LOGINThe doors sealed behind him with a click - a sound that made my chest tighten and my stomach twist.
For a long moment I just stood there, pulse hammering in my throat, staring at the tall doors that he had locked. Apparently, he had other business to attend to before dealing with me.We have unfinished business, you and I. His words made me shiver.I turned, my eyes falling on the massive bed with its wine-colored silk sheets. It looked… soft, alluring, but also a bit terrifying. Like it was waiting to swallow me whole.
His jacket, draped over my shoulders, smelled of him. Cedar. Smoke. Sandalwood. The scent was suffocating me. It made his presence stronger. I yanked it off and tossed it onto the bed.
Wrapping my arms around myself, I rubbed soothing circles against my skin, trying to steady my breathing. Turning away from the bed, needing to move, to do something, I studied my surroundings. The room was beautiful in a way that made me uneasy. A carved dark wooden wardrobe stood against one wall, its doors slightly open, revealing neat rows of shirts and tailored suits in dark shades. On a low table near the fire sat a crystal decanter, half full of deep amber liquid. One glass waited beside it.
I drifted toward the fireplace, its warmth welcome against my cold skin. My eyes caught on something above the mantel: another lion painting. This one wasn’t roaring - it was prowling. Lurking. Watching my every move. Ready to pounce.
Turning around again, letting the fire heat my back, my eyes caught the window. It drew me in like a beacon. Tall. Slim. Wide enough for me to fit through. If I dared.
My pulse quickened. I hugged myself tighter, torn between the fire’s warmth at my back and the cold dread curling in my stomach. I had to make a choice.Part of me wanted to stay. To let myself be swollen by the wine-colored silk sheets, to let Santiago’s heat cage me. Own me. Control me. To believe him that this was the only safe place for me.
But another part – a louder part – screamed that this was no sanctuary. It was a prison. A gilded one, wrapped in silk, yes, but a cage all the same.
My eyes darted to the locked doors. His voice still echoed in my head: We have unfinished business, you and I. My throat tightened. He would come back. Soon. If I wanted freedom, this was it.I turned back to the window, heart hammering. Wiktor’s men. Could they really be waiting outside?
No. They didn’t know me. Not yet. Not where I worked. Not even my name. If I was going to disappear from under their noses, this was my chance – before Santiago paraded me further into his world, before Wiktor figured out how to use me against him.And I couldn’t just vanish. I had a life. A job. Double shifts at the hotel tomorrow. Derek, my manager, was already out to get me, just waiting for an excuse to fire me. One more absence, one more “excuse”, and I’d be out. Missing tomorrow was not an option.
I looked back at the bed. The red silk shimmered in the firelight, soft and suffocating. My body ached for rest. For comfort. To let myself sink into it. Be pulled deeper. Be consumed. Never come back up.
My chest tightened. No. I wasn’t ready to be locked away.I strode to the window, fingers fumbling with the latch. It gave with a soft click. The night air rushed in, sharp and cool, eager to take my place by the fire. I took a deep breath, filling my lungs with freedom.
I hesitated once – glancing back at the fire, at the jacket I had tossed on the bed, at the shadows cast from the fire, acting as his hands, trying to pull me back in. Then I swung my leg over the sill.The stone was slick with dew beneath my shoes. My breath caught as I eased myself down, gripping the window frame until my knuckles ached. I looked down. The drop wasn’t far – but it was enough to send pain jolting through my knees as I landed on the gravel below.
I froze. Listening. No shouts. No footsteps. Only the hush of the wind sweeping through the courtyard.
Heart in my throat, I wrapped myself for comfort, for warmth. Trying to steady myself, steady the tremors. Then I ran. Ran from the fortress. From this prison. From Santiago. I didn’t know if Wiktor’s men were out there in the night. Or if Santiago would come after me. But I knew one thing. I wasn’t ready to belong to anybody. Not yet.When I opened the bathroom door, both brothers looked up.Marek’s gaze swept over me.Not like before.Not with that reckless hunger that had made my skin burn.This time, something flickered in his eyes and vanished so quickly I almost missed it.Regret.Good.Let it rot in him.I stepped into the living room, clutching the hem of my uniform, my bare feet silent against the floor.“Well?” Marek asked.His voice had regained that rough, mocking edge, but it didn’t fit him right now. It sat crooked on him.I looked him dead in the eyes.“I hope Santiago gets his hands on you.”Patryk sucked in a breath.Marek went still.Then he laughed.Dry. Low. Almost empty.“There she is.”His smile spread slowly, but it didn’t reach his eyes. “I was starting to worry you’d gone soft on me, little lamb.”“Don’t cal
VALERIE’S POV:Get dressed.The words stayed in the air between us, colder than the apartment, colder than the fear crawling beneath my skin.For a moment, I didn’t move.I just stared at Marek, searching for the man who had given me water. The man who had draped a duvet over my legs. The man who had looked at me like maybe, just maybe, I was something he hadn’t meant to ruin.But he was gone.The wolf stood in his place.His eyes were empty now. Guarded. Icy.A soldier preparing to carry out an order he hated.Patryk lingered by the door, pale and restless, his hands curling into fists at his sides. He looked younger than before. Smaller somehow. Like fear had peeled years off him.“Marek,” he said quietly. “Maybe we still have time to think of something.”Marek didn’t look at him. “No.”“But if Santiago is already looking for her, maybe we could
Patryk’s words hung like a death sentence in the apartment.Wiktor knows.I told him you were going to bring her in.Marek’s jaw flexed.Patryk rushed on. “I said you wanted it to be a surprise. That you took her because you knew Santiago would lose his mind, and you wanted to hand her over properly. I told him you were going to deliver her...” He swallowed, voice thinning. “Like you said. Wrapped up in a bow.”The words slithered across the floor between us.Nice wrapped up in a bow.Marek had said it earlier with a grin, with smoke on his breath and cruelty in his eyes.But now there was no grin.Only the dreadful weight of a joke turning into a sentence.Marek looked at me.For one heartbeat, I saw him. Not the wolf. Not the brute. Not Wiktor’s hound.Just Marek.A man standing between two lives.Mine.His brother’s.And I saw t
VALERIE’S POV:For a moment, nobody moved.The door stood open behind Patryk, letting in the stale hallway air and something colder with it. Fear. It slipped into the apartment like smoke, curling around my throat.Marek stood between us, one hand still on the doorframe, his body half-turned away from me. His shirt was wrinkled from the couch, his hair slightly disordered from where my fingers had been tangled in it moments ago.Moments ago.Before the knock.Before Patryk’s pale face.Before those two words shattered whatever strange fragile thing had started to grow between us.‘They know.’Marek exhaled through his nose, almost amused.“Santiago knows?” he asked, voice lazy, casual. Too casual. “Good. Let him come.” He stepped aside, opening the door wider for his brother. “You look like you’re about to faint, brat. Want some cold pizza?”Patryk stare
Julián pulled the man to his feet by the back of his collar before Santiago changed his mind, then guided him forward with a politeness that looked almost civilized, if one ignored the threat in every step.The security room smelled of old coffee and dust. A guard sat inside, round-faced and nervous, already half-standing as they entered. Santiago did not waste words. Julián locked the door behind them.“Cameras,” Santiago said.The guard glanced at the manager. The manager, still wheezing, nodded once.With shaking hands, the guard pulled up the footage.Santiago turned toward the manager, making him flinch instantly.“Which floor?”The manager blinked at him, terrified. “What?”“You said you saw them in a corridor.” Santiago’s voice was silk wrapped around a knife. “Which floor?”The man swallowed, trembling now.“T-third,” he stuttered. &
SANTIAGO’S POV:Five o’clock came and went.Then five-oh-five.Then five-ten.Santiago stood across the street from Hotel Grand Ocean View, his intense stare fixed on the polished glass entrance. The black SUV waited at the curb behind him, Julián beside it with one hand folded over the other, patient as stone.Santiago was not patient.He had arrived before her shift ended. Earlier than necessary. Earlier than reasonable. He had told himself it was strategy. That he needed to see whether Marek was watching. Whether Wiktor’s men had dared circle the hotel.But that wasn’t the whole truth.His last shred of restraint was running thin, watching the front doors open and close for everyone except the one person he had come for.Valerie.His French rose.His runaway angel.He wanted to see her walk out alive.He wanted to see that stubborn little rose lift her chin, pretend she hadn’t been afraid, pretend she hadn’t run from him in the middle of the night and shattered his control into a t
The SUV slowed, turning down a long drive flanked by stone walls. At the end, an iron gate slid open without a sound, lantern light spilling across cobblestones.I pressed closer to the window, my chest tight. It wasn’t a house. It was a fortress.The vehicle rolled into a courtyard, and I noticed
My eyes widened. “What?” His hand tightened on mine, iron wrapped in silk. “If I drop you off tonight, Wiktor’s men will follow – and knowing Wiktor, he will try to hurt me any way he can.” The way he said the words sent a shiver down my spine. “So, until I decide how to deal with him, you’re not o
For a second, I could only stare at him. His hand covered mine against the table, warm and immovable, his eyes locked on me with that infuriating calm confidence, as if he had not just threatened to punish me in the middle of a restaurant. My pulse thudded in my throat. “Excuse me?” I said. Sant
At the end of the square, across the street, a black SUV idled at the curb, the kind of car with tinted windows that stood out in a quiet neighborhood. Santiago’s hand rested against my back with a gentle touch, though it still guided me forward toward the car without giving me much of a choice. My







