I sat at that mahogany table, clutching a silver pen so hard my knuckles ached. Across from me, he didn't spare me a glance-not even once since I'd set foot in his penthouse. He was just a sharp silhouette, the city burning behind him. All that glitter-high-rises, headlights, the illusion of warmth-looked like loose jewels. But inside, the light felt dead and flat.
Julian Vane. That name was already legend in the places where quiet voices traded stories after midnight. "He's a vulture in a suit," they'd said. "He buys people, then sells their secrets." I'd only met his money, the kind you feel in your bones-the kind that pulled my mother out of debt and danger. Now I was the payment. I was just another number he'd chosen to balance in his cold, immaculate world.
He finally turned toward me-smooth, silent, almost animal. No handshake. No smile. Just a key card, black with silver embossing-some sort of crest: a serpent coiled around a dagger. He slid it across the table. It stopped, perfect, right in front of my stiff fingers.
"The terms aren't negotiable." That voice-calm, rich, no warmth, no real emotion at all. I'd never met anyone so sure they'd never be denied. "You're an occupant, not a guest. My staff will give you a schedule. You don't go into the East Wing. You don't talk about us, not to anyone."
The key card pressed cold and heavy into my hand. "And my mother?"
At last, he looked at me. His eyes were storm-grey, focused, nothing soft or kind-nothing like a husband. It felt like he was sizing up machinery, not a person. His stare scraped away resistance and fear and hope, until only survival was left.
"She's being moved to Zurich now. World-class care-as long as you remain useful." He said it without blink or hesitation. His gaze dropped to my lips, then back to my eyes.
I repeated the word, "Useful." It tasted like copper. Nausea surged; I forced it down. My father once told me fear was a luxury. Poverty's a prison, but this-this is a fancy cage, gold-plated, locked from the outside.
"Don't confuse this for a partnership, Elara." He stepped out of the shadows, taller than I expected. He filled the room with his presence. "You have something I want. I can take away what you love. I don't care if you cooperate. I care if you can keep your mouth shut."
He crossed to the doorway so quietly I barely noticed. My legs felt carved from stone as I stood. Questions clawed at me-why me, why now, why any of this? What about those missing years no one ever explained? But the room felt airless.
He moved, coat spotless, everything about him precise. I remembered the files in Dad's study before he died-the ones about the Vanes, edges charred, almost erased. My father hid too many secrets, but none bigger than this: why Julian Vane was first on his emergency contact list.
"So, is that it?" I said, trying to sound strong. "Do I get a tour of my prison?"
He paused with one hand on the gold handle. Didn't bother turning. Just a black shape in the doorway, swallowing the hallway's weak light.
"There's nothing here you need to see." His voice cut colder. "You'll be too busy surviving the month to go exploring. Or dreaming."
A shiver broke across my back. I looked from the key card down to the living room, all cold marble and staring art. That's when it hit me: this wasn't just a sacrifice to save my mother. This was a well-laid trap, and I'd waltzed right in. Some new game had started, and I didn't even know the rules.
"I need to go back to my apartment," I tried. "I have things to pack."
He turned just enough for me to catch the hard slash of his jaw. "You have nothing. Everything you owned before this? Gone. You have no past now, Elara. Just this. You only exist when you cross that threshold."
He swung the door open. It echoed down the hall-sharp, violent. Outside, the corridor stretched away like a throat, dim and hungry. The key card was cold as ice in my grip.
I spotted a portrait outside-a stern ancestor, eyes following me. I caught a wild urge to bolt, run back to my messy, broke, normal life. Anything would be easier than this. But my mother was waiting.
Julian loomed, calm but ready, in the hallway. He didn't see a person when he looked at me-just a liability he intended to control.
"Do you understand?" His voice roughened to a whisper. "Your old life is a ghost. It's gone."
I took a slow step toward him. My heart banged against my chest, frantic and trapped. I met his eyes-cold, shifting, like storm clouds-and held my ground. "You have all the power," I told him, voice steady. "But everyone has a weakness. Even you."
His face didn't change. But something flickered behind his eyes. Not anger, not fear-something else. He leaned in, the scent of cedar and cold steel ghosting between us.
"Find it then," he murmured, mocking. "If you think you can."
He turned, vanishing down that beast of a hallway, and I just stood there, staring at the room, the damp signature sealing my fate. I followed him into the shadow of the East Wing-the place he'd forbidden-already knowing I'd lost the first move.
"You move in tonight," he called back.
I didn't look back again.