Sold Before Sunset

964 Words
I was born on the wrong side of a secret. Not poor. Not exactly. But not wanted either. My father was one of those men whose name opened doors and closed mouths. Senator Richard Hale. Clean reputation. Perfect family. A wife who smiled like she’d never been betrayed. And then there was me. The mistake tucked away in a different house, in a quieter part of the city, where the curtains stayed drawn and the neighbors didn’t ask questions. I learned early that love wasn’t something you were given. It was something you survived without. “You’re getting married.” The words came casually, like he was discussing dinner plans. I stared at him across the polished dining table. “To who?” He didn’t hesitate. “Victor Kane.” My stomach dropped. Everyone knew that name. Older. Wealthy. Untouchable in the worst ways. The kind of man rumors followed like shadows but never quite caught. “I’m not marrying him,” I said, my voice steady even as my chest tightened. My father sighed, like I was being inconvenient. “This isn’t a discussion.” “Then what is it? A transaction?” His eyes flicked up to mine. Cold. “Yes.” The wedding was set for two weeks. No questions. No arguments. No escape. Except I wasn’t built to be sold. That night, I packed light. A hoodie. Jeans. A small bag. My mother’s necklace, the only thing I had that ever felt like it belonged to me. No grand plan. Just one decision: Run. The city was alive when I stepped out. Neon lights. Sirens in the distance. Cars slicing through wet streets like blades. Freedom didn’t feel soft. It felt like standing at the edge of something huge and unforgiving. I pulled my hood up and walked faster. Then faster. Then I ran. I didn’t notice the SUV until it stopped in front of me. Black. Tinted windows. The kind of car that didn’t get questioned. The door opened. And he stepped out. He didn’t look like safety. He looked like the reason people disappeared. Tall. Broad shoulders. Dressed in dark layers that made him blend into the night instead of stand out. His presence hit first. Heavy. Controlled. Like a storm that knew exactly when to strike. His eyes locked onto mine. Sharp. Assessing. “Get in.” Not loud. Not rushed. Just… final. “I don’t even know you,” I said, backing up slightly. His gaze flicked past me. And then I heard it Voices. Men. Close. Searching. For me. His attention returned to me, calmer now, almost certain. “You don’t have time to be picky.” My heart pounded. Every instinct screamed not to trust him. But every other instinct screamed louder Run or be caught. I moved. Slid into the car. The door shut behind me with a sound that felt too permanent. The inside smelled like leather and something darker. Clean, but not comforting. He got in beside me. Too close. The car pulled off immediately. Silence filled the space between us. Thick. Watching. Then “Do you always get into cars with strangers?” he asked. I let out a shaky breath. “Do you always pick up girls being chased in the middle of the night?” A pause. Then the corner of his mouth lifted. Not warm. Not kind. Just… interested. “Only the ones who look like trouble.” I turned to him fully. “Where are you taking me?” He studied me for a moment. Long enough to make my pulse trip over itself. “To a place no one will look for you.” That should have felt like relief. It didn’t. The car stopped in front of a towering building downtown. Glass. Steel. Security at every corner. Power, but quieter than my father’s world. More controlled. More dangerous. Inside, everything was too polished. Too perfect. Like nothing messy was allowed to exist here. Except him. “Sit,” he said. I stayed standing. “Not until you tell me who you are.” The room shifted. Something subtle. Like I had just stepped over a line I couldn’t see. He walked toward me. Slow. Deliberate. Until there was barely any space left between us. I held my ground. Even when my breath caught. Even when I felt how close he really was. “You don’t ask that,” he said quietly. “Why not?” His gaze darkened just slightly. “Because most people who learn my name…” He leaned in just enough for his voice to drop, controlled and dangerous. “Don’t get the chance to repeat it.” My heart slammed against my ribs. But I didn’t look away. A beat of silence. Then “Dominic.” The name settled in the air like something heavy. Final. “And now,” he added, his eyes still locked on mine, “You’re in my world.” I swallowed. “Then I should at least know what to call the man who kidn*pped me.” That almost made him laugh. Almost. “I didn’t kidnap you.” His gaze dropped briefly To my lips. Then back up again. “You chose to get in.” Something shifted in my chest. Fast. Unfamiliar. Dangerous. “What’s your name?” he asked. “…Elena.” He repeated it slowly. “Elena.” Like he was memorizing it. Like it already belonged somewhere in his life. I didn’t realize it then. Standing there, caught between fear and something far more complicated. But that moment? That was the beginning. I hadn’t escaped my fate. I had rewritten it. And somehow I had just tied myself to a man far more dangerous than the one I ran from.
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