The Gala

1003 Words
Elara Voss hated rooftops. Not the height. Not the view. The people on them. The Voss Grand rooftop glittered above Manhattan like a cage of crystal and ambition. Champagne flutes caught moonlight in sharp flashes. Black-tie whispers traded favors money could buy but never forgiveness. The Hudson wind sliced cold enough to sting, but Elara felt nothing. She hadn’t felt anything in years. She stood at the terrace edge in black silk that clung like spilled night, champagne untouched in her hand. The skyline glittered below—beautiful, distant, indifferent like her. These galas were rituals. Glamour was armor she wore without thought. What she hated was the hunger behind every smile, every lingering hand, every veiled pitch for money or influence. They circled like sharks scenting weakness. She let them. Easier than admitting the heiress was hollow at the core. Boardrooms and acquisitions filled her days with clean lines and colder numbers, but they never touched the quiet ache beneath her ribs. Tonight she had already signed two checks blind and deflected the same tired refrain: No fiancé yet, Elara? The empire needs an heir. She lifted the flute. Untouched. Stared at the city—Manhattan glittering like a promise it never kept. Then the stare landed. Not an appraisal. Not calculation. Weight. Heat. Something ancient that raised fine hairs on her arms and made her pulse stutter once, hard. She turned slowly, scanning masked faces—tuxedos, sequins, feathers—and found him. Near the infinity pool, half in shadow. Tall, broad-shouldered, dark hair swept back from a face carved sharp and unyielding. Tuxedo tailored to his body like a second skin, but something feral moved beneath the polish—simple black leather mask. Golden eyes locked on her as though the rest of the rooftop had ceased to exist. Their gazes met. The world collapsed to a pinpoint. Music dulled. Chatter vanished. Her chest squeezed—not fear, not attraction exactly. Recognition. As if some buried part of her had waited her entire life for exactly this look. He moved. Long, deliberate strides. The crowd parted without conscious thought, bodies yielding to predators passing through. Elara’s heart slammed ribs. She should step back. Signal security. Do anything rational. Instead stood rooted as he closed the distance, gravity inverting, drawing her in like a tide to the moon. He stopped close—too close. Scent hit her: pine smoke, iron, wild warmth tightened throat, sent shiver racing down her spine. Something inside her—small, new—stirred. Senses sharpened unnaturally. She heard individual heartbeats around them, smelled champagne on breath ten feet away. Her own pulse thundered in her ears. “You shouldn’t be out here alone,” he said, voice low, rough—gravel under moonlight. She arched her brow, summoning heiress armor. “I own the building. I go where I like.” Faint, dangerous smile, curved lips—slow, reluctant. “Not tonight.” Before retorting, he caught her wrist—gentle but unbreakable. Heat exploded arm, electric, arrowing straight core. Pulse thundered. A dizzy second low growl echoed chest—not his. Hers. Pain lanced the palm. Thin silver chain slipped cuff, wrapped skin. Where touched, perfect crescent burned—hot, bright, searing. Gasped, yanked free. Mark's heartbeat throbbed. Skin reddened, blistered—then faded impossibly fast faint silver-white scar. Silver. Word rang, the warning bell didn’t understand. Looked up. Shock, recognition, and fear crossed my face. Stared marks betrayed him personally. “You’re not supposed to feel silver,” he said quietly. “Excuse me?” “You’re human.” Words cracked—plea. “You’re insane.” Crowded against the railing. City lights glittered behind, all she saw gold flaring eyes—predatory, terrified. “Say my name.” “I don't know.” “Say it anyway.” The word rose from somewhere deep, unbidden. “Lucien.” His eyes blazed pure gold, pupils blown. “Fated,” he breathed. “Impossible.” The terrace blurred. Only him: heat radiating from his body, heartbeat thundering in sync with hers, fingers trembling as he reached for the scar—then jerked back as though she had scorched him. “Come with me,” he rasped, voice edged with desperation. She should refuse. Scream. Anything. Instead she let him take her hand—gentler now—and lead her through the crowd, past masks and hollow laughter, to the private service elevator behind velvet drapes. Doors closed. Mirrors. Dim light. Them. He released her. Backed to the wall, shoulders hitting metal. “What the hell was that?” Elara demanded, cradling the scar. It had faded to silver-white, cool now against her skin. “You felt silver.” His voice cracked again. “You’re not supposed to.” “I asked a question.” “You’re human. You reacted.” “And you don’t kidnap women at galas.” “I didn’t plan this.” He dragged a hand through his hair. “I didn’t know you existed until tonight.” Elevator hummed upward. Penthouse level. His territory. Her heart wouldn’t slow. Not fear. Something worse: the pull. Every cell leaning toward him, gravity rewritten. She hated it. Hated him for making her feel it. “Who are you?” she whispered. He met her eyes—gold still burning. “The man who just found the one thing that could destroy everything I’ve protected.” Ding. Doors opened. The penthouse stretched vast, shadowed, floor-to-ceiling glass overlooking sleeping Manhattan. Moonlight poured silver across marble. No lamps. Lucien stepped out first. Held out his hand. She stared—at the tremor in his fingers, at the way he looked at her: salvation and damnation in one breath. She didn’t take his hand. But she stepped forward anyway. Doors closed behind her. City lights glittered on, indifferent, as the untouchable heiress walked into the wolf’s territory—and the wolf realized his mate was the one woman who could end his world. The night had just begun.
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