The fifty-eighth floor of Vane Enterprises didn’t feel like an office; it felt like a cathedral dedicated to the worship of capital. Floor-to-ceiling glass overlooked a city that looked like a circuit board at dusk, pulsing with lights and hidden currents.
Elena stood by the mahogany desk, her fingers trembling slightly as she organized a stack of acquisition contracts. She had worked for Julian Vane for two years, and in that time, she had learned three things: he took his coffee black, he never repeated an order, and he was the most dangerous man she had ever met.
It wasn't a physical danger—at least, not yet. It was the way he commanded a room without raising his voice. It was the way his bespoke charcoal suits fit his broad shoulders with a precision that bordered on the obsessive.
"The Sterling report is on top, Mr. Vane," she said, her voice steady despite the way her heart hammered against her ribs.
Julian didn't look up from his tablet. He was silhouetted against the setting sun, a dark figure carved from granite. "And the NDAs for the board members?"
"Signed and filed."
He finally looked up. His eyes were a piercing, icy blue that seemed to strip away her professional veneer. He looked at her not as an assistant, but as an obstacle he was deciding whether to bypass or crush. "You’re staying late again, Elena."
"There’s a lot to do before the merger, sir."
He stood, the movement fluid and predatory. He walked toward her, the scent of expensive sandalwood and something metallic—like rain on asphalt—filling her senses. He stopped just inches away, close enough for her to feel the heat radiating from his body.
"Go home," he murmured. His voice was a low baritone that vibrated in her chest. "The city isn't safe for a girl like you after dark."
"I can handle myself," she retorted, a flash of defiance sparking in her eyes.
A slow, dark smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. It wasn't a kind expression. "You have no idea what you can handle."
Three hours later, Elena was cursing her defiance.
Her car had died two blocks from the office, right on the edge of the Industrial District. The sleek skyscrapers of the financial hub felt a world away here, replaced by crumbling brick warehouses and flickering streetlamps.
She began to walk, her heels clicking rhythmically on the pavement. She reached for her phone to call an Uber, but the signal was a dead zone.
That was when she heard it.
A low, guttural roar. Not one engine, but dozens. The sound grew louder, a mechanical thunder that shook the very ground beneath her feet. She ducked into the shadows of an alleyway, her breath hitching.
A fleet of motorcycles tore around the corner, black chrome gleaming under the sparse light. They weren't just riders; they were a legion. At the head of the pack was a massive black chopper, its engine sounding like a caged beast.
The riders pulled into a gated yard behind a derelict warehouse. Elena, driven by a cocktail of fear and morbid curiosity, crept closer. She peered through a gap in the rusted corrugated fence.
The men dismounted. They wore heavy leather cuts with a terrifying insignia on the back: a skeletal vulture gripping a bloody gear. The Iron Vultures. The city's most notorious outlaw motorcycle gang.
The leader stepped off his bike. He pulled off his matte-black helmet, shaking out dark hair. He wasn't wearing a suit. He was in a grease-stained white tee that clung to his muscles, a leather vest, and heavy boots.
Elena gasped, her hand flying to her mouth.
It was him.
The cold, calculated billionaire who had told her to go home hours ago. Julian Vane was standing in the center of a circle of killers, his face no longer a mask of corporate indifference, but one of raw, unfiltered malice.
A man was dragged into the center of the circle, sobbing. Julian stepped forward, the light of a nearby burn barrel flickering in his eyes. He didn't use words this time. He reached for a heavy chain at his hip.
Elena stepped back, her heel catching on a loose stone. The sound was tiny, a mere click against the concrete, but in the sudden silence of the yard, it sounded like a gunshot.
Julian’s head snapped toward the fence. His eyes found hers through the gap, and for a heartbeat, time stopped. The billionaire was gone. In his place was a predator who had just found his prey.
"Search the perimeter," Julian growled to his men, his gaze never leaving the spot where Elena hid. "I think we have a witness."
Elena turned and ran. She ran until her lungs burned, until the clicking of her heels was replaced by the heavy thud of boots behind her. She reached the end of the alley, only to find a dead end.
She spun around, her back against the brick.
Julian emerged from the shadows. He didn't look like he had been running. He walked with a terrifying, measured grace. He pinned her against the wall, his hands slamming into the brick on either side of her head.
The smell was the same—sandalwood and rain—but now there was the scent of leather and gasoline.
"I told you the city wasn't safe, Elena," he growled, leaning in until his lips brushed her ear. The heat of him was overwhelming, a stark contrast to the cold fear in her veins. "Now you’ve seen the part of me I keep in the dark."
He tilted his head, his nose trailing down the line of her throat. Elena’s breath hitched, a traitorous shiver of heat racing through her.
"Join the ride, sweetheart," he whispered, his voice dropping to a gravelly, possessive depth as his lips grazed hers. "Or be mine anyway. Either way... you aren't leaving this alley the same girl you were."