PROLOGUE
The scent of liquor and luxury filled the air—amber light glinting against glass, laughter echoing from the bar’s main floor. Valerie Marie Chavez tightened her ponytail and balanced the cleaning caddy on her hip, her steps soft against the carpeted hallway.
Another night. Another room. Another paycheck to keep the lights on at home.
Her name tag caught a glimmer of the neon lights as she stopped at the row of VIP rooms. Room 6. The last one before her shift ended. She let out a quiet sigh and wiped the sweat from her forehead.
From behind the door came the faint thud of jazz music and a man’s low voice speaking into a phone. Then silence.
She hesitated, hand hovering over the knob. “Sir?” she called softly. No answer.
She pushed the door open.
The world inside was still—dimly lit, scented with bourbon and expensive cologne. A man sat alone on the leather couch, one leg crossed over the other, sleeves rolled up, tie loosened. The faint glow from the city lights beyond the glass wall drew hard lines on his face: sharp jaw, controlled expression, unreadable eyes.
He didn’t look up right away. When he did, his gaze landed on her like a weight.
“What are you doing here?”
His voice was low—measured, but carrying something that made her spine stiffen. He looks uncomfortable, losing the tight of his necktie.
“I was told to clean this room, Sir,” she answered quickly, clutching the rag in her hand.
“You should’ve waited.”
“I knocked, but—”
“Then you should’ve known to wait,” he cut in, setting down his glass with precision. He stood slowly, and she noticed how tall he was, how easily the space seemed to shrink around him.
“I—I’m sorry. I’ll leave now.”
She turned, but before her hand reached the doorknob, his voice came again.
“Stop.”
She froze.
The word wasn’t loud, but it carried the kind of command people didn’t question.
He walked closer, footsteps unhurried. She could hear the faint rustle of his clothes, smell the crisp scent of his cologne—a clean, expensive scent that somehow made her knees weaken.
“Your name,” he said.
“Valerie.”
He studied her for a moment. “You don’t belong here, Valerie.”
Her pulse quickened. “It’s just a job, Sir. I clean, I go home.”
Something flickered in his eyes—disbelief, maybe. Or curiosity. “You should find a different place to survive.”
“I can’t afford to be choosy.” she answered uneasily.
He stepped closer still, until the distance between them was only a breath. His gaze swept over her face—not the way men in bars usually looked at her, but as if he were dissecting her, trying to understand why she was standing there, trembling, but not running.
“You’re afraid,” he said quietly.
“No.”
“Then why are you shaking?”
She didn’t answer.
He stopped just in front of her, one hand braced against the wall beside her head. The air between them shifted, thickened. Her heartbeat drummed loud enough that she was sure he could hear it.
“Do you know who I am?” he asked.
She shook her head.
“Good.” His lips curved—half a smile, half a warning. “Drugo Hawthorne. Remember it only if you must.”
The name struck something familiar. She had heard it whispered among the other employees—stories about the man who owned half the companies in the city. Cold. Impossibly rich. Untouchable.
And here he was, close enough that she could see the flecks of gray in his eyes.
“Do you always speak this way to janitors, Sir?” she asked softly.
That made him pause. “You’re braver than you look.”
“I’m just tired,” she said. “People don’t scare me anymore.”
His expression shifted—something unreadable passing over his face. “Maybe that’s what makes you dangerous.”
He turned, as if to step back, but stopped halfway. “Leave the mop,” he said. “I’ll have someone else clean.”
She hesitated. “It’s fine, Sir. I’ll just—”
“Leave it.”
The finality in his tone silenced her. She placed the handle against the wall. Her hands felt empty without it.
“Look at me, Valerie.”
She did.
For a heartbeat, neither of them moved. The world outside the room might as well have vanished; the only sounds were her shallow breaths and the faint ticking of the clock on the wall.
But Valerie noticed that there’s something wrong with the guy. He’s fidgety and sweating a lot.
He reached out, brushing a strand of hair from her face with careful fingers, the gesture both gentle and calculated. “You shouldn’t be here,” he said again, but softer this time, almost like regret.
“I told you—I don’t have a choice.”
“Everyone has a choice.”
“Not people like me.”
He looked at her a long time, something cold in his eyes thawing into curiosity, into something he didn’t seem to like. Then, quietly, almost to himself, he murmured, “You have no idea what you’re stepping into.”
She swallowed hard. “Then tell me.”
He exhaled, a sound that wasn’t quite laughter. “If I do, you’ll run.”
She met his gaze, trembling but steady. “Maybe I won’t.”
For the first time, his composure cracked. He looked away, jaw tightening. When he spoke again, his voice had dropped to something raw.
“You should go.”
But she didn’t move.
Neither did he.
The silence stretched, electric, as if the air itself held its breath.
She didn’t remember how long they stood there. Only that when he analyze her face, the air felt heavy with something dangerous and inevitable.
“Valerie,” he said, voice low. “You should forget tonight.”
Then he grasp her lips aggressively. Valerie was shock and trying to push the guy who’s kissing him aggressively but he’s way too strong. He even lifted her up.
“S-Sir.” Valerie trying to snap him up to his senses but he’s uncontrollable. Her strength and lust was battling the mere sanity she have trying to keep.
“Aahh”, she moaned softly when Drugo kissed her neck when he put her down on the sofa.
“S-Stop, d-don— ahhh!”
He let go for a second then look at her, studying her face. Even he saw that she was scared, he wasn’t planning to let her go.
“Help me, woman. They drugged me.” He said then started kissing her again, did not wait for her approval.
-------
When she left the room leaving him asleep, her lips still tingled from the ghost of his breath, and the city lights outside blurred into gold.
She didn’t see the way he stood at the window after she left—hands in his pockets, eyes fixed on how she was having a difficulty to walk—as if the calm, immaculate order of his world had just cracked.