Chapter 1
Her back hit the cold wall before she could even breathe. Damian’s hand slid to her jaw, tilting her face up to his. His voice was a low, trembling threat.
“Do you feel what you’re doing to me, Aria?”
Her heartbeat stuttered. “You’re my sister’s husband…”
“Exactly,” he whispered. “That’s why I shouldn’t want you.”
He leaned closer, his breath brushing her lips.
“But wanting you is all I’ve done… every damn day.”
***
Aria Hale has spent her life unseen, ignored by her father, used by her sister, and taught that her feelings don’t matter. But everything changes the day she moves into her sister’s penthouse…
the same home ruled by Damian Cross.
Thirty-six. Billionaire. Cold.
Married to her sister.
And quietly, obsessively fixated on Aria.
He watches her too long.
Stands too close.
Speaks too softly for a man with no heart.
He looks at her like she’s the only warmth in his frozen world.
Aria tries to avoid him.
Tries to reject him.
Tries to pretend she doesn’t feel the air tighten when he enters a room.
But Damian does not let go.
He corners.
He interferes.
He destroys anything that dares approach her.
Because wrong or not, forbidden or not—
he has already decided she belongs to him.
And when the truth behind his obsession finally comes to light…
Aria will learn that some desires, once awakened, are impossible to escape.
The silence in the Hale estate wasn’t peaceful. It was heavy, like water filling a room, rising slowly until it pressed against your chest and made it hard to breathe.
Aria Hale woke up to that silence, just as she did every morning.
She lay still for a moment, her eyes tracing the familiar crack in the ceiling of her bedroom. The room was small, tucked away in the north wing of the house, far from the master suite and far from Cassandra’s sprawling quarters. It was perpetually cold here, the kind of stale, artificial chill that settled into the floorboards—the result of massive stone walls and a house that never seemed to let the summer sun in. It seeped through the thin rug she had bought with her own pocket money three years ago.
The light filtering through the sheer curtains was gray and weak, signaling another overcast morning.
Aria pushed the duvet back. The cool morning air brushed against her bare skin, raising goosebumps along her arms. She didn't shiver. She had learned a long time ago that reacting to the cold didn't make it warmer; it just made you more aware of your own discomfort.
She moved through her morning routine with the efficiency of someone who didn't want to be noticed. She showered quickly, the water lukewarm because the hot water tank always prioritized the main bathrooms first. She dressed in a simple beige long-sleeved top and faded jeans, clothes that allowed her to blend into the background, to become part of the furniture.
That was her role, after all. The invisible daughter. The afterthought.
Downstairs, the house was vast and impeccably decorated. Marble floors that echoed underfoot, chandeliers that cost more than most people’s homes, and portraits of ancestors who looked down with the same disdain her father wore.
Aria walked softly, her socks sliding over the polished stone. She reached the kitchen before the staff had fully set up for breakfast. She liked this time of day best, before the masks had to be put on, before the performance of being a "happy family" began.
She started the coffee machine, the hum of the grinder loud in the quiet kitchen. She set out a cup for her father, black, no sugar, and a cup for Cassandra, herbal tea with a slice of lemon. She didn't make one for herself. She would drink water.
The sound of heavy footsteps approached from the hallway.
Aria’s stomach tightened instinctively. It wasn't fear, exactly; Desmond Hale wasn’t a violent man. He didn't yell. He didn't throw things. He simply… looked through her. To him, she was a clerical error in the ledger of his life. A debit where there should have been an asset.
Desmond walked into the kitchen, already dressed in a sharp charcoal suit. He was checking emails on his phone, his brow furrowed in concentration.
"Good morning, Father," Aria said softly.
He didn't look up. He walked past her to the counter, picked up the coffee she had just poured, and took a sip.
"The car needs to be ready by eight," he said to the room, or perhaps to the coffee cup. He certainly wasn't speaking to her eyes. "I have a merger meeting at Cross Industries."
Aria stood by the island, her hands clasped behind her back. "I’ll tell the driver," she whispered.
He didn't acknowledge her. He turned and walked out of the kitchen toward his study, the click of his shoes fading away.
Aria let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding. Her shoulders slumped slightly. It was foolish to expect anything else. Twenty-three years of this should have hardened her, but the small, childish part of her heart still bruises every time.
She began to arrange the fruit bowl, her fingers trembling slightly as she adjusted the grapes. Don’t be stupid, she told herself. He’s busy. He’s important. You’re just… here.
Ten minutes later, the atmosphere shifted.
If Desmond was a cold draft, Cassandra was a hurricane.
Aria heard her sister before she saw her. The rapid clicking of high heels, the rustle of expensive fabric, and the sound of her voice talking loudly into a phone.
Cassandra swept into the kitchen, a vision of golden perfection. Her blonde hair was blow-dried into sleek waves, her makeup was flawless even at this hour, and she was wearing a silk robe that shimmered under the kitchen lights. She was beautiful. Everyone said so. She was the sun around which the Hale family orbited.
"I don't care what the florist said, I want the orchids," Cassandra snapped into her phone, her eyes scanning the counter. She spotted the tea Aria had made. "No, listen to me. If they don't have white orchids, cancel the contract. I’m not paying for second best."
She hung up aggressively and tossed the phone onto the marble island. She picked up the tea, took a sip, and wrinkled her nose.
"It's cold," she said, looking at Aria for the first time.
"I made it ten minutes ago," Aria said, her voice steady but quiet. "You were upstairs."
Cassandra rolled her eyes, a gesture that was both elegant and dismissive. "Well, make another one. And put honey in it this time. My throat feels scratchy."
She didn't ask. She commanded.
Aria moved to the kettle immediately. It was easier to obey than to argue. Argument required energy, and Aria felt drained before the day had even begun.
"Did you pick up my dress from the tailor?" Cassandra asked, leaning her hip against the counter and scrolling through her phone again.
"Yes," Aria said, turning on the tap. "It's hanging in your dressing room."
"Good. Check the hem. I think the seamstress is going blind; the last time, it was crooked." Cassandra sighed, a long, dramatic sound. "God, I am so stressed. You have no idea what this is like, Aria."
Aria watched the water boil. "What is it like?"
"The pressure," Cassandra said, gesturing vaguely at her own perfect body. "Father is pushing for this dinner with the Cross family to be perfect. He says it’s the most important merger of the decade. And obviously, I’m the centerpiece."
Aria’s hand paused on the handle of the kettle. The Cross family.
She knew the name, of course. Everyone in the city knew the name. Cross Industries owned half the skyline. They were industrial royalty, old money mixed with terrifying new power.
"Is... is he coming?" Aria asked, her voice barely above a whisper.
"Who?" Cassandra glanced up, annoyed.
"Damian Cross."
The name felt heavy on her tongue. Sharp. Dangerous.
Cassandra laughed, a tinkling, humorless sound. "Of course he's coming. He’s the CEO. He’s the one Father is trying to impress." She checked her reflection in the dark window of the oven. "Though I hear he’s a nightmare. Cold as ice. Alfred Cross raised him to be a machine, not a man."
She turned to look at Aria, her blue eyes narrowing with critical assessment. "You’re not wearing that to dinner tonight, are you?"
Aria looked down at her beige top. "I… I didn't think I was invited."
"You’re not," Cassandra said simply. "But you’ll be in the house. Try not to look like a homeless person if you walk past the dining room. It reflects badly on me."
The sting was sharp, but Aria swallowed it down. She poured the hot water over the tea bag, watching the dark color bleed out.
"I’ll stay in my room," Aria promised.
"Good idea." Cassandra took the fresh cup from her hand without a thank you. "Oh, and Aria? Go to the library and organize Father’s files for the meeting. He left a mess last night and he’ll scream if he can’t find the projections."
"Okay."
Cassandra turned to leave, her silk robe fluttering behind her like a royal cape. At the doorway, she paused.
"Don't sulk, Aria. It gives you wrinkles."
Then she was gone.
Aria stood alone in the kitchen. The silence rushed back in, filling the space Cassandra had vacated. She gripped the edge of the cold marble counter, her knuckles turning white. She wasn't sulking. She wasn't angry. She was just... tired.
She cleaned the mugs. She wiped the counter. She pushed the chairs in.
Then, as instructed, she went to the library.
The library was the darkest room in the house, lined with mahogany shelves and heavy velvet drapes that blocked out the morning sun. It smelled of old paper and expensive scotch. This was Desmond’s sanctuary, and usually, Aria wasn't allowed inside unless she was cleaning or retrieving something.
She moved to the massive oak desk. Papers were scattered across the surface, blueprints, financial reports, contracts. Her father was chaotic in his genius, leaving destruction in his wake for others to tidy.
Aria began to stack the papers, aligning the edges with precision. She liked the order of it. She liked making things neat. It gave her a sense of control she didn't have anywhere else in her life.
Under a stack of quarterly reports, her hand brushed against a glossy business magazine.
It was a heavy publication, the kind printed on thick, expensive paper. It must have arrived in the morning mail.
Aria went to move it to the side, but her hand froze.
The cover was dark, almost entirely black, except for the man standing in the center of it.
Damian Cross.
She had heard the rumors. She had heard the whispers at the few galas she had been forced to attend in the background. They called him the Shark. The Prince of Silence. A man who could dismantle a company with a single signature and ruin a life without blinking.
She stared at the photo.
He was wearing a black suit, perfectly tailored, absorbing the light around him. His hair was dark, styled back from a face that was too harsh to be traditionally handsome, but too striking to look away from. His jaw was a sharp line of tension. His mouth was set in a straight, uncompromising line.
But it was his eyes that made Aria’s breath hitch in her throat.
Even in a photograph, even through the glossy sheen of the paper, they were arresting. Dark, intelligent, and utterly devoid of warmth. He wasn't looking at the camera; he was looking through it. It was a gaze that promised nothing and demanded everything.
The Future of Power, the headline read in bold white letters.
Aria ran her thumb near the edge of the page, careful not to touch his face. She felt a strange shiver crawl up her spine, a prickle of warning that had nothing to do with the temperature of the room.
He looked like a predator. He looked like a storm waiting to break.
"Damian Cross," she whispered to the empty room.
The name sounded like a secret.
She quickly closed the magazine and shoved it to the corner of the desk, burying it under a pile of invoices. Her heart was beating a little faster than usual, a nervous rhythm she couldn't explain.
She didn't know him. She would probably never meet him. He was entering her father’s world, her sister’s world, the world of gold and power and noise.
Aria belonged to the silence.
She finished organizing the desk, her hands moving mechanically, but her mind kept drifting back to those dark, empty eyes on the cover.
Tonight, that man would be in this house.
She looked toward the heavy wooden doors of the library, feeling a sudden, inexplicable urge to run, to hide, to lock the door of her tiny room and never come out.
Because for the first time in her invisible life, Aria Hale felt like something was watching her.
Chapter 2
By seven o’clock, the Hale estate had transformed from a home into a stage.
The air in the foyer smelled of fresh white orchids and expensive furniture polish. The lighting had been dimmed to a warm, golden glow, designed to make diamonds sparkle and skin look flawless. Every cushion was plumped, every surface gleamed, and the silence that usually filled the house had been replaced by the frantic, hushed energy of the staff moving in the background.
Aria stood at the top of the service staircase, pressing herself into the shadows of the alcove.
She was wearing a simple black dress, one that she usually wore for funerals or formal events where she was required to stand in the back and not speak. It was modest, high-necked, and blended perfectly with the darkness of the hallway.
Below her, the main foyer was a theater of anticipation.
"Is the wine breathing?" Desmond’s voice drifted up the stairs, sharp and agitated. "Alfred Cross drinks only the '82 vintage. If it’s not ready, heads will roll."
"It’s ready, sir," the butler replied, his voice calm.
"And Cassandra?"
"Miss Cassandra is in the drawing room, sir."
Aria shifted her weight, her hand gripping the cold wooden banister. She wasn't supposed to be here. She was supposed to be in her room, invisible, eating a tray of dinner that the cook would bring up later. But ten minutes ago, Cassandra had texted her: My clutch. The silver one. I left it in the library. Bring it down. Now.
So Aria was on a mission, trying to navigate the house without being seen, like a ghost haunting her own family.
She crept down the back stairs, the service entrance that led into the kitchen corridor. The kitchen was a war zone of steam and shouting chefs, so she kept her head down and slipped into the side hallway that connected to the library.
Her heart was doing a nervous flutter in her chest. The guests, the Cross family, were due to arrive at any second. If she bumped into them, her father would be furious. He didn't want his "mistake" of a daughter cluttering up his perfect business merger.
She reached the library, the room dark and smelling of leather. She found the silver clutch on the sofa where Cassandra had carelessly tossed it. Aria grabbed it, her fingers brushing the cold metal sequins.
Get in. Get out.
She turned to leave, stepping back into the corridor.
The front doorbell rang.
It wasn't a normal ring. It was a deep, resonating chime that seemed to vibrate through the floorboards.
Aria froze. She was trapped in the hallway between the library and the foyer. If she moved forward, she would be seen. If she went back, she would be stuck in the library for hours until the dinner moved to the dining room.
She pressed her back against the wall, hiding behind a large potted fern, her breath catching in her throat.
Just wait, she told herself. Wait for them to move into the drawing room, then run.
She heard the heavy oak front doors open. The sound of the night air rushing in, followed by the firm click of shoes on marble.
"Alfred," Desmond’s voice boomed, overly jovial, dripping with the desperation to impress.
"Welcome. Thank you for coming."
"Desmond." The replying voice was dry, aged, and sounded like sandpaper rubbing against stone. That must be Alfred Cross.
Aria peeked through the leaves of the fern. She knew she shouldn't look. She knew it was dangerous. But curiosity was a pull she couldn't resist.
She saw her father shaking hands with an older man who looked as if he had been carved out of gray granite. Alfred Cross wore a suit that cost more than Aria’s entire life education. He didn't smile. He merely nodded.
And then, a shadow moved behind him.
Aria’s breath stopped.
Damian Cross walked through the door.
The magazine photo hadn't done him justice. It hadn't captured the sheer physical weight of his presence. He was tall, comfortably over six feet, with broad shoulders that filled the tailored black coat he wore. He moved with a predatory grace, slow, deliberate, like a large cat entering a new territory, checking for threats, checking for prey.
He stepped into the light of the foyer, and for a second, Aria felt the temperature in the hallway drop.
His face was striking, brutal in its symmetry. High cheekbones, a sharp, arrogant jawline, and hair as black as ink, swept back from his forehead. He wasn't handsome in the way movie stars were handsome; he was handsome in the way a weapon was beautiful. Dangerous. Cold. Perfect.
"Damian," Desmond said, extending a hand. "Good to see you."
Damian didn't smile. He didn't offer a polite greeting. He simply took Desmond’s hand, gave it a single, firm shake, and released it.
"Desmond," Damian said.
His voice was a low baritone, dark and smooth like velvet dragged over gravel. It sent a strange vibration through the floor, a sound that seemed to bypass Aria’s ears and settle straight into her stomach.
"Come in, come in," Desmond ushered them. "Cassandra is waiting in the drawing room. Drinks are poured."
The men began to move. Aria let out a silent exhale, her shoulders relaxing. They were walking away from her. She was safe.
She waited until they disappeared into the drawing room on the left. The heavy doors closed with a soft click.
Silence returned to the hallway.
Aria peeled herself away from the wall, clutching Cassandra’s silver bag to her chest. She needed to get this to the drawing room, hand it to a maid to deliver, and then disappear upstairs.
She walked quickly, her footsteps silent on the runner rug.
But as she passed the open archway of the dining room, she hesitated.
The table was set for four. Crystal glasses, silver cutlery, white orchids. It was perfect.
And then, she felt it.
A prickle on the back of her neck. A sudden, irrational feeling that she was exposed.
She turned her head.
The drawing room doors she thought were closed... weren't. One was cracked open just an inch.
And through that crack, an eye was watching her.
Dark. heavy. Unblinking.
Aria froze mid-step. Her heart slammed against her ribs like a trapped bird.
It was him.
Damian Cross was standing just inside the drawing room, his back to the party, looking through the gap in the doors. He wasn't listening to her father. He wasn't looking at Cassandra.
He was looking at her.
She couldn't move. The distance between them was twenty feet, but his gaze felt physical, like a hand gripping her throat. He didn't look away when she caught him. Most people would have politely averted their eyes, embarrassed to be caught staring.
Damian didn't.
He widened the gap in the door slightly with one hand, pushing the wood back, revealing half of his face. His expression was completely unreadable, no surprise, no interest, no warmth. Just cold, clinical observation. He looked at her the way a scientist looks at a specimen under a microscope.
He looked at her simple black dress. He looked at her messy hair, tied back in a rush. He looked at the silver clutch she was gripping so hard her knuckles were white.
Aria felt a flush of heat rise up her neck, shame, fear, confusion. She felt small. She felt dirty compared to the perfection of the house.
She broke the contact. She couldn't handle the weight of it.
She spun around, ducking her head, and hurried toward the kitchen, her legs feeling unsteady. She pushed through the swinging door, the noise of the chefs hitting her like a wall, drowning out the silence of the hallway.
She leaned against the stainless steel counter, gasping for air, her hand pressing against her racing heart.
"Miss Aria?" the head cook, Mrs. Higgins, asked, pausing over a pot of soup. "Are you alright? You look like you’ve seen a ghost."
Aria swallowed hard, her throat dry. "I... I’m fine. Just... here." She held out the bag, her hand trembling. "Can you please give this to one of the servers to take to Cassandra? She needs it."
"Of course, dear." Mrs. Higgins took the bag, looking at her with pity. "You go upstairs now. I’ll send a plate up for you."
"Thank you," Aria whispered.
She turned and fled. She took the back stairs two at a time, needing to put walls and floors between herself and the ground floor.
She reached her room and shut the door, leaning her back against it, breathing hard in the darkness.
She was safe. He was down there, in the world of business and lies, and she was up here, where she belonged.
But as she closed her eyes, she could still feel it.
That dark, heavy gaze.
It hadn't felt like a glance. It hadn't felt like an accident.
It felt like he had memorized her.
*****
Downstairs, the dinner began.
The conversation was dominated by Desmond and Alfred, talking about market shares, Asian expansion, and stock valuations. Cassandra was charming, laughing at the right moments, touching Damian’s arm lightly, playing the part of the perfect trophy wife.
Damian sat at the head of the table, his posture relaxed but dominant. He twirled the stem of his wine glass between his long fingers, watching the red liquid swirl.
He answered when spoken to. He nodded at the right times. He was polite, efficient, and completely detached.
"My daughter has quite the eye for interior design," Desmond was boasting, gesturing to Cassandra. "She practically redecorated the west wing herself."
"It’s lovely," Damian said, his voice flat.
"We believe in family values," Alfred added, cutting his steak with surgical precision. "A strong home makes a strong empire."
"Agreed," Desmond said. "Cassandra is the heart of this house. We are very proud of her."
Damian took a slow sip of wine. His eyes drifted away from the conversation, moving toward the open doorway of the dining room, toward the dark hallway beyond.
The shadows were empty now.
"Desmond," Damian said suddenly, cutting through the conversation.
The table went quiet. Desmond looked eager. "Yes?"
Damian set his glass down. The sound of crystal hitting the tablecloth was soft, but it sounded like a gavel.
"I saw a girl in the hallway earlier."
The air in the room grew stiff.
Cassandra’s smile faltered for a fraction of a second. Desmond stiffened, his fork pausing halfway to his mouth.
"A girl?" Desmond laughed nervously. "Oh, you must mean one of the maids. I apologize if she was in the way. I’ll speak to the staff manager."
"She wasn't wearing a uniform," Damian said. He wasn't asking. He was stating a fact.
Desmond cleared his throat, adjusting his tie. He looked annoyed, embarrassed. "Ah. Yes. That would be... Aria."
"Aria," Damian repeated.
He said the name slowly, testing the weight of it on his tongue. It sounded different when he said it, darker, heavier.
"My youngest," Desmond said dismissively, waving a hand as if to shoo the topic away. "She’s... quiet. Shy. She prefers to stay out of the way. She’s not really involved in the family affairs."
"I see," Damian said.
"She’s a bit odd," Cassandra added, letting out a small, musical laugh. "Always hiding in corners. We try to get her to socialize, but she’s just so... awkward. You know how some people are."
"Awkward," Damian said, his eyes still fixed on the empty hallway.
"Yes," Cassandra smiled, leaning closer to him. "But let’s not talk about her. Father was just telling us about the merger timeline."
Damian turned his gaze back to Cassandra. His eyes were blank, void of any emotion, shielding his thoughts completely.
"Of course," he said smoothly. "The timeline."
He picked up his knife and fork, resuming his meal.
But for the rest of the dinner, while Desmond boasted and Cassandra flirted, Damian Cross did not say another word. He simply ate, drank, and stared into the middle distance, his mind working behind the wall of his silence.
He was thinking about the girl in the black dress. He was thinking about the fear in her eyes. And he was thinking about the way she had looked at him, like she was the only person in this entire house who saw the monster sitting at the table.
And Damian liked being seen.
Chapter 3
The morning after the dinner, the Hale estate felt different.
Usually, the house was a tomb of silence, but today it vibrated with a manic, electric energy. It was the frequency of ambition. The merger had gone well. The handshake had happened. And, as Aria learned before she had even brushed her teeth, the wedding date had been set.
"Six months," Cassandra announced.
She was sitting at the vanity in her bedroom, staring at her own reflection with the intensity of an artist admiring a masterpiece. Aria stood by the door, holding a basket of fresh linens she had been collecting from the hallway.
"Father says we can't wait longer," Cassandra continued, applying a layer of peach gloss to her lips. "The fiscal year ends in December. We need the stocks to merge before then. So, I have six months to plan the wedding of the century."
She turned to look at Aria, her eyes bright with triumph. "Can you imagine it? Mrs. Cassandra Cross. It sounds expensive, doesn’t it?"
Aria gripped the wicker handle of the basket tighter. "It sounds… powerful."
"Exactly." Cassandra stood up, smoothing the silk of her dressing gown. "He’s richer than God, Aria. I’m going to have access to accounts that have more zeros than you can count. The penthouse in the city, the estate in the Hamptons, the private jet fleet. It’s all mine."
Aria hesitated. "And… Damian?"
Cassandra frowned, as if she had forgotten he was part of the equation. "What about him?"
"Do you… do you like him?"
Cassandra laughed. It was a sharp, incredulous sound. "Oh, grow up, Aria. This isn't a fairy tale. I don't need to 'like' him. I need to handle him. He’s cold, he’s boring, and he works twenty hours a day. Which is perfect. I’ll have the credit card, and he’ll have his office. We’ll barely have to speak."
She walked past Aria, trailing the scent of expensive rose perfume. "Now, stop standing there like a statue. Father is in the study with the lawyers. He needs the files you organized yesterday. Bring them down. Immediately."
Aria’s stomach gave a small, uncomfortable lurch. "Is… is Mr. Cross still here?"
"No, he left last night," Cassandra said, checking her phone. "But his lawyers are here. Go. Don't make Father wait."
Relief washed over Aria. He was gone. The dark shadow that had stood in the dining room doorway was gone.
"Okay," Aria whispered.
She hurried to her room, put down the laundry basket, and smoothed her hair. She checked her reflection in the small, cracked mirror on her wall. She looked tired. There were faint shadows under her eyes from a night spent staring at the ceiling, replaying the way Damian Cross had looked at her through the crack in the door.
It was nothing, she told herself for the hundredth time. He was just looking at a noise. A distraction. You are nothing to him.
She took a deep breath, picked up the file folder from her desk, and headed downstairs.
The house was busy. Staff members were moving furniture, polishing silver, preparing for the influx of wedding planners that Cassandra had already summoned. Aria moved through them like a ghost, dodging elbows and apologizing to empty air.
She reached the heavy oak doors of the study. She could hear voices inside, her father’s booming baritone and the sharp, clipped tones of legal counsel.
She knocked softly.
"Come in!" Desmond barked.
Aria pushed the door open and stepped inside, keeping her eyes on the floor.
"The files, Father," she said softly, walking toward the desk.
"Finally," Desmond grunted. He was standing by the window, a cigar in one hand. "Put them on the desk. And pour water for everyone. The staff is useless today."
Aria nodded. She placed the blue folder on the center of the massive mahogany desk. Then, keeping her head down, she moved to the side table where the crystal water pitcher sat.
She poured a glass for her father. She poured a glass for the lawyer sitting in the leather armchair. She poured a glass for the man sitting in the high-backed chair in the corner, obscured by the shadows of the bookshelves.
She stepped forward to place the glass on the coaster near his hand.
"Here is your, "
She froze.
The hand resting on the armrest wasn't wearing a lawyer’s watch. It was wearing a platinum Rolex, the face dark, the band heavy. The hand itself was large, tanned, and strong, with long fingers that tapped rhythmically against the leather.
Aria’s gaze traveled up the sleeve of the immaculate black suit jacket, past the broad shoulders, to the face.
Damian Cross.
He hadn't left.
He was sitting deep in the chair, his legs crossed at the ankle, looking completely at ease in her father’s territory. He wasn't looking at the papers. He wasn't looking at Desmond.
He was looking up at her.
The glass in Aria’s hand wobbled. Water sloshed over the rim, splashing onto the expensive Persian rug.
"I, I’m so sorry," she gasped, her face burning instantly.
She scrambled to pull a tissue from her pocket, dropping to her knees to dab at the tiny wet spot on the rug. "I didn't know… I thought you were…"
"Clumsy," Desmond snapped from the window. "God, Aria. Leave it. Get up."
Aria flinched at her father’s tone. She stopped wiping the rug, her fingers trembling. She felt humiliated. Stupid. Invisible girl makes a mess. That was the headline of her life.
She started to stand up, keeping her eyes averted, preparing to apologize again and run.
But a hand entered her vision.
Damian had leaned forward. He didn't reach for the water. He reached out and, with slow, deliberate precision, took the wet tissue from her shaking fingers.
His skin brushed hers.
It was a fraction of a second. A mistake of physics. But the contact sent a shock through her body that was so sharp, so electric, it almost hurt. His fingers were warm, rougher than she expected, and firm.
"It’s just water," Damian said.
His voice was low, cutting through the tension in the room like a blade. He wasn't speaking to Desmond. He was speaking to her.
Aria looked up, trapped by the sound of his voice.
He was close. Much closer than he had been in the hallway. She could see the flecks of gray in his black eyes. She could smell him, a scent of sandalwood, crisp rain, and something darker, like burnt sugar.
"I… I’m sorry," she whispered again, unable to find any other words.
"Don't apologize for gravity," he said.
He didn't smile. His face remained completely impassive, a mask of stone. But his eyes were doing it again. They were tracing her face, cataloging the shape of her jaw, the tremble of her lip, the flush on her cheeks.
"Damian," Desmond interrupted, oblivious to the frequency shift in the room. "The prenup terms regarding the joint assets. We need to finalize clause four."
Damian didn't look away from Aria. He held her gaze for three seconds longer, three seconds that felt like three hours.
Then, slowly, he released her eyes and turned back to her father. The warmth vanished. The attention vanished. He became the machine again.
"Clause four is non-negotiable, Desmond," Damian said coldly. "Cross Industries retains 51% of all acquisition rights. Take it or leave it."
Aria scrambled to her feet, clutching the silver tray against her chest like a shield.
"Get out, Aria," Desmond muttered, waving a hand at her without looking. "Close the door."
She didn't need to be told twice.
She backed away, her legs feeling like jelly. She reached the door, pulled it open, and slipped into the hallway.
She closed the heavy wood barrier between them and leaned back against it, her breath coming in short, shallow gasps.
She raised her hand, the hand he had touched. Her fingertips still tingled, a phantom sensation of heat where his skin had grazed hers.
It’s just water.
He had defended her. It was a small thing. A tiny, insignificant comment. But in a house where her father called her clumsy and her sister called her useless, Damian Cross, the cold, ruthless monster everyone feared, had told her not to apologize.
Why?
Inside the study, she heard the low rumble of his voice again, discussing millions of dollars and asset forfeiture as if he hadn't just stopped time for her.
Aria pushed herself off the door. She needed to get away. She needed to go to the garden, to the greenhouse, to the only place where the air didn't feel like it was thinning.
But as she walked down the hall, she realized something terrifying.
She wasn't invisible anymore.
Not to him.
***
Two hours later, the meeting ended.
Damian walked out of the Hale estate, flanked by his lawyers. The sun was high now, glaring off the polished hoods of the black SUVs waiting in the driveway.
Desmond was shaking his hand again, smiling that desperate, eager smile. Cassandra had come down to say goodbye, posing on the front steps like a queen waving to her subjects.
"I’ll see you at the engagement party on Saturday," Cassandra purred, touching his lapel.
"Saturday," Damian repeated.
He stepped away from her, moving toward his car. His driver opened the rear door.
Damian paused.
He looked over the roof of the car, his gaze scanning the grounds of the estate. He looked past the fountain, past the manicured hedges, toward the old glass greenhouse at the edge of the property.
Through the glass, blurry and distant, he could see a figure in a beige sweater, tending to a row of plants.
She was alone. She was hiding.
Damian watched her for a long moment, his hand resting on the car door. He felt a tightening in his chest, a strange, dark hunger that had nothing to do with business and everything to do with possession.
"Sir?" his driver asked.
Damian blinked, the mask sliding back into place.
"Drive," he said.
He got into the car, the tinted window sliding up to seal him in darkness. As the car rolled down the long driveway, he didn't look back at his fiancée. He didn't look back at his business partner.
He opened his phone and typed a message to his head of security.
Find out everything about Aria Hale. Where she goes. Who she talks to. Everything.
He hit send, locked the screen, and stared into the black reflection of the glass.
The game had begun.