Elara stared at the detailed plasterwork of the ceiling in the Vanderbilt guest suite, listening to the soft, even sound of Liam’s breathing beside her. The room was a masterpiece of quiet luxury, but it felt like a beautifully appointed tomb. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Kaelan’s burning gaze in the gallery, heard his voice, “You’re not safe with him. You’re bored.”
The words were a poison, seeping into the foundations of her certainty.
At dawn, she slipped from the bed, the cool silk of her robe a whisper against her skin. She needed space, air that wasn’t perfumed with old money and older secrets. The Vanderbilt mansion was silent, a sleeping beast. She found her way to the morning room, a sun-drenched space with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the manicured gardens. She hoped it would be empty.
He was already there.
Kaelan stood at the window, a silhouette against the rising sun, a steaming mug of black coffee in his hand. He was dressed in running gear, a simple grey t-shirt, and shorts that did nothing to diminish his imposing presence. He looked more human, more approachable, which somehow made it all worse.
“Couldn’t sleep either?” he asked without turning around. He’d sensed her. Of course, he had.
“I was looking for tea,” she said, her voice stiff. She moved to the ornate sideboard where a silver service was laid out, her back to him.
“Second drawer on the left. The Darjeeling is acceptable.”
She flinched at his intimate knowledge of the house’s workings, a house that was supposed to be her future home. She fumbled with the delicate china, the clatter loud in the silence.
“Nervous?” he asked. She heard him move, his footsteps quiet on the Persian rug. He stopped a few feet behind her. Not touching, but close enough that she felt the heat of him.
“Why would I be nervous?”
“You’re in the lion’s den. Surrounded by people who dissect everything. Your accent, your posture, the way you hold your fork. They’re predators, Elara. Just like me. Only with better manners.”
She turned then, clutching the empty cup like a shield. “And you’re warning me? How chivalrous.”
A faint, tired smile touched his lips. It lacked the cold mockery of the night before. This one looked real, and that was infinitely more dangerous. “I’m not chivalrous. I’m possessive. I don’t want them to see what I see. It would complicate things.”
“What do you see?” The question left her lips before she could stop it, a desperate, traitorous thing.
He studied her, his eyes tracing the shadows under hers, the way her robe clung to her shoulders. “I see someone playing a role that’s two sizes too small. I see the artist’s hands trembling as she pours tea for the aristocracy. I see a woman who spent a decade building a fortress, only to realize she locked herself inside it.”
Her breath hitched. It was like he’d reached into her chest and pulled out her deepest, most private fear. “You don’t know me.”
“I’m the only one who does,” he countered softly. “Liam sees the woman you built for him. I see the blueprint. I remember the raw material.” He took a step closer. “The fire. The stubborn silence. The way you’d bite your lip when you were drawing, completely lost in a world of your own making. I hated that world. I wanted you in mine.”
The memory was so vivid it stole the air from the room. She had bitten her lip when she drew. It was a childish habit she’d broken years ago. How could he remember that? How could he have noticed?
“That girl is gone,” she whispered, but the words sounded hollow.
“Is she?” He reached out, slowly, giving her every chance to pull away. His fingers, calloused and warm, brushed a stray strand of hair from her forehead. The contact was electric, a jolt of pure sensation that shot straight to her core. It wasn’t the cruel grip from the party. It was terrifyingly gentle. “I don’t think so. I think she’s just buried under good manners and a diamond ring.”
The sound of footsteps in the hall broke the spell. They sprang apart, putting a respectable three feet between them just as Mrs. Vanderbilt, Kaelan and Liam’s mother, swept into the room.
“Kaelan, darling, you’re up early,” she said, her sharp eyes missing nothing as they flicked between her son and her future daughter-in-law. “And Elara. I hope you slept well.”
“Perfectly, thank you,” Elara lied, her voice miraculously steady. She could still feel the ghost of his touch on her skin.
“Good. Liam tells me you have a fondness for modern art. The Greystone Museum is opening a new exhibit today. Their director is a dear friend. Kaelan,” she said, turning her commanding gaze on him, “you’ll take Elara. Liam has that tedious meeting with the foundation lawyers all day. It will be good for you two to get better acquainted.”
It was a decree, not a suggestion. A masterstroke of social manipulation. Elara’s blood ran cold.
Kaelan didn’t even blink. “Of course, Mother. I’d be delighted.” He took a sip of his coffee, his eyes meeting Elara’s over the rim. The challenge in them was bright and clear. Run along, little mouse.
The Greystone Museum was a temple of glass and steel. Kaelan was a perfect, if silent, escort. He held doors, offered a guiding hand at the elbow she refused to take, and spoke knowledgeably with the curator who greeted them like royalty. He was playing his part flawlessly.
The exhibit was on "The Architecture of Emotion," with stark installations and haunting video pieces. They stopped before a sprawling photograph of a dilapidated, beautiful old house, its windows boarded up, vines claiming the walls.
“It’s sad,” Elara found herself saying, her guard slipping momentarily in the face of the art. “All that history, just waiting to be forgotten.”
“Or waiting for someone with the vision to restore it,” Kaelan said from beside her. He wasn’t looking at the photo; he was looking at her. “To see the strength in the bones, not just the decay on the surface. It wouldn’t be easy. It would require someone ruthless. Someone willing to tear out the rot to save the structure.”
His metaphor hung between them, heavy and undeniable. He was talking about her. About them.
“Sometimes,” she said, forcing her eyes back to the crumbling house, “the rot is too deep. Sometimes it’s kinder to let it fall.”
“Kinder?” He gave a short, humorless laugh. “Since when have I ever been kind, Elara? I don’t want kindness. I want the truth. And the truth is you’re not in love with my brother. You’re in love with the idea he represents. Safety. Acceptance. A clean slate.”
Tears of rage and recognition pricked her eyes. “You have no right”
“I have every right!” he hissed, stepping closer, his voice low and vehement. A nearby patron glanced over, and he smoothed his expression into a polite mask, but his eyes remained volcanic. “I marked you first. I saw you first. I may have been a monster, but my obsession was real. His love is a polite fiction. Do you think he’d look at you twice if you were still the girl in thrift-store jeans, smelling of turpentine?”
It was the lowest blow, and it landed with brutal precision. It exposed her oldest, deepest fear: that she was, and always would be, unworthy.
She couldn’t breathe. The sterile museum air was suffocating. She turned and walked away, blindly, pushing past startled patrons, needing escape.
She found a deserted side hall leading to a service entrance, a stark concrete space with an emergency exit. She leaned against the cold wall, gasping.
He followed. Of course he did. The heavy door swung shut behind him, sealing them in the gray, utilitarian silence.
“Elara,” he said, his voice stripped of its earlier anger, leaving only a raw, desperate intensity.
“Stay away from me,” she choked out, hugging herself.
“I can’t.” He advanced until he was right in front of her, caging her against the wall with his arms on either side of her head. “You think this is easy for me? You think I want this? To want my brother’s fiancée?” His face was a mask of torment. “I have spent ten years trying to forget the taste of your name. And then you walk back in, and it’s like no time has passed at all. You are a sickness in my blood, and Liam is offering you as the cure.”
His confession was an earthquake, shaking her to her foundations. She saw it then, the genuine struggle in his eyes, the war between his ruthless morality and this uncontrollable need. He was just as trapped as she was.
Her anger melted, leaving behind a terrifying, unwanted compassion. And something else. A pull.
His gaze dropped to her lips. The air crackled. The world shrunk to this cold hallway, to his heat, to the frantic beating of her heart. Every cell in her body was screaming, a chaotic chorus of no and yes and finally.
He lowered his head, slowly, his breath warm on her mouth.
And from the other side of the door, clear as a bell, came Liam’s cheerful, confused voice. “Elara? Kael? The curator said "You came this way?”
They froze. The spell shattered into a million jagged pieces.
Kaelan’s eyes flashed with something like regret, then hardened into impenetrable stone. He pushed back from the wall, putting a chasm of space between them.
“In here, brother,” he called, his voice perfectly steady. He reached past her and pushed the bar on the emergency exit door, letting in a flood of harsh sunlight and the sound of the city. He held it open, his expression unreadable.
“We were just getting some air,” he said to Liam, who appeared in the main hallway, his face concerned. “It was getting a little too intense in there.”
Liam smiled, relieved. “Modern art, right? All feeling, no oxygen. Come on, Mother’s arranged a late lunch.”
As Elara walked past Kaelan, her shoulder brushing his chest, he didn’t look at her. But his voice, so quiet only she could hear it, followed her into the light.
“The next time we’re alone,” he murmured, “I won’t stop.”