"Don’t look back, Louisa. The girl who worked in that cubicle died the second you stepped into this car."
Keon’s voice was a low, velvet warning that cut through the humming silence of the Maybach. He didn't look at me; he was focused on fastening his cufflinks, his movements precise and lethal. I sat beside him, the emerald silk of the dress he’d chosen feeling like a second, colder skin.
"I'm not looking back," I whispered, though my heart was hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. "I’m just wondering if I look like a Senior Consultant or a trophy you bought at an auction."
Keon finally turned, his stormy grey eyes raking over me. They lingered on the exposed skin of my back, then traveled up to the emeralds resting against my collarbone. For a heartbeat, the cold businessman disappeared, replaced by something dark and hungry that made my breath hitch.
"Tonight, you’re neither," he said, reaching out. His fingers brushed the nape of my neck as he adjusted the strap of my dress. The heat of his touch sent a jolt of pure electricity down my spine. "Tonight, you’re the ghost in their closet. You’re the reason Clara won't be able to sleep, and the reason Ethan will realize he traded a diamond for a piece of glass."
The car glided to a halt in front of The Onyx. The red carpet was a sea of flashbulbs and predatory reporters. Before the driver could even open the door, Keon leaned in closer, his scent of sandalwood and danger surrounding me.
"When we walk through those doors, you don't explain yourself. You don't defend yourself. You look at them as if they are already beneath your feet. Can you do that?"
"I've spent four years being the smartest person in every room, Keon. I think I can handle a club."
"Good. Then let's go give them a nightmare to remember."
The moment we stepped onto the carpet, the world turned into a blur of light and noise. Keon’s hand settled firmly on the small of my back, a possessive, grounding weight that told everyone I belonged to him. We didn't stop for photos. We didn't smile. We moved through the crowd like a storm front, silent and unstoppable.
Inside, the club was a cavern of amber light and clinking crystal. I spotted them in the VIP lounge almost immediately. Clara was draped over a velvet booth, a glass of champagne in one hand and a triumphant smirk on her face. Ethan sat beside her, looking like a man who had finally achieved his dreams, though his eyes were darting nervously around the room.
They were celebrating my professional funeral.
"They see us," I murmured, my pulse thudding in my ears.
"Let them look," Keon replied.
We approached the booth with a terrifying lack of hesitation. As we drew closer, the laughter at the table died a sudden, violent death. Ethan’s glass stopped halfway to his mouth. The color drained from his face so fast I thought he might faint.
Clara stood up, her silver dress shimmering like a snake’s scales. "Louisa? What the hell are you doing here? This is a private celebration for the Ashford Merger team."
"Is it?" Keon’s voice rang out, cold and clear, cutting through the heavy bass of the music. "Then it’s a good thing I brought my lead advisor. I wouldn't want to celebrate without the woman who actually did the work."
Ethan finally found his voice, though it sounded thin and pathetic. "Keon... Mr. Ashford. There must be some mistake. Louisa was terminated this morning for gross negligence. She shouldn't be here."
Keon stepped forward, moving into Ethan’s personal space with a predatory grace. "Negligence? That’s an interesting word for someone who just handed me the digital forensic trail of a ten-million-dollar embezzlement scheme. A scheme that seems to have your fingerprints all over it, Ethan."
The silence that followed was deafening. The socialites at the surrounding tables leaned in, sensing blood in the water.
Clara’s smirk didn't just falter,it shattered. "That’s a lie! She’s just a bitter ex employee trying to save her skin."
"Actually," I said, stepping out from behind Keon’s shadow. I didn't raise my voice, but the coldness in it made Clara flinch. "It was remarkably easy to find the back-door access you used at 3:00 AM. You were so busy forging my signature that you forgot I’m the one who wrote the security protocols for that server. I knew you were there before you even logged off."
I looked at Ethan then. I waited for the spark of the man I thought I loved, but all I saw was a coward.
"You stayed silent while she ruined me, Ethan," I said, the emeralds at my throat gleaming. "I hope the promotion was worth it. Because by Monday morning, your name is going to be synonymous with fraud."
"Lou, wait—" Ethan started, reaching out for my hand.
Keon intercepted him, his grip on Ethan’s wrist so tight I heard the faint creak of bone. "Don't touch her. You lost that right the second you let her take the fall for your cowardice."
Keon turned to me, his expression softening into something unreadable. "I think we've seen enough of the trash, don't you? We have a real meeting to attend."
He guided me away, leaving them standing in the wreckage of their celebration. My heart was racing, but for the first time in my life, it wasn't from fear. It was from the intoxicating rush of power.
He led me toward a private, shadowed balcony overlooking the city. A man was waiting there, his back to us, a cigar glowing in the dark.
"Is she as good as you said?" the man asked, his voice gravelly and familiar.
"Better," Keon said. "She’s the one who’s going to dismantle Vale and Associates for us, piece by piece."
The man turned around. It was the Chairman of the Board. The man who had officially signed my firing papers this morning.
"Well, Miss Vale," the Chairman said, a dark smile touching his lips. "I hear you have some things to show me that will make my partners very, very uncomfortable."
I looked at Keon, then at the Chairman. I realized then that Keon wasn't just helping me get revenge. He was using me to take over the entire firm.
"I have enough to burn the whole building down," I said, my voice steady. "But I have one condition."
Keon stepped closer, his hand finding the small of my back again. "Anything."
"I want Clara and Ethan to watch," I whispered. "I want them to see exactly who I become when I have nothing left to lose."
Keon’s smirk was lethal. "Consider it done."
"Sign it, or I let her leak the metadata to the SEC before your first scotch hits the floor."
Keon’s voice was as cold as the ice cubes clinking in the Chairman’s glass. We were standing on the edge of the club’s private balcony, the city lights flickering below us like a sea of diamonds, but the air out here was far more dangerous than the party inside. Arthur, the Chairman of Vale and Associates, looked like he was staring into the barrel of a loaded gun.
"You’re asking me to hand over the keys to my own kingdom, Ashford," Arthur growled, his eyes darting to the tablet in my hand. "Based on the word of a girl I fired six hours ago?"
"I’m asking you to hand over the keys before she burns the kingdom down with you locked inside," I said, stepping forward. I didn't wait for Keon to speak for me this time. I swiped the screen, bringing up the encrypted logs of the rerouted merger funds. "This isn't just embezzlement, sir. This is treason against the board. Clara wasn't acting alone, and we both know you’ve been ignoring the red flags because she was bringing in high value clients. If this goes public, you won't just be out of a job. You’ll be in a jumpsuit that matches your silver hair."
The Chairman’s jaw tightened. He looked at Keon, then back at me, his eyes narrowing with a mixture of respect and loathing. "You’ve changed your tune, Louisa. This morning you were stuttering and begging for a chance to explain. Now you’re shaking down the Chairman of the Board?"
"This morning I was a loyal employee," I countered, the wind whipping my emerald dress around my legs. "Tonight, I’m an independent contractor with a very expensive lawyer and a boss who doesn't believe in mercy. You have thirty seconds to decide if you want to be a casualty or an ally."
Keon checked his watch, the movement slow and deliberate. "Twenty-five seconds, Arthur. And I should mention, the dress she’s wearing costs more than your assistant’s annual salary. I don't invest in losing hands."
Arthur let out a ragged breath, the fight draining out of him as he stared at the undeniable proof on the screen. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a fountain pen, his hands trembling slightly as he signed the digital authorization I had prepared on the tablet.
"The board meeting is at 8:00 AM on Monday," Arthur muttered, handing the device back to me. "If you don't have the rest of the evidence by then, I’ll deny everything and sue you both into the stone age."
"You won't have to," Keon said, his hand finding the small of my back again, pulling me into his side. "By Monday morning, you won't even remember who Clara Bennett was. Now, get back inside. You have a reputation to maintain."
As the Chairman retreated into the club, the heavy glass doors sealing behind him, I felt the adrenaline finally begin to ebb. My knees shook, and I leaned into Keon’s solid frame, the warmth of his body the only thing keeping me upright in the cool night air.
"You’re a natural at this, Louisa," he murmured, his breath ghosting over my temple. "The way you handled him... it was almost as good as the way you handled my server."
"I hate him," I whispered, my heart still racing. "I hate all of them. They think people are just numbers they can delete when the math doesn't add up."
Keon turned me to face him, his hands resting firmly on my waist. The amber light from the club spilled onto the balcony, carving his features into sharp, beautiful angles. "That’s why you’re here. To remind them that some numbers carry a heavy price."
He leaned in, his forehead resting against mine. The music from inside was a muffled heartbeat, and for a second, the world felt like it only consisted of the two of us trapped in this high altitude cage.
"You saved my sister’s life tonight," I said, my voice barely a breath. "Why? You don't even know her."
"I didn't do it for her," Keon said, his thumb tracing the line of my jaw with a terrifying tenderness. "I did it for the look in your eyes when you realized you weren't powerless anymore. That look is worth every cent of that tuition, Louisa."
Before I could respond, the balcony door swung open again. I expected a waiter or a curious guest. Instead, I saw Ethan. He was disheveled, his tie loosened, and his eyes were bloodshot.
"Louisa, please!" he shouted, stumbling toward us. "You can't do this! Clara told me what you’re planning. You’re going to destroy the firm! My career... everything I’ve worked for!"
Keon stepped in front of me, his posture shifting from relaxed to lethal in a heartbeat. "You’re trespassing on a private conversation, Blackmore. Walk away before I have security throw you off this balcony."
"I’m talking to my girlfriend!" Ethan yelled, his voice cracking with a desperation that made my skin crawl.
"Former girlfriend," I snapped, stepping around Keon. I looked at Ethan, and for the first time, I didn't see the man I had loved. I saw a stranger. A small, desperate man who was afraid of his own shadow. "You lost the right to call me that the moment you let me take the fall. You didn't just stay silent, Ethan. You helped her bury me."
"I was protecting us!" Ethan pleaded, reaching for my arm. "If I had spoken up, we both would have been fired! I thought if I stayed, I could fix it from the inside... I could help you later!"
"Later is now," I said, my voice cold and final. "And the only person being fixed is you. Keon has the logs. The Chairman has the evidence. You have forty-eight hours to pack your desk and disappear before the fraud charges are filed."
Ethan’s face went from desperate to ghostly pale. He looked at Keon, then back at me, the realization finally hitting him that the girl he thought he could control was gone forever.
"You’ve become a monster," he whispered, his eyes filling with tears.
"No," Keon said, stepping forward until he was towering over Ethan. "She just found a better class of monster to run with. Now, get out of my sight before I lose my patience."
Ethan scrambled back, nearly tripping over his own feet as he fled back into the lights of the club. I watched him go, expecting to feel a sense of triumph. Instead, I just felt empty.
"You okay?" Keon asked, his hand settling on my shoulder.
"I will be," I said, looking out at the city again. "Once they’re gone. Once it’s over."
Keon pulled me back into his arms, his chin resting on the top of my head as we stood in the shadows. "It’s only just beginning, Louisa. The dinner is served, and the guests are waiting. We have a few more people to introduce you to before the night is over."
"More people?" I asked, looking up at him.
"The rivals," Keon said, his eyes gleaming. "The ones who want to see the Ashford Merger fail. We’re going to show them exactly why that’s a bad idea."
As he led me back into the club, I realized that the "deal" I had made wasn't just for six months. It was for a lifetime I wasn't sure I was prepared for. But as I walked beside him, my hand tucked into his arm, I knew one thing for certain. I wasn't the prey anymore. I was the weapon.