The morning didn’t wake me; the heat did.
I was tangled in sheets that cost more than my tuition, trapped between a silk mattress and a body that felt like a furnace. The scent of rain and dark woodsmoke was everywhere—on my skin, in my hair, and deep in my lungs.
I tried to shift, but a heavy arm tightened around my waist, pulling me back against a chest of solid, vibrating muscle. Silas didn't open his eyes. He just tucked his face into the crook of my neck and inhaled, a deep, ragged sound that made my skin prickle.
"Don't move," he growled. It wasn't a request. It was a low, primal command that made my blood hum.
"Silas, let go," I whispered, though my body was already melting back into him. "It’s early. I have a life. I have to go to my apartment and—"
"You don't have an apartment anymore, Elena," he rasped, his teeth grazing the pulse point in my throat. "You have a penthouse and an Alpha who hasn't slept in a year because you weren't in his bed."
I twisted in his arms, forcing him to look at me. The golden glow in his eyes from last night had faded back to a stormy gray, but the intensity was worse. He looked at me like I was the only source of oxygen left in the world.
"Last night was an emergency," I said, trying to find my voice. "The bond, the blood... it was a reaction. But I am still your secretary, and you are still the man who yelled at me for being four minutes late."
"I yelled at you because your scent was driving me insane and I couldn't touch you," he countered, his hand sliding up my thigh under the sheets with a slow, heavy possessiveness. "And as for being my secretary? That’s over. You’re my Anchor. The only thing keeping my wolf from tearing this city apart."
"I’m not a cage, Silas," I snapped, my pride finally waking up. "And I’m not a submissive little mate. If we’re doing this—whatever this is—we’re doing it on my terms."
Silas sat up, the duvet falling away to reveal a torso that looked like it had been carved from stone. He looked at me with a lethal, dark amusement. "Terms? You want to negotiate with an Alpha, Elena?"
"I’ve negotiated with you for a year, Silas. I’m the only one who knows how to handle your ego," I said, sitting up and clutching the sheet to my chest. "Term number one: I keep my job. I am not an ornament for your arm. I work. I stay independent."
Silas leaned in, his heat hitting me like a wave. "Agreed. You keep the job. But your office is now inside mine. I’m not letting you out of my sight. Next?"
"Term number two: Professionalism. In that building, I am Ms. Reyes. No growling. No pinning me to desks. No 'Mate' nonsense in front of the board."
Silas let out a short, dry laugh. He reached out, his thumb tracing my lower lip until it pulled down, exposing the damp heat of my mouth. "Professionalism? You think you can stand three feet away from me in a pencil skirt and pretend my mark isn't already burning into your soul?”
"I've spent a year pretending I didn't want to scream every time you looked at me, Silas. I can handle a few more months of playing pretend," I challenged, though my breath hitched as his hand moved from my lip to the back of my neck.
He didn't argue. He just pulled me forward until our foreheads touched, his eyes searching mine. "Term number three?"
"You tell me everything," I whispered, the weight of the silver glow on my fingers still fresh in my mind. "No more 'Security Breaches' without explanations. I want to know about the Silver Moon. I want to know who is hunting us. If I'm your Anchor, I'm not doing it blindfolded."
Silas’s expression darkened. The gray in his eyes flickered with gold for a split second, a warning of the beast lurking just beneath the surface. "The truth is a bloodbath, Elena. But if that’s what it takes to keep you by my side, then so be it. You have your terms."
"Good," I said, trying to pull away to find my clothes.
"I didn't say I was finished," he growled.
He didn't give me time to react. He hauled me back against the pillows, his large body pinning mine into the silk. He wasn't being the CEO now. He was all wolf, all hunger. His hands roamed over my curves with a desperate, heavy possessiveness that made my thoughts shatter into a million jagged pieces.
"My term is simple," he whispered against my lips, his heart hammering against mine with a rhythm that wasn't entirely human. "You can keep your job. You can keep your 'professionalism.' But every night, you belong to me. Every time those office doors lock, the secretary disappears. I want the fire, Elena. I want the wit. I want everything you’ve been hiding for three hundred and sixty-five days."
He kissed me then—a deep, bruising claim that tasted like coffee and a year of suppressed obsession. I didn't push him away. I pulled him closer, my fingers tangling in his dark hair as I let the heat of the bond consume the room.
I had my terms, but as Silas buried his face in my neck and let out a low, vibrating sound of absolute satisfaction, I realized I’d just negotiated a deal with the predator of New York. And the worst part?
I didn't want him to stop.
An hour later, we were in the back of the blacked-out SUV, heading toward the office. Silas was back in a sharp three-piece suit, his face a mask of cold, corporate indifference as he scrolled through his tablet. But under the privacy of the tinted windows, his hand was clamped firmly on my thigh, his thumb tracing slow, burning circles into my skin.
"We have a board meeting at ten, Ms. Reyes," he said, his voice perfectly professional even as his eyes promised me a repeat of last night. "Make sure the Mercer files are ready. I don't like to be kept waiting."
"Of course, Mr. Vane," I replied, my voice steady despite the electricity jumping between us. "I’ll make sure everything is... handled."
The office was waiting. The danger was coming. But for the first time in my life, I wasn't afraid. I was the Anchor of the Silver Moon, and the Ice King was finally mine.