Chapter 4
His Gaze
The silence that followed Kaden’s introduction was heavy, charged with the kind of electricity that only existed between two predators. Laila felt the weight of his gaze, a physical pressure that seemed to strip away the silk of her dress and the fog of the alcohol, pinning her to the bar stool.
“Laila,” she whispered, her voice barely audible over the thrumming bass of the music.
Kaden’s eyes softened, though the lethality behind them never truly vanished. He leaned in just an inch closer, his scent of rain and cedarwood wrapping around her like a warm cloak. “Laila. What a beautiful name for an even more beautiful woman.”
Laila felt a sudden, sharp jolt in her chest. She looked away, her fingers tracing the condensation on her empty shot glass. “Oh, please. Do not flatter me.”
Her words were dismissive, but inside, her mind was a chaotic storm. No one had ever acknowledged her beauty before. Not like this. Since the moment Lyra was born, Laila had been the useful one, the smart one, the one who stayed in the background to ensure her sister’s star could shine brighter. Every compliment in the Wolfe household was directed at Lyra’s golden hair, Lyra’s perfect smile, Lyra’s effortless charm. Laila was just the shadow that kept the estate running. To have a total stranger, a man who radiated more power than her father ever could, look at her and see beauty made her skin feel too tight.
It was awkward. It was terrifying. It was the first time she felt truly visible.
Kaden did not look away. He watched the faint, crimson blush creep up her neck and settle in her cheeks. A slow, knowing smile tilted his lips, as if he could read every insecure thought passing through her head. He signaled to the bartender, who had been hovering nervously a few feet away.
“Bring me a double whiskey. The private reserve,” Kaden commanded.
“Yes, boss. Right away,” the bartender replied, his voice thick with a level of respect that bordered on fear.
Laila’s head snapped toward Kaden, her brows furrowing. “Boss?”
She leaned in, her shoulder nearly brushing against his expensive suit. The alcohol made her bold, pushing the question out before her filter could stop it. “You own this place?” she whispered, her eyes wide.
Kaden turned his head, his face inches from hers. The intensity in his winter sky eyes was enough to make her breath hitch. “I own many things in this city, Laila. This bar is just one of them.”
Laila let out a breath she had been holding. “Wow. There are clearly many things I do not know about you, stranger.”
Kaden’s smile widened, showing a hint of white teeth. “That is the beauty of a first meeting. Everything is a discovery.”
The bartender returned, placing a crystal glass of dark, amber liquid in front of Kaden. The movements were precise, almost ritualistic. Kaden picked up the glass and held it out toward Laila. She gripped her own refilled shot, the glass cool against her palm.
They clinked their glasses, the sharp sound echoing briefly between them before they both downed the liquid in one synchronized motion. The whiskey hit Laila’s throat like a velvet hammer, warming her from the inside out. But as the heat settled, so did the reality she had been trying to outrun.
The numbness began to c***k.
She went quiet, her gaze dropping to the scarred wood of the bar. The image of Lyra’s golden hair on her own white pillows flashed in her mind. She remembered the look on her mother’s face, the coldness in her father’s eyes. In all her years of life, no one had ever truly looked after her. No one had celebrated her achievements without reminding her not to outshine her sister. She had been a tool, a placeholder, a sacrifice.
A single, hot tear escaped her eye and splashed onto the counter. Then another. She tried to wipe them away, but the floodgates were opening.
Kaden noticed immediately. The predatory stillness of his body shifted into something more attentive. He did not pull away. Instead, he reached out, his large hand settling firmly but gently on her shoulder, pulling her into the warmth of his frame.
“What is wrong, Laila?” he asked, his voice low and devoid of the earlier playfulness.
Laila hesitated. She wanted to pull away, to keep her pride intact, but the weight of the betrayal was too heavy to carry alone anymore. The alcohol had stripped away her defenses, leaving her raw.
“My fiancé,” she choked out, the words feeling like shards of glass. “I found him. Today. With my sister. In my own bed. My parents... they told me to forgive her. They told me to walk down the aisle tomorrow because the business deal mattered more than my soul.”
She started talking, the words pouring out in a frantic, messy stream. she told him about the years of dimming her light, the academic degrees that meant nothing to her father, and the way her sister had slowly dismantled every piece of happiness Laila had ever tried to build. She told him how she had been treated like a ghost in her own home, only acknowledged when there was a fire to put out or a contract to sign.
Kaden listened. He did not interrupt, he did not offer empty platitudes. He simply held her there, his presence a solid, unshakable anchor in the middle of her storm. He watched her with an intensity that suggested he was memorizing every tremor in her voice, every spark of rage in her eyes.
Just as the last of her story crumbled into a shaky breath, Laila felt Kaden’s grip on her shoulder tighten slightly. He opened his mouth to speak, his expression darkening with a cold, calculated fury that was not directed at her, but for her.
Before he could utter a word, a sharp, intrusive ringing cut through the moment.
Laila flinched, the sound feeling like a physical assault. She reached into her purse and pulled out her phone. The screen illuminated the dim bar, the caller ID flashing a name that made her blood run cold.
Dad.
Laila stared at the screen, the vibration rattling against her palm. She looked up at Kaden, her eyes filled with a mixture of fear and defiance.
“I... I have to take this,” she whispered, her voice trembling.
Kaden’s gaze moved to the phone and then back to her face. He nodded once, a slow, deliberate movement. He did not let go of her shoulder until she stood up.
“Excuse me,” she said, stepping away from the bar and the only man who had ever truly seen her.
She pressed the receiver to her ear and walked toward the shadows of the exit, the weight of the Wolfe name pressing down on her once again.