But the ultimate betrayal happened the night before I left.
On the family yacht, Chelsea pushed me overboard. I screamed for help in the freezing dark water.
I watched Desmond dive in.
I reached out for him, but he swam right past me.
He chose to save his wealthy fiancée, the "asset," and left me to drown.
In that moment, the girl who loved him died.
I realized his brother Antone, who I thought was my friend, was just a stalker using me to get close to Chelsea. I was nothing but collateral damage to the people I had worshipped.
I didn't die that night. I boarded the plane to Seattle with a frozen heart.
They thought they were selling me to a monster. They didn't realize they were handing me a King.
The next time the Morgans saw me, I wasn't their victim.
I was the woman coming to burn their empire to the ground.
Chapter 1
Dallas Cole POV:
I stood in the center of the rose garden, the silk of the white dress Desmond Morgan had bought me clinging to my skin in the humid air.
I was convinced that tonight, the Underboss of the East Coast would finally defy his father and put a ring on my finger.
Instead, I watched him stride toward me, his fingers interlaced with another woman's.
My heart didn't just break.
It exploded.
It was a silent detonation, the kind that happens deep underwater where the pressure crushes your lungs before you even realize you're drowning.
Desmond looked lethal in his black suit. He was the heir to the Morgan crime family empire, a man who had slaughtered three rivals before his twenty-fifth birthday.
A man whose knuckles I had kissed clean of blood more times than I could count.
I loved him.
God, I was stupid.
The woman beside him was Chelsea Taylor. I knew her face from the society pages. She was the daughter of the Chicago Tech-Syndicate boss.
She was blonde, pristine, and looked expensive.
She was an asset.
I was a ward. A charity case the Morgans had collected after my parents' lab exploded. I was the pet canary they kept in a gilded cage to ensure no one asked questions about why their chemists kept dying.
Desmond stopped three feet away from me. His eyes, usually warm when we were alone in the dark, were now cold obsidian.
"Dallas," he said. His voice was devoid of emotion. "This is Chelsea. My fiancée."
The word hung in the humid night air like a guillotine blade.
Fiancée.
Chelsea smiled. It didn't reach her eyes. She looked me up and down, her gaze lingering on the white silk that was far too bridal for a casual Tuesday night.
"Oh, Desmond," she purred, her voice dripping with practiced condescension. "Is this the little ward you told me about? The orphan?"
"Yes," Desmond said.
He didn't look at me. He looked through me.
"She's pretty," Chelsea said, sounding bored. "Like a little sister. We'll have to find her a nice associate to marry. Someone low-level."
My stomach lurched. I felt bile rise in my throat.
"Go inside, Chelsea," Desmond commanded. "I need a moment to explain the... transition to Dallas."
Chelsea patted his chest, staking her claim, and walked toward the mansion. Her heels clicked on the stone path like a countdown.
The moment she disappeared, I stepped forward. My hands were shaking.
"Desmond," I whispered. "You promised. Last night. In my bed. You said-"
He closed the distance between us in a blur of motion. His hand wrapped around the back of my neck.
It wasn't a caress. It was a vice.
"Stop," he hissed.
"You're marrying her?" My voice cracked.
"It's a merger, Dallas. Her father controls the shipping routes in Chicago. It's business. It's for the Family."
"And what am I?" I asked, tears stinging my eyes. "What was last night?"
He leaned down. His breath brushed my ear, carrying the scent of whiskey and expensive tobacco that used to comfort me. Now, it made me want to retch.
"You are mine," he whispered darkly. "This changes nothing between us. Chelsea is for the public. She is for the treaty. You... you stay where you belong. In my bed. In the shadows."
He wanted a wife for power and a mistress for pleasure.
He wanted to reduce me to a Goomar. A side piece.
He tightened his grip on my neck, his thumb pressing warningly into my pulse. "Do not make a scene, Dallas. You know what happens to things that become inconvenient to this family."
He released me abruptly and walked away.
I stood alone among the thorns, realizing that the man I had worshipped as my savior was actually my jailer.