CHAPTER ONE — The Moment He Saw Her
The first time Aria Everly felt truly exposed in years was under a chandelier worth more than her entire life.
Her plan had been simple: slip into the Astor Crown charity gala unnoticed, blend in with the servers, and get close enough to the Hale Corporation archives to retrieve the one thing that could clear her past.
Simple, until he looked at her.
Xavier Hale.
The billionaire who built an empire with a face that never changed, a voice that never slipped, and eyes that never softened.
A man so controlled that the entire city whispered about what it would take to make him break.
Apparently, all it took… was her.
Aria kept her head lowered, balancing a tray of champagne glasses as she wove through glittering gowns and polished shoes. She had perfected invisibility; rounded posture, gentle steps, harmless smile. The girl no one looked at. The girl no one remembered.
But someone was watching her now.
She felt it before she saw him, like a hand pressing against the back of her neck, like a warning.
When she finally lifted her gaze, Xavier Hale was staring straight at her.
And he looked… startled.
Startled, and something else; something sharper, something like recognition.
As if he’d seen her before.
As if he’d lost her once.
Aria’s throat tightened. No. He couldn’t know her. He couldn’t. She had erased every part of her old life; name, address, history. Aria Everly didn’t exist before two years ago.
But Xavier didn’t look away.
He didn’t blink.
He began walking toward her through the crowd, cutting through silk and diamonds as people parted for him like instinct.
Aria’s pulse slammed against her ribs.
Not him. Not tonight.
She turned, heading toward the staff hallway, but a hand caught the edge of the tray before she could escape. The glasses rattled.
Her breath stilled.
Xavier stood in front of her, impossibly tall up close, his suit black, his expression unreadable.
“You’re not staff,” he said quietly.
The words were soft. The certainty was not.
“I…I’m filling in,” she whispered, pitching her voice small. Soft. Forgettable. The mask she always wore.
His eyes dragged over her face; slow, searching, unsettlingly familiar.
“No,” he said, almost to himself. “Not filling in. Hiding.”
Her heart stopped.
Xavier exhaled once through his nose, like the realization cost him.
“Come with me,” he said.
“I can’t,” she breathed.
“You can.” His voice dropped, not angry; dangerously calm. “Because I need to know why you look exactly like someone I lost.”
Aria’s fingers went cold.
He couldn’t mean that. He couldn’t possibly—
A camera flash exploded across the room, snapping her back to reality. She jerked away, and Xavier’s hand brushed hers—a brief touch, but strong enough to send a shiver up her arm.
His eyes darkened.
“You felt that,” he said softly.
It wasn’t a question.
The room suddenly felt too loud, too bright. Aria’s vision narrowed, her mind racing.
She needed to leave. Now. Before he saw through her. Before he recognized the truth she’d buried.
But Xavier Hale stepped closer, lowering his head until only she could hear him.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he murmured. “And yet… I can’t look anywhere else.”
Aria’s breath caught.
Because somewhere across the ballroom, a man in a gray suit was watching her too.
And unlike Xavier, he wasn’t supposed to be alive.
Xavier’s eyes flicked to the man, then back to her.
Something deadly flickered behind his calm.
“Aria,” he said, quietly but with complete certainty, “you’re in danger.”
Her blood went cold.
He knew her name.
She hadn’t told him.