A woman-no, a girl barely out of her teens-balanced on a rickety ladder, back arched, arm extended high as she dragged crimson across crumbling brick. Paint dripped down her forearm like fresh blood, streaking the bare skin between cutoff tank top and low-slung jeans. Her dark hair clung to her neck in damp strands; sweat or mist from the river nearby, he couldn't tell. Every stroke of her brush was defiant, angry, alive. The mural taking shape was chaos made beautiful: jagged flames swallowing a glass skyscraper that looked suspiciously like the one he planned to build here.
Mason killed the engine. The silence rushed in, broken only by the soft hiss of spray paint and her occasional muttered curse when color bled wrong.
He should have driven on. Property acquisition didn't require personal surveillance at this hour. But something-some long-buried wire in his chest-snapped taut as he watched her hips shift for leverage, the curve of her ass tightening against denim, the way her breasts rose and fell with each forceful breath.
He stepped out without thinking.
Gravel crunched under Italian leather. She froze mid-stroke, brush hovering. Slowly-agonizingly slowly-she turned her head.
Their eyes locked.
Hers were storm-green, furious, rimmed with smudged black liner. His were blacker than the night behind him, pupils blown wide.
"You lost, suit?" Her voice was smoke and gravel, younger than her fire suggested. Twenty-one, maybe twenty-two. Young enough to make what he was already imagining criminal in most courts.
"This is condemned property." He moved closer, hands in pockets to hide how they flexed. "You're trespassing."
She laughed-short, sharp, unafraid. "Condemned doesn't mean owned. Not yet." She dipped the brush again, dragged scarlet in a deliberate slash across what would have been his building's logo if the mural hadn't eaten it. "Run along. Big men like you have boardrooms to conquer."
Mason's jaw ticked. No one spoke to him like that. Not in fifteen years. Not since he'd clawed out of this rotting town with nothing but rage and a scholarship he stole through blackmail.
He closed the distance in three strides.
She didn't flinch. Just watched him approach like a predator sizing up another predator.
Up close she smelled like turpentine, night air, and something sweeter-vanilla body oil, maybe. Paint speckled her collarbone, a constellation he suddenly wanted to trace with his tongue.
He reached past her-deliberately brushing the side of her breast with his forearm-and plucked the brush from her fingers.
Her breath hitched. Barely. But he heard it.
"Give that back." Low. Dangerous.
He twirled the brush once, then dragged the wet bristles slowly-torturously-down the center of her throat, following the line of her pulse. Crimson painted a thick, dripping line between her breasts, disappearing under the thin cotton.
Her nipples peaked instantly against the fabric.
"You ruined my wall," he murmured, voice velvet over steel. "Seems only fair I ruin something of yours."
She swallowed. The paint shifted with the movement. "Touch me again without permission and I'll ruin more than your pretty building."
He leaned in until their mouths were a heartbeat apart. Her lips parted on a shaky exhale. Heat rolled off her skin in waves.
"I don't need permission," he said softly. "I take what I want."
For one suspended second he thought she might kiss him-or bite him.
Instead she shoved hard against his chest.
He didn't budge.
She tried again. This time he caught her wrists, pinned them above her head against the still-wet mural. Paint smeared across her forearms, his cuffs, the front of his shirt.
Their bodies pressed flush. Her breasts crushed to his chest. His thigh slotted between hers-hard, insistent. She gasped when she felt exactly how much he wanted her.
"You feel that?" he growled against her ear. "That's what happens when you paint over my future."
Her hips jerked-whether to escape or grind closer, neither of them knew.
"Let go," she hissed, but her voice cracked on the last word.
He released one wrist only to slide his hand down her side, fingers digging into the soft dip above her hip. "Say my name first."
"I don't know your name."
"Mason Blackwell." He rolled his hips once-slow, deliberate-letting her feel every thick inch of him through expensive wool and her thin jeans. "Say it."
Her head fell back against the brick. Paint transferred to her hair. "Fuck you, Mason Blackwell."
He smiled against her throat-sharp, predatory. "Soon."
His mouth hovered over the paint streak on her neck. One hot breath away from tasting it.
Her phone buzzed violently in her back pocket.
She stiffened.
He felt the shift instantly-fear slicing through lust.
"Don't," she whispered. Not to him. To the phone.
He reached around, plucked it from her jeans before she could stop him.
Screen lit up.
Unknown Number:
Harper, we know where you sleep. Finish the job or the mural isn't the only thing that burns tonight.
Mason's grip on her tightened to bruising.
Her eyes-wide now, not defiant-locked on his.
"Who the hell is threatening you?" His voice dropped to something lethal.
She yanked free, snatched the phone. "None of your business."
He caught her chin, forced her gaze back. "Everything about you is my business now."
She searched his face-saw the monster waking behind the billionaire mask-and for the first time, real fear flickered.
Then her lips curved. Small. Dangerous.
"You think you can buy me? Own me?" She stepped closer until her paint-streaked breasts brushed his ruined shirt. "Try it. See what happens when a girl like me decides to fight dirty."
She turned, grabbed her backpack, and walked into the dark without looking back.
Mason stood frozen, cock throbbing painfully, paint drying on his skin like a brand.
His phone vibrated.
Text from his head of security:
Target acquired visual confirmation. Rival developer E. Langston was seen meeting with local activist group tonight. Subject: Harper Voss. They're planning to sabotage phase one demolition.
Mason stared at the retreating silhouette of the girl who'd just painted war on his empire-and on his sanity.
He typed one reply:
Double the surveillance. No one touches her but me.
Then he looked down at the crimson streak still wet across his palm.
He brought it to his mouth.
Tasted copper and rebellion.
And smiled.
Because the game had just begun-and Harper Voss had no idea how thoroughly he intended to win.