someone realizing the game had started long before she stepped onto the board.No regret on my part. Just recalibration. I had expected her to find it eventually. Sooner than projected, though. That interested me more than it should.She was sharper than the profile suggested. That complicated things. I didn’t dislike the complication.My phone vibrated on the desk. Desmond. Of course. The man had the instincts of a bloodhound and the sleep schedule of a machine.“Talk,” I said, keeping my voice low.“Minor breach attempt on the perimeter feed at the south gate,” he reported, crisp and unhurried
Rule Number TwoTALIAI didn’t step back.My body was telling me to move from this person to get the desk behind me and the door in front of me so I could leave. If I step back now it will feel like I am quitting. I have already shared much of myself with this person tonight.Every muscle in my body was still screaming at me to put some space between us.So I just stood there with my head high. The folder I had just opened was still warm, in my hands.Soren filled the space around me without touching me. It wasn't his height or the wide line of his shoulders that caught my eye.The air in the room seemed to get tighter when he was around. It was like the room was making space for him and for whatever he was thinking. I could see it in his ice- eyes.I was next to him and could smell cedar on his skin. I also caught something with a sharper scent. It smelled like whiskey.. Maybe it was just leftover from the night before.“Rule number two,” he said, voice low, almost conversational, “
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 grew here on purpose. Every light is precise. Every angle is intentional. It is the most beautiful and the most unwelcoming building I have ever seen.I don't say anything.Neither does Soren. He's been on his phone since the call. Typing. Reading. Existing in whatever dimension he operates in where other people's crises are just logistics to process and file.My brother is alive. That's what one of his people confirmed twenty minutes ago. A man in the front seat who spoke into his earpiece and then said the asset is secured and receiving medical attention like my brother Eli is a line item. Like he isn't the person who taught me how to ride a bike and ruined every birthday cake he ever tried t
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
The Wrong DoorTALIAUnknown: 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 hou







