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Chapter 7 - The Glided Shackle

Author: MELLA
last update publish date: 2026-04-14 07:58:04

The penthouse was silent, but it wasn't the silence of peace; it was the heavy, pressurized quiet that precedes a storm. I stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows of Julian’s office, staring out at a Seattle that looked like a blurred watercolor of grey and navy. My reflection in the glass looked like a ghost pale, hollow-eyed, and utterly untethered.

Behind me, I heard the rhythmic, predatory click of Julian’s lighter. A flame flared, the scent of expensive tobacco drifting through the sterile, climate-controlled air. He hadn't said a word since showing me the archives the thousands of photos that proved my life had been a curated exhibit in his private gallery for three years.

"The clock is ticking, Elara," he said, his voice a low, gravelly vibration that seemed to crawl up my spine. "The gala starts in an hour. My guests don’t like to be kept waiting, and I don't like to be disappointed."

I turned, my fingers digging into the velvet upholstery of the chair. "I’m not going. You can take my phone, you can lock the doors, but you can’t make me walk into a room full of people and pretend that this… this insanity is normal."

Julian stood up slowly. He didn't look angry; he looked patient, which was infinitely more terrifying. He walked toward the obsidian desk and picked up a rectangular box wrapped in black silk. He didn't hand it to me; he set it on the desk and slid it toward me like a chess piece.

"Open it," he commanded.

"No."

"Elara," he said, his voice dropping an octave, becoming something dark and jagged. "I am trying to give you a choice in how this evening begins. Do not make me rescind it."

With trembling hands, I reached for the box. The silk ribbon felt like ice against my skin. I pulled it, the lid sliding off to reveal a gown that looked less like clothing and more like a sin. It was liquid emerald silk, a green so deep it looked almost black in the shadows of the office.

I lifted it, the fabric spilling over my arms like water. It was weightless, terrifyingly thin, and backless. Not just low-back it was a plunging cowl that would leave every inch of my skin from my neck to the small of my spine exposed to the air.

"What is this?" I whispered.

"Your uniform for the night," Julian said, stepping around the desk. He closed the distance between us until I could feel the heat radiating from his charcoal suit. "Vane Global is celebrating thirty years of dominance tonight. I am the man of the hour. And you… you are the ward who has finally come of age."

"I'm twenty, Julian. I'm an art student. I'm not a socialite. I don't belong on a red carpet."

"You belong where I put you," he corrected, his hand coming up to cup my jaw. His thumb traced the line of my lower lip, his gaze dropping to my mouth with a hunger that made my knees weak. "Tonight, the world stops speculating about why I kept you hidden. Tonight, they see exactly what I’ve been protecting."

"They'll see a prisoner," I hissed, trying to pull away.

His grip tightened, just enough to let me know I was caught. "They will see a woman wearing the Vane emeralds. They will see a woman who answers to me and only me. And if you think you can skip this, remember page twelve of your mother's debt settlement."

The air left my lungs. "The paintings."

"The paintings," he repeated, his eyes locking onto mine with a chilling clarity. "The gallery storage in SODO. One phone call from me, and the last remnants of your father’s legacy become ash. You want to save his memory, Elara? Then put on the dress. And put on a smile."

He let go of me, the cold air rushing into the space where his hand had been. "My stylist is in the dressing suite. You have forty minutes. And Elara?"

I stopped at the door, my hand on the handle.

"Don't bother with lace. That dress is cut to fit you like a second skin. If I see a single line, a single strap… I will remove it myself in the middle of the ballroom. Am I clear?"

I didn't answer. I couldn't. I fled to the dressing suite, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs.

The next forty minutes were a blur of cold hands and hot curling irons. The stylist worked in a terrified silence, as if she knew she was dressing a lamb for a wolf’s dinner. When she finally stepped back, I stared at the stranger in the mirror.

The emerald silk was suffocatingly beautiful. It clung to my hips and draped over my chest, the fabric so thin I felt naked. Every time I breathed, the silk shifted, reminding me of Julian’s warning. I was bare beneath the green, a secret hidden in plain sight.

The door to the suite opened. Julian entered, already changed into a midnight-black tuxedo that made him look like a shadow come to life. In his hand was a velvet box.

He walked up behind me, his eyes meeting mine in the glass. He didn't say I looked beautiful. He didn't have to. The way his pupils dilated, swallowing the grey of his irises until his eyes were almost black, told me everything.

He opened the box. Inside was a necklace of raw, unpolished emeralds and diamonds, a piece of jewelry that looked like it had been pulled from a sunken ship. He lifted it, his arms surrounding me, his chest pressing against my bare back.

The metal was freezing. I shivered as he clicked the clasp shut. His fingers lingered on the nape of my neck, his thumb tracing the sensitive skin behind my ear.

"This necklace has been in my family for three generations," he whispered, his lips grazing my ear. "It has waited a long time for a neck as graceful as yours."

He slid his hand down my arm, his fingers interlacing with mine, forcing me to look at our joined reflection. We looked like a power couple. We looked like a lie.

"One rule for the night, Elara," he said, his voice turning into a low, possessive snarl. "You stay within three feet of me. You do not speak to the press. You do not dance with other men. And if another man touches so much as your hand… I will break him before we leave the floor. And then, I will take you home and remind you exactly who owns every inch of that skin."

He grabbed my chin, forcing me to look up at him. "Do you understand the stakes?"

"I understand," I whispered, the word tasting like ash.

"Good. Let’s go show them the prize."

As he led me toward the elevator, his hand firmly on the small of my bare back, I realized the Gala wasn't a party. It was a branding. And as the gold doors closed, sealing us in the mirrored box, I knew that tonight, the cage was finally going public.

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