The office was colder than winter rain. Not because of the air conditioning, though the vents whispered low above her head, but because of the man seated at the center of it all.
Elena Brooks felt her heartbeat thud against her ribcage as she stood stiffly in front of his desk. A ridiculous part of her wanted to wrap her coat tighter around herself, as if fabric could shield her from the weight of his gaze.
Adrian Knight.
The name alone carried power in New York—spoken with respect in some circles, with fear in most. Billionaire, tycoon, predator in an Armani suit. And now, apparently, her judge, jury, and executioner.
“You have two choices, Miss Brooks.”
His voice slid through the silence, deep and controlled, like a pianist striking the first ominous chord of a concerto. No warmth. No hesitation.
Elena swallowed hard. “Choices?”
“Yes.” He leaned back in his chair, one hand resting lazily on the armrest, the other lifting a crystal glass of scotch. The amber liquid caught the light as he swirled it, like fire trapped in glass. “Marry me, and your father keeps his company. Refuse…” He sipped, his lips curving into the faintest ghost of a smile. “And by tomorrow morning, he won’t even own the chair he’s sitting on.”
Her breath caught, words tangling uselessly in her throat.
“That’s not—”
“It’s very simple,” he cut in, his tone sharpening like a blade. He set the glass down with a soft click and slid a folder across the desk. The Knight Enterprises seal gleamed gold against the leather blotter. “One signature. One ceremony. You get a husband. I get what I want. And your father…” He paused, his eyes narrowing with the cruel precision of a hawk zeroing in on prey. “Your father gets to keep breathing in peace.”
Elena’s nails bit into her palm. She wanted to fling the folder back at him, to tell him to go to hell. But the image of her father—his graying hair, the way his coughs had grown harsher each winter—flashed before her eyes.
Her voice cracked when she finally spoke. “Why me? You could have anyone.”
Adrian stood, slow and deliberate, as though he had all the time in the world and she was just another pawn in his private game of chess. When he rounded the desk, Elena instinctively stepped back.
But he followed.
He stopped only when he was close enough that she caught the subtle notes of his cologne—sandalwood and something darker, dangerous. His presence filled the space, crowding her lungs.
“Because I don’t want anyone,” he murmured, his voice low enough to feel intimate, but edged with command. His eyes, dark and merciless, pinned her in place. “I want you.”
Elena’s pulse spiked. “You’re insane.”
“Maybe.” His lips tilted, though it wasn’t amusement—it was arrogance. Certainty. “But I always get what I want. And right now, that’s you.”
Her breath trembled out of her, anger sparking through the fear. She shoved at his chest, putting distance between them. “You think you can buy people like you buy your companies? I’m not for sale.”
He didn’t even stumble. His chest was solid, unmoving, like a wall she could never break. Instead of anger, his eyes glinted with a flicker of interest—like her defiance had only fanned the flames.
“You’re beautiful when you’re angry,” he said softly. His hand lifted, fingers brushing her chin, tilting her face up toward him. “That fire in your eyes? That’s exactly why you’re perfect for me.”
Her skin burned where he touched her, and she jerked back, swatting his hand away. “Don’t touch me.”
For the briefest moment, something unreadable flickered across his face. Then it was gone, replaced by the icy mask of a man who’d made fortunes out of other people’s ruin.
“You’ll learn,” Adrian said simply. “In time.”
Before Elena could hurl another word at him, the heavy oak door opened. One of his men—broad-shouldered, dressed in an immaculate black suit—stepped inside. He leaned toward Adrian, murmuring something too low for her to catch.
Adrian’s jaw tightened, his attention snapping back to her like the crack of a whip.
“Time’s running out, Elena.” He buttoned his jacket with one precise movement, as though sealing the conversation shut. “You have twenty-four hours to decide.”
Her mouth went dry. “And if I say no?”
His eyes glittered. “Then you’ll watch everything you love burn. Piece by piece. Until nothing remains but ashes.”
The world seemed to tilt. Elena gripped the edge of the desk to steady herself, but he was already moving toward the door.
He paused at the threshold, his silhouette framed against the city skyline glittering beyond the glass wall. He glanced back over his shoulder, his voice slicing through the silence like a verdict:
“Tick-tock, Miss Brooks. Tomorrow, you’re either Mrs. Knight… or you’re nothing.”
The door closed behind him with a heavy finality.
Elena stood frozen, the folder still on the desk before her, its edges catching the glow of the office lights like a taunt. Her pulse thundered in her ears, her father’s coughing echoing in her memory.
She wanted to scream. She wanted to run. She wanted to throw the damn contract into the shredder and watch it burn.
But the truth was a knife lodged deep in her chest.
Adrian Knight never bluffed.
And for the first time in her life, Elena Brooks realized she was trapped in a game she had no idea how to win.