Her breath caught-and then the fingerprint scanner on the master bedroom door let out a quiet electronic whir.
Her heart skipped, but she recovered fast. She took her time drying her hair, casting a lazy, curious glance toward the bathroom door crack. At this hour, with fingerprint access, there was only one person it could be.
Julian Sinclair.
He walked in, shirt cuffs still half-undone, moving with an easy, unhurried rhythm. Six months without a word, and here he was, strolling back in like he'd never left.
Seraphina pushed the bathroom door open, leaned against the frame, and crossed her arms.
His gaze landed on her, those pale blue eyes carrying a faint glint of amusement in the dim light.
"Come out."
He said it like he was calling a cat.
Seraphina raised an eyebrow. "Julian, did you forget this is New York? People knock here."
He didn't answer. He walked toward her, closing the distance step by step. The air thickened with the scent of expensive cologne and the stale, metallic trace of a long-haul flight. Most people would have stepped back under that kind of pressure. Seraphina stayed put, arms crossed.
"Six months and your temper's gotten sharper," he said, eyes flicking to the phone in her hand. "Late-night video calls?"
"Video calls?" Seraphina let out a short laugh and turned the screen toward him. "Divorce papers. Addressed to you. You just saved me postage."
She said it like she was discussing dinner plans.
Julian's gaze paused on the word divorce. The corner of his mouth twitched-not quite a smile, not quite a frown. He reached out, took the phone from her fingers with an almost lazy ease, and closed his hand around it.
The crunch of metal and glass was sharp in the quiet room.
He looked up at her, voice carrying a slow, deliberate edge: "Divorce? Who gave you permission to even think that?"
Seraphina grabbed his open shirt collar and yanked him half a step closer. "Julian Sinclair. Six months. Not one message. And the first thing you do when you come back is smash my phone?"
Julian glanced down at her hand on his collar, then back up at her face. One eyebrow lifted, almost imperceptibly.
A low note of amusement threaded through his voice. "I seem to recall you telling me, before I left, that 'not coming back would be better.'"
"That was sarcasm." Seraphina rolled her eyes. "Now I'm being literal. Sign the papers, walk out, and I swear I won't even post about it."
He caught her wrist, thumb pressing lightly against her pulse-not hard enough to hurt, just enough to hold her there.
"Divorce papers?" He leaned in, breath warm against her ear, voice dropping to a slow, dangerous murmur. "The Sinclairs don't do divorce."
His mouth came down on hers a second later. The kiss carried something like a challenge-both of them testing where the other would draw the line. She bit; he bit back. She pushed; he pressed her harder against the marble counter. A button popped off his shirt somewhere in the tussle. Her towel came loose. The cool stone bit into her back, but she didn't notice much beyond the weight of his palm against her hip, the way his breathing hitched when her nails dragged across his shoulder blade.
The rest of that night blurred into fragments: his collar hanging open, the brief pause in his breath when her fingers traced the edge of his shoulder, and, sometime after midnight, her sitting up against the headboard while he stood with his back to her, fastening his cuffs.
"You've picked up quite a bit of new vocabulary tonight," he said, tone flat but not quite cold.
"You've got decent timing yourself." She rubbed her temples and pulled the sheet higher. "Six months off, and you haven't lost a step."
He finished the last button, turned his head just enough to glance at her over his shoulder. His eyes gave nothing away-or maybe they gave away everything, and she just wasn't in the mood to read them.
At the door, he paused. "Keep that divorce paper.It can be used to make a fire."
The door clicked shut behind him.
Seraphina sat in the middle of the wrecked bed, surrounded by scattered clothes and torn paper, and pushed the hair out of her face. She laughed-a short, quiet thing, more to herself than anything.