Cassidy stood by the side of the bed, feeling ridiculous. She was wearing a pair of cotton pajamas that buttoned up to her chin-armor against the man who was currently in the bathroom.
The door opened. Kingsley walked out.
He was wearing nothing but a towel low on his hips. Water droplets clung to the dark hair on his chest, trailing down his abdomen.
Cassidy jerked her gaze away, staring fixedly at a painting on the wall. Her pulse jumped in her throat.
Kingsley scoffed. "Don't act like a virgin, Cassidy. We both know you aren't."
He dropped the towel and pulled on a pair of boxers. Cassidy kept her eyes averted until she heard the rustle of sheets.
She grabbed a pillow and marched toward the chaise lounge in the corner. "The contract didn't specify I had to sleep in the same bed."
"The lounge is bugged," Kingsley said from the bed. He was lying on his back, hands behind his head.
Cassidy froze. "What?"
"Elmore planted bugs. If he hears you sleeping on the sofa, he'll know the marriage is a sham. Get in the bed."
"You're lying," she said, though her voice wavered.
"Am I? Do you want to risk your father's plea deal on a gamble?"
Cassidy gritted her teeth. She walked back to the bed and climbed in, staying as close to the edge as physics allowed. She turned her back to him, curling into a tight ball.
The silence stretched, thick and suffocating.
Hours later, the nightmare came.
She was back in the courtroom. The judge was screaming. Her father was crying. Vargo was laughing.
Cassidy thrashed in her sleep, her arm flinging out blindly.
Smash.
The sound of breaking glass shattered the night.
Cassidy woke with a gasp, sitting bolt upright. Kingsley was already moving, snapping on the bedside lamp.
On the floor, next to the marble nightstand, lay a watch. A vintage Patek Philippe. The crystal face was pulverized.
Kingsley stared at it. His face went completely white, then a dark, terrifying red.
"No," he whispered.
Cassidy scrambled out of bed, falling to her knees. "I'm so sorry, I was dreaming, I didn't mean to-" She reached for the pieces.
"Don't touch it!" Kingsley roared.
He grabbed her wrist, his grip like an iron shackle. He squeezed so hard her bones ground together.
"That was my grandfather's," he hissed, his eyes wild. "It survived two wars. It didn't survive one night with you."
"I'll pay for it," Cassidy cried, tears springing to her eyes from the pain in her wrist. "I'll fix it."
"You can't afford the air inside the case," Kingsley snarled. He flung her hand away.
Cassidy stumbled back, her elbow cracking against the bedpost. She cried out, clutching her arm. A bruise was already forming.
Kingsley saw it. For a second, his eyes flickered. Something like regret flashed behind the rage, but he crushed it instantly.
He stood up, breathing hard. "Add it to the debt. The interest just doubled."
He walked over and picked up the broken watch with trembling hands. "And since you like destroying my assets, you can work for them. The shareholder gala is in five months. You will handle the board members' widows. You will charm them. You will make them love you. If you fail, I sell your father's debt to a collection agency in Russia."
"I understand," Cassidy whispered, cradling her arm.
Kingsley turned off the light. "Go to sleep. And don't move."
He lay back down in the dark, clutching the broken watch to his chest. Cassidy lay on the edge of the mattress, tears leaking silently onto the pillow. She bit her lip to keep from sobbing.
Kingsley put in earplugs, but he didn't sleep.
Morning light filtered through the blinds, grey and unforgiving. As Cassidy walked into the breakfast nook, her phone vibrated on the granite counter. A text from Julian Ashford. Heard the news. Tell me this is some kind of joke. We need to talk. Before she could process it, Kingsley entered the room, his eyes immediately locking onto the illuminated screen.
He plucked the phone from the counter. His expression hardened as he read the message. He tossed the phone back without a word.
A moment later, Mercer was there, a new document on the table.
Kingsley was drinking black coffee, dressed in a three-piece suit that looked like armor. He didn't say good morning.
"Amendment to the service agreement," Mercer said, sliding the paper toward her. "Per Mr. Osborn's immediate request."
Cassidy read the legal jargon. The cost of the watch repair was astronomical. Then she saw the red text at the bottom.
Clause 108: The Party of the Second Part (Cassidy Steele) is strictly prohibited from any private, public, or digital contact with Julian Ashford.
Cassidy's head snapped up. "Julian?"
Kingsley set his cup down. The china clinked sharply against the saucer. "Is there a problem?"
"Julian is a client. He's a friend. He has nothing to do with this."
"He's a competitor," Kingsley said, his voice dropping an octave. "And I know about the plane ticket, Cassidy."
The air left the room.
"The ticket?" Cassidy frowned. "Six years ago? I bought a ticket to Zurich because my father needed a specialist. Julian just happened to be on the flight."
Kingsley's lip curled. "Coincidence? You expect me to believe you didn't run off with him? That you didn't sell him the algorithm?"
"I didn't!" Cassidy felt the old frustration clawing at her throat. "I was trying to save my dad! You wouldn't listen then, and you won't listen now."
"You're right. I won't." Kingsley pointed at the paper. "Sign it. Or get out."
Cassidy looked at him. She saw the wall behind his eyes. He had built an entire narrative of her betrayal, and Julian Ashford was the villain in his story. If she fought this, she lost everything.
She picked up the pen and slashed her signature across the line. The tip tore through the paper.
"Happy?" she asked, her voice trembling.
Kingsley took the paper. He looked satisfied, almost triumphant. "Ecstatic."
He stood up and left for the city without looking back.
Ten minutes later, Cassidy's phone, still on the table, lit up again.
Incoming Call: Julian Ashford.
She stared at the screen. Her thumb hovered over the green button. Julian was kind. Julian listened. Julian would help her.
But Julian couldn't save her father from the Feds.
She pressed the red button.
She looked up and saw a maid dusting a vase, watching her reflection in the glass. Spying.
She deleted the text message thread.
She opened her laptop and pulled up the Osborn Group's shareholder files. If she was going to be a prisoner, she would be a useful one. She started digging into the financials.
Buried in a sub-folder, mislabeled as 'Archived Catering Invoices,' she found something odd. A series of shell companies buying up stock in a rival tech firm. The transaction logs were protected by a simple cipher she only recognized from a case two years ago. It was sloppy, almost intentionally so. Was this incompetence? Or was it a test?
Kingsley was planning a hostile takeover. A massive one. And he was overleveraged.
If this leaked, he was ruined.
Cassidy stared at the screen. She held the gun that could kill him. But strangely, she didn't want to pull the trigger. She wanted to help him aim.
The next morning, Cassidy woke up to an empty room. Her suitcase still hadn't been brought up. The butler had "forgotten" again.
She stood in the middle of the room in her pajamas, shivering. She couldn't go downstairs like this. She couldn't face the staff.
She walked to the dressing room door and pushed it open.
It was larger than her old apartment. Rows of suits, shoes, and ties were organized with military precision.
She hesitated, then reached for a white dress shirt hanging in the back. It was crisp, Egyptian cotton. She slipped it on.
It engulfed her. The hem hit her mid-thigh, the sleeves hanging past her hands. It smelled like him-clean, sharp, masculine. She buttoned it up, rolling the sleeves.
The door to the bedroom opened.
Kingsley walked in. He was sweaty, breathing hard from a run. His t-shirt clung to his chest.
He stopped dead.
His eyes swept over her-the bare legs, the oversized shirt, the messy hair. For a second, the mask slipped. His pupils dilated. His throat worked as he swallowed.
He didn't look like a CEO. He looked like a man starving.
"My luggage is missing," Cassidy stammered, pulling the collar tight.
Kingsley didn't speak. He walked toward her, slow and predatory. He backed her up until her calves hit the bench at the foot of the bed.
He placed a hand on the wall beside her head, trapping her. The heat radiating from his body was overwhelming.
"Are you trying to seduce me, Mrs. Osborn?" he murmured, his voice rough.
Cassidy's face burned. "It was force majeure. I had nothing to wear."
Kingsley reached out. His fingers grazed the collar of the shirt, brushing her skin. Her breath hitched. He leaned in, his gaze dropping to her lips. The air between them crackled with electricity.
"Please," Cassidy whispered, her hand coming up to push against his chest. "Don't. This is unprofessional."
The word was a bucket of ice water.
Kingsley froze. The heat in his eyes instantly crystallized into ice. He recoiled as if she had burned him.
"Don't you dare," he snarled, stepping back. "Don't you dare talk about professionalism while wearing my clothes and texting another man."
He ripped his running watch off his wrist and threw it onto the bench.
"Take it off," he commanded.
Cassidy blinked, confused. "What?"
"The shirt. Take it off. Now."
"Kingsley, I'm not wearing anything underneath-"
"I don't care," he yelled, his voice cracking with rage. "I don't want you wearing my clothes while you're thinking about him. It makes me sick."
Cassidy felt tears prick her eyes. The humiliation was absolute.
"Turn around," she whispered.
Kingsley turned his back, his shoulders heaving.
With shaking fingers, Cassidy undid the buttons. She let the shirt fall to the floor, standing there in her underwear, exposed and shivering. She grabbed her pajamas from the bed and scrambled into them.
"It's off," she choked out.
She ran past him into the bathroom and locked the door.
Outside, she heard a loud thud, as if a fist had just punched through a mahogany wardrobe door.