Chapter 3

I should have known Damian would make travel part of his strategy. "Face time with investors," he'd called it, as though video conferences didn't exist. Now, less than a week after the takeover announcement, I was strapped into a first-class seat beside him on a private jet heading to Geneva.

GreenSphere had always been lean, scrappy. My business trips were usually economy-class flights and budget hotels. Now everything smelled like leather, polished wood, and money. The irony wasn't lost on me: my company under siege, and I was flying in luxury with the man leading the attack.

Damian was already working, his laptop balanced on his knees, fingers gliding over the keys like a pianist. I hated how effortlessly composed he looked - navy sweater instead of a suit jacket, sleeves rolled, expensive watch glinting under the cabin lights.

"I still don't understand why we couldn't do this virtually," I said, crossing my legs and staring out the oval window. The clouds looked like crushed velvet.

He didn't look up. "Investors pay for access. They want handshakes, eye contact, and reassurance."

"They want reassurance that you've leashed me," I muttered.

This time he did glance up, one eyebrow arching. "Is that what you think?"

"That's what you're selling."

A faint smile curved his lips. "You have a sharp tongue, Ms. Grant."

"I use it to tell the truth."

He shut his laptop and turned slightly toward me. "Then tell me the truth now. Why did you really agree to the co-CEO arrangement?"

I stared at him. "To save my company. What other reason could there be?"

He held my gaze, his gray eyes searching. "You could have fought harder. Found another buyer. Declared bankruptcy. You didn't."

I forced a laugh. "Do you want me to thank you for making my options so limited?"

"No." His voice was low now, serious. "I want to understand you."

That disarmed me more than any smirk. I looked back out the window. "You can understand my company. You don't need to understand me."

Silence settled between us, heavy but not entirely hostile. The engine hummed, the cabin crew whispered at the back. My heartbeat felt too loud.

He broke the silence first. "We'll be staying at the Hôtel du Rhône. There's a dinner with the European GreenTech Council tomorrow night, and a private tour of the hydro project the next day."

I kept my tone cool. "And what exactly do you expect me to do at these events?"

"Be yourself," he said. "Passionate. Visionary. Convincing. They already trust me. I need them to trust you, too."

I turned to him. "You need them to trust me?"

"I'm not the enemy of your vision, Elena." The way he said my name - slow, deliberate - sent an involuntary shiver down my spine. "I'm trying to make it bigger."

"Bigger doesn't always mean better," I shot back.

He smiled, but it was a softer smile this time. "Sometimes it does."

The jet dipped slightly as we hit a pocket of turbulence. I grabbed the armrest before I could stop myself. Damian's hand moved instinctively toward mine, then paused in midair. For a second, we both stared at the space between our hands.

"I'm fine," I said quickly.

He drew his hand back, a flicker of something unreadable passing over his face. "Of course."

The turbulence smoothed out, but the tension in the cabin didn't. I pretended to scroll through my phone while my mind raced.

He was dangerous, but not just in the way I'd thought. He wasn't only trying to take over my company. He was trying to get under my skin, too - and it was working.

By the time we landed in Geneva, dusk had draped the city in gold. The car waiting for us was sleek and black, the driver silent. I sat stiffly in the back seat as we crossed a bridge lined with fluttering flags. The city glittered - old-world elegance mixed with high finance, the perfect playground for Damian Cross.

At the hotel, we were shown to adjoining suites on the top floor. The view from my balcony was ridiculous: the Rhône flowing like molten glass, the Alps hazy in the distance. I should have been thrilled. Instead, I felt like a pawn being moved to a new square.

A knock at my door made me jump. I opened it to find Damian, jacket off now, tie loosened. Without the armor of a suit, he looked almost... human.

"Dinner in an hour," he said. "Black tie. They'll expect us to arrive together."

I folded my arms. "Appearances."

"Perception," he corrected softly. "This is how we win."

"I'm not interested in winning your game."

His eyes held mine. "Then make it yours."

He left before I could respond.

An hour later, I stood in front of the mirror in a black evening dress, my hair swept up. I hated how much it felt like preparing for battle and a date at the same time. When I stepped into the hallway, Damian was waiting. He looked devastating in his tuxedo - classic, understated, lethal.

"You clean up well," he said, his voice like velvet wrapped around steel.

"I always do," I replied, stepping past him. "Shall we?"

In the elevator, our reflections stood side by side in the mirrored walls - predator and prey, or maybe two predators circling each other. My pulse skittered.

He glanced at me. "You don't have to like me, Elena. But you should know I respect you."

The words landed heavier than they should have. I stared at the floor numbers lighting up. "Respect doesn't mean trust."

"No," he said quietly. "But it's a start."

The elevator dinged. The doors slid open to the glittering lobby, where photographers waited like wolves. Damian offered his arm again. This time, after the briefest hesitation, I took it.

We stepped forward into the flash of cameras, a united front - at least on the surface. Underneath, my heart was a storm, and I had no idea whether I was holding my ground or being swept away.

Six months, I reminded myself. Just six months.

But as Damian's hand rested lightly over mine, steady but not possessive, a thought slipped uninvited into my head:

What if six months wasn't enough - not to outmaneuver him, but to resist him?

Chapter 4

The ballroom at the Hôtel du Rhône was drenched in candlelight and quiet power. Crystal chandeliers glimmered overhead, silver cutlery glinted on linen-draped tables, and the murmur of European accents filled the air like a low tide. This wasn't just a dinner - it was a stage, and every investor, politician, and green-tech magnate here was an actor playing for keeps.

Damian's hand rested lightly at the small of my back as we entered. Not possessive, but steady - like a reminder, or a warning. I didn't know which.

The photographers' flashes went off again. I smiled for the cameras, my expression practiced. Inside, my stomach was tight. This was my world once - investors, deals, speeches - but tonight it felt like enemy territory.

"They're waiting for us at the head table," Damian murmured in my ear. His voice was low, velvet over steel. "Ready?"

"Always."

He smiled, the faintest flicker at the corner of his mouth, as if my defiance pleased him.

We took our seats. The table was a who's who of European green-tech power: the chair of the GreenTech Council, a Swiss billionaire who owned half the hydropower stations on the continent, a young French minister with eyes like hawks. They all turned to Damian first, of course. His reputation preceded him like a trumpet blast.

I kept my smile polite as the introductions went around. When it was my turn, I felt their eyes assess me - the underdog, the upstart American CEO clinging to her company in the jaws of a corporate giant.

"It's an honor to finally meet you," said the council chair, a silver-haired woman with diamond studs. "We've heard much about GreenSphere's innovations."

"Thank you," I said. "Innovation has always been our heartbeat."

Dinner began, course after course appearing like magic. Conversation flowed easily around the table, but under it ran a current of calculation. These people weren't here for food. They were here to decide who to back, who to crush, who to ignore.

Damian spoke smoothly about the merger, laying out his vision. The others nodded, murmuring approval. He had them in the palm of his hand, and he knew it.

Then one of the investors - a sharp-eyed man named Victor Lang, whom I'd only seen in headlines - turned to me. "And you, Ms. Grant? How do you feel about... sharing power with Mr. Cross?"

It was a knife wrapped in velvet. I felt Damian's gaze flick to me, a warning to tread carefully.

I set down my wine glass and smiled. "GreenSphere was built on independence and responsibility. Those values haven't changed. Partnering with Mr. Cross allows us to scale while protecting those values. I'm here to ensure we do just that."

A ripple of interest passed around the table. Victor Lang tilted his head, intrigued. "And if Mr. Cross disagrees?"

The question hung in the air like a guillotine.

I held Victor's gaze. "Then Mr. Cross and I will have... spirited discussions. But ultimately, we both want success. And I don't lose."

A soft chuckle went around the table. Even Damian's lips quirked. "She's telling the truth," he said lightly. "She doesn't lose."

The council chair smiled at me with something like respect. Score one for me.

As dessert was served, Damian leaned closer, his shoulder brushing mine. "Nice answer," he murmured.

"Thanks," I said without looking at him. "I've had practice."

He chuckled softly. "You might actually enjoy this if you stopped seeing it as a battlefield."

"It is a battlefield," I said. "You just like the war."

Something flickered in his eyes - not anger, but recognition. "Maybe. But you like it too."

My fork paused halfway to my mouth. "I don't."

"You do," he said quietly. "I watched you tonight. The way you handled Lang. You were electric."

I stared at him. "Electric?"

"Alive," he said simply. "You think I'm your enemy. Maybe I am. But I'm also the only one at this table who sees what you're capable of."

His words sent a strange current through me, more dangerous than his smirk ever could be.

Before I could answer, Victor Lang leaned back and said something about hosting a private roundtable tomorrow morning - just Damian and me. His tone made it sound less like an invitation and more like a test.

Damian accepted smoothly. "We'd be delighted."

After dinner, we stepped out onto a balcony lined with potted olive trees. The night air was crisp, the city lights glittering below. I wrapped my arms around myself.

"You handled Lang well," Damian said again.

"I don't need your approval."

"That wasn't approval. That was admiration."

I turned to face him. "Why are you telling me this?"

"Because you keep looking at me like I'm some cartoon villain," he said quietly. "I'm not here to destroy you, Elena. I'm here because I think we can build something extraordinary together."

"You mean make you richer."

He smiled faintly. "I'm already rich."

The way he said it made something in my chest tighten. I turned back to the view. "We're still opponents, Damian."

"Maybe," he said. "Or maybe we're something else."

I hated the way my pulse jumped at that. "Don't try to play me."

"I'm not." His voice was soft now. "I'm just telling you the truth."

For a long moment, we stood there, the city stretching out beneath us, his presence like heat at my side. It felt dangerously like standing on a cliff edge, the wind at my back.

Then I stepped away. "Goodnight, Mr. Cross."

His mouth curved in a half-smile. "Goodnight, Ms. Grant."

I walked back to my suite without looking back. But even with the door shut and the city lights winking below, I could still feel the echo of his gaze on my skin - a question, a challenge, maybe something more.

Six months. That's all I had. Six months to keep my company, my independence, and my heart intact.

I wasn't sure which would be hardest.

Chapter 5

The conference suite at the Hôtel du Rhône felt like a different world from last night's glittering ballroom. Gone were the chandeliers and soft candlelight; here it was all glass walls and pale wood, the kind of space designed to look transparent but hide a thousand deals.

I arrived two minutes early. Damian was already there, of course, sitting at the head of the sleek table like he owned the air in the room. He didn't look up from his phone as I entered, but I caught the faintest flicker of a smile at the corner of his mouth.

"You're early," he said without looking up.

"I like to see the battlefield before the enemy arrives," I replied.

He chuckled softly. "You really do see everything as war."

"Because it is."

He finally set his phone down and met my eyes. "Then this morning, we're allies. For now."

Before I could ask what he meant, the door opened and Victor Lang stepped in. He wasn't alone. Marcus Hale - Damian's CFO - trailed behind him, looking like a man who wanted to be invisible.

Victor was all charm. A crisp navy suit, an expensive watch, and a smile so polished it reflected light. "Ms. Grant, Mr. Cross. Thank you for agreeing to this little breakfast chat."

"This isn't breakfast," I said, noting the absence of coffee or pastries on the table. "It's a test."

Victor's smile deepened. "Smart woman."

We all took our seats. Victor sat opposite Damian, directly across from me, like a predator settling in for the hunt. Marcus hovered near the coffee machine, pretending to busy himself but clearly listening.

"I'll get to the point," Victor said, lacing his fingers. "Your merger has spooked the market. Investors are nervous. Regulators are circling. The two of you are powerful, but you're also vulnerable. I can make that vulnerability disappear."

"And in return?" Damian's voice was mild, but his eyes were sharp.

Victor leaned back. "I buy a controlling stake in both your companies. At a premium, of course. You two keep your titles, your reputations, but the real power flows through me. Clean, simple, no drama."

I almost laughed. "No drama? You mean no independence. You'd turn us into figureheads."

Victor's gaze flicked to me. "It's not a bad life, Ms. Grant. You'd still be rich. You'd still get to innovate. You'd just answer to someone else."

"I already had that life," I said coolly. "I left it for a reason."

He tilted his head. "Be careful. Pride is expensive."

Damian shifted slightly in his chair, the movement so subtle I almost missed it. "Victor," he said evenly, "this isn't going to happen."

"Think carefully," Victor replied. "The market's on my side. I've already spoken to three of your largest institutional investors. Marcus?"

Marcus startled, as though he'd been caught. "Yes, sir?"

"Tell them."

Marcus swallowed. "Mr. Lang's... proposal has traction. If either of you want to maintain control, you'll need to move fast."

A cold weight settled in my stomach. Marcus - Damian's right hand - was helping Victor?

Damian's expression didn't change. "Thank you, Marcus," he said quietly. "You can wait outside."

Marcus hesitated, then left. The door clicked shut.

Victor smiled like a cat. "You're surrounded, Cross. And Ms. Grant - you're collateral damage. But you don't have to be. Sign with me now and I'll protect your company, your patents, your people. You'll even keep your CEO title."

I looked at Damian. His face was carved stone, unreadable.

"I'm not for sale," I said.

Victor's eyes sharpened. "Everyone's for sale."

"Not me."

He leaned forward. "Then watch everything you've built burn."

The words hit like a slap. But before I could answer, Damian spoke.

"Get out," he said softly.

Victor blinked. "Excuse me?"

"You heard me," Damian said, his voice still calm but carrying an edge like broken glass. "This meeting is over."

Victor laughed, but there was no humor in it. "You think you can order me out?"

Damian stood. He didn't raise his voice. He didn't even look angry. But the temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees. "Leave, Victor. Before I show you exactly how surrounded you really are."

For a heartbeat, no one moved. Then Victor pushed back his chair and stood, still smiling but his eyes cold. "You've just made a very expensive mistake."

"We'll see," Damian said.

Victor glanced at me. "Think about my offer, Ms. Grant. When he drags you down, I'll still be here."

Then he left, the door shutting softly behind him.

The room was suddenly quiet. My pulse was a drumbeat in my ears.

Damian sat back down slowly, steepling his fingers. "Well."

I stared at him. "Marcus betrayed you."

"Marcus betrayed himself," Damian said. "He's been leaking information for months. I needed confirmation."

"You used me as bait," I said.

His gaze met mine, steady. "I used us as bait. And now we know."

I pushed my chair back. "You could have warned me."

"If I'd warned you, you'd have looked at Marcus differently. He'd have smelled it. We needed him to show his hand."

I stood. "You're unbelievable."

"Elena," he said quietly.

I turned at the door.

"I'm trying to protect you," he said. "Even when it doesn't look like it."

I didn't answer. I walked out of the room, my heels sharp on the marble floor.

Halfway down the hall, I stopped. My hands were trembling. Not from fear, but from fury - and something else. Something I didn't want to name.

Damian Cross was a liar, a manipulator, a shark. But for one terrifying moment, when he'd stood up to Victor, I'd believed him. I'd believed we were on the same side.

And that was the most dangerous feeling of all.

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