chapter one: A night of sparks
(Elena's POV)
The first mistake of my night was letting Rachel pick the bar.
The second was letting her talk me into wearing a dress that should’ve come with a warning label.
“Live a little, Cruz,” she’d said, strutting ahead of me in stilettos that clicked against the wet New York pavement like gunfire. “You study too much, you work too much, and you definitely don’t have nearly enough orgasms. Tonight, we’re fixing all three.”
I had rolled my eyes, clutching my jacket tighter against the October chill. “You make it sound like orgasms are something you can pick up at the bodega.”
Rachel grinned, wicked and unrepentant. “Honey, in this city? You can.”
That’s how I ended up in front of Vale Noir, a building that didn’t look like a club at all. It was sleek, black glass, no sign, no line of tipsy twenty-somethings waiting to get in. Just a velvet rope, two guards in tailored suits, and the kind of silence that screamed money.
Rachel flashed the fake ID she swore was foolproof. My stomach lurched as one of the guards scanned me with the kind of gaze that felt like it stripped more than clothes. But after a beat, he unclipped the rope and nodded us in.
Inside, the air shifted. It was heavy, charged, scented faintly of leather and expensive perfume. Music pulsed low, not the kind of pop beats you could grind to, but deep, seductive rhythms that crawled under your skin.
I tried not to gape, but it was impossible. Crystal chandeliers glowed against black walls. Velvet drapes pooled onto marble floors. Every surface whispered luxury. Every person inside looked… untouchable.
Rachel, of course, fit right in. She tossed her hair back and winked at me. “Welcome to the jungle, baby.”
I didn’t belong here. Not in my clearance-rack dress. Not with student loans clinging to my name like shackles. I was here on a dare, not because I had any business stepping into this world.
Still, a thrill shot through me.
For once, I wasn’t Elena Cruz, a broke grad student. I wasn’t the girl whose father’s scandal made the news. I wasn’t the one who got cheated on by her ex after three years of loyalty.
Here, I could be anyone.
I followed Rachel deeper into the crowd, past women in silk slips and men in sharp suits, past bartenders serving champagne instead of cheap vodka shots. My nerves buzzed with every step.
That’s when I felt it.
The weight of a stare.
It hit me so hard I froze. The kind of stare that prickled across my skin and made me suddenly, painfully aware of every inch of myself.
My gaze lifted instinctively, searching.
And then I saw him.
Across the room, above it all, leaned against a sleek balcony railing a man dressed in black. Tall, broad shoulders, hair dark as midnight, jaw like it was carved from stone. He wasn’t smiling. He wasn’t drinking. He wasn’t doing anything but watching. Watching me.
And those eyes of God.
Gray. Cold. Sharp enough to slice me in half.
For a second, the room fell away. The music, the chatter, even Rachel tugging at my arm. It was just me and that stare, pinning me in place like he already knew my name.
I should’ve looked away.
But I didn’t.
Because for the first time in a long time, I didn’t feel invisible. I felt… claimed.
His lips curved the faintest degree. Not a smile. A promise.
And before I could catch my breath, he started moving.
Down the stairs.
Through the crowd.
Straight toward me.