Chapter 5

The first time Raven saw Jaxon Morreau break a man, he didn't raise his voice. He didn't throw punches or pull a gun or even move quickly. There was no flash of violence, no theatrical rage. Just stillness. Precision. Ice in the shape of a man. And it chilled her more than any screaming brute ever could.

It began with a phone call.

She was in his office, seated on the leather chaise with her notebook in hand, pretending to take inventory of club shipments, an excuse Jaxon had given her to justify her presence, but the real reason was simpler. He wanted her close.

The moment the call came in, something changed in him. His posture, his breath, the way he folded his fingers together like he was preparing for surgery.

"She took the money?" he asked, voice quiet.

There was a pause as whoever was on the other end of the line stammered through their explanation.

Jaxon's eyes went flat. "Where is he now?"

Another pause. "Bring him to the lounge. Ten minutes."

He hung up.

"Problem?" Raven asked, schooling her features into curiosity instead of dread.

He stood slowly, adjusted his cuffs. "A man forgot who he works for."

"Forgot, or decided he didn't care?"

Jaxon looked at her, amused by the challenge in her voice. "Does it matter?"

"Depends on what you do next."

He walked toward her and stopped just short of touching. "You've seen how I take control of a body," he murmured, voice like velvet stretched over razors. "Now you'll see how I take control of a man's future."

The lounge wasn't part of the main club, it was deeper. Private. Guarded. The lighting was soft and moody, and everything smelled expensive.

Raven stood near the bar, watching as two of Jaxon's men dragged in someone she didn't recognize.

He was in his thirties, maybe. Sweating. Face flushed. Cheap suit. He stumbled as they shoved him forward, and when he saw Jaxon, he tried to straighten.

"Mr. Morreau, sir, I didn't know..."

Jaxon held up a hand. "Silence."

The man fell quiet like someone had snapped their fingers inside his throat.

Raven's skin prickled.

Jaxon stepped forward and adjusted the man's tie, not harshly, but carefully, like he was grooming a child for a funeral.

"Do you know what betrayal smells like?" he asked.

The man blinked. "What?"

"It smells like sweat and desperation. Just like you."

"I didn't mean to..."

"You skimmed five thousand off the private bottle service accounts," Jaxon said calmly. "And then you gambled it away."

"I was gonna put it back."

"Stop talking." He said it so gently, so softly, that Raven felt the words inside her bones.

The man's mouth closed.

Jaxon stepped back and nodded once to Victor, who stood behind the bar.

Victor opened a drawer, retrieved something heavy.

Raven's stomach flipped when she saw the object.

A mallet. Not a gun. Not a knife. A wooden-handled mallet with a steel head, gleaming under the overhead light.

Jaxon took it from Victor's hands.

The room felt like it shrank.

He walked to a small, antique table in the center of the lounge. Placed the mallet down beside it. Then looked back at the trembling man.

"Put your hand on the table."

The man flinched. "Please..."

"Now."

He obeyed. Slow. Shaking.

Raven couldn't breathe.

Jaxon rolled his sleeves to the elbow. "First," he said, "you'll tell me the names of the men who helped you."

"There weren't any."

Jaxon raised a brow.

The man crumbled. "Okay, okay, Marcus from downstairs. He helped. He looked the other way."

"Good."

Then, without pause, Jaxon raised the mallet and brought it down.

A sickening crunch of bone echoed through the lounge. The man screamed, collapsing to his knees, clutching his broken hand.

Jaxon didn't flinch. Didn't look away. He placed the mallet back on the table as if it were a wine glass and turned to Victor. "Take him to medical. Make sure the hand's fucked but usable. Then fire Marcus. Quietly."

Victor nodded. The man was dragged out, still screaming. And then it was quiet again.

Jaxon turned back to Raven, who stood frozen against the wall, heart hammering. He looked at her, his expression unreadable. "You wanted to know who I am," he said. "Now you do."

She didn't speak.

He approached her slowly, stopping just inches away. "I didn't kill him," he said softly. "I didn't pull a trigger or slit a throat. I didn't even break a sweat."

"Is that supposed to impress me?"

"No," he said. "It's supposed to teach you."

He leaned down, his breath warm against her neck. "This is my world. Order, control, consequence. If you want to walk beside me, Raven, you need to understand how that world survives."

She didn't move. "And if I don't?"

"Then you're just another outsider."

He stepped back.

She finally found her voice. "You crushed his hand like it was nothing."

"No," he said. "I crushed it because it meant something."

Back in the office, she paced while Jaxon poured himself a drink.

"You could've scared him," she said. "Used words. Not a weapon."

He sipped, unfazed. "Fear fades. Pain doesn't."

"That's monstrous."

He looked at her, and for a moment, something in his gaze shifted. Softer. Not apologetic. But human.

"Do you know what monsters and kings have in common, Raven?"

She said nothing.

"They both get remembered."

She shook her head. "You're just trying to justify it."

"No," he said, walking toward her, "I'm showing you the rules of this game. And letting you decide if you're still willing to play."

He stopped in front of her and took her wrist.

She tensed, but he didn't pull. Just placed her hand against his chest. "Feel that?"

His heartbeat was steady. Strong. "I'm not made of stone," he said quietly. "But I've had to carve myself into something unbreakable. Because in this world, softness gets you killed."

Her fingers curled involuntarily.

"Do you want out?" he asked.

She looked up at him, lips parting.

"No."

He nodded once. "Then remember what you saw tonight."

That night, she wrote in the journal again: I thought he was cold. But he's not. He's methodical. Sharp. He doesn't act on emotion, he uses it to control others. And God help me, I'm beginning to understand why that's power.

I should hate him. I should want to leave.

But when he placed my hand on his chest, I didn't want to pull away. I wanted to feel how human he wasn't.

The next morning, Raven woke to a package at her hotel door. Inside: a tailored black blazer. Silk lining. Sharp lapels. Her initials monogrammed inside.

And a note: Wear this. You represent me now.

-J.M.

The collar was still in the drawer beside her bed.

She hadn't worn it again. But today, as she dressed, she looked at both, the blazer and the collar, and realized something terrifying.

She didn't feel owned. She felt powerful. Because he had chosen her. And somehow, she'd chosen him too.

Chapter 6

The invitation came in the form of a single white card slipped beneath her hotel room door.

No handwriting. No stamp. Just a message embossed in deep black ink: Midnight. Top floor. Wear red.

There was no signature. None was needed. Jaxon Morreau never repeated himself.

Raven held the card in her hand for a long time, her thumb brushing the edge like she could feel his voice in the weight of the paper. The last time she'd been summoned to the top floor, he'd broken something inside her she hadn't known was still fragile, her belief in her own autonomy.

She hadn't bled, but she hadn't walked out the same, either.

Tonight, he wasn't calling her for punishment. There was no lie to interrogate, no defiance to tame. Which meant this was something worse.

Something intentional. Something planned.

The red dress waiting in her closet hadn't been there the night before. She hadn't bought it. She would have remembered something like that. It was too perfect. Too precise. Red like sin. Silk like skin. Backless. Strapless. Shimmering. It fit like it had been sewn to the measurements of her guilt.

There was no note. No label. Just a whisper of perfume on the fabric that didn't belong to her.

She almost didn't put it on. But of course she did.

The club roared beneath her heels as she made her way through Eden. The air was thick with sex and secrets, bodies grinding beneath the gold-tinted lights. She moved like a red thread woven through black silk, eyes following her, some in admiration, some in warning.

The bouncer at the private elevator didn't speak. He simply stepped aside.

Jaxon's presence lived in the space between gestures.

The ride up was as smooth and silent as ever, the kind of rich stillness that made your thoughts louder.

By the time the doors opened, her pulse was a steady drumbeat.

And he was waiting.

The top floor was transformed. Gone were the usual dim lights and cigar smoke. The space was bathed in candlelight, golden and soft, with a grand piano glowing in the corner like it had been conjured just for this night. The city skyline bled through the windows, a dark canvas of blinking light.

Jaxon stood in the center of the room in a three-piece black suit, shirt unbuttoned at the collar, sleeves rolled halfway up his forearms like he'd just finished something dangerous and elegant.

He didn't smile when he saw her, but his eyes told her everything. They darkened. Dilated. Devoured.

"Raye," he said.

"Jaxon."

He reached out a hand. No words. No demands. Just the invitation of touch.

She stepped forward and placed her hand in his. His palm was warm. Strong. He pulled her gently toward him, their bodies fitting together like a secret. And then, impossibly, music began.

Not from speakers. Not from a phone. Live.

A violinist stepped from the shadows, tuxedoed and graceful, bow sliding across strings with practiced care. A waltz. Slow. Haunting. The sound curled through the air like smoke.

"You planned this," Raven whispered.

"Of course I did."

"Why?"

He pulled her closer, one hand settling at her waist, the other holding hers aloft. "Because I want to watch you lose control in a different way."

They began to move.

Raven didn't know how to waltz. She'd never needed to. But somehow, his body made hers obey. His steps led hers like a current pulling the shore under. One-two-three, turn. His hand pressed her lower back, guiding her spine. Their eyes locked. Her heels slid across the floor like her limbs didn't belong to her anymore.

"You're not trying to seduce me tonight," she said breathlessly.

"No," he murmured. "I'm reminding you who I am."

"And who's that?"

"The man who always finishes what he starts."

The music swelled, and he spun her. Her dress flared like flame. Her pulse soared.

Raven let herself forget, for a moment, the stories she was chasing. The missing girls. The dark corners of Club Eden. The proof tucked into her bag like a ticking bomb.

Tonight, there was only the glide of silk on silk. His hand on her spine. The ache behind her ribs.

He dipped her, slowly, her back arching as his face hovered above hers. Not kissing. Not yet. Just watching her breathe.

"You still think you're not mine?" he asked.

She gasped as he pulled her upright.

"You don't own me."

"I do," he said. "Not because you kneel, but because when you stand, you're still thinking about my hand around your throat."

The truth of it struck like a match. He was in her blood now. In every inhale, every exhale. His voice lived behind her thoughts. His command echoed in her bones.

She should've hated him. But she was dancing with him. And hating him would mean letting go.

The song ended, and he didn't release her.

"Again," he said softly, pulling her closer.

The violinist shifted to a new melody. Slower. Darker. The air grew thicker.

Jaxon's lips brushed her temple. "Tell me what you're afraid of."

"I'm not afraid."

"Liar."

She gritted her teeth. "Losing control."

"Too late."

He turned her, pulled her against his chest, and held her there. Not dancing now, just holding. Possessive. Claiming. His breath skimmed her ear.

"I could have you tonight," he whispered. "Here. Now. In front of the city, in front of the sky. You'd come apart for me, just like before."

Her knees threatened to give.

"But I won't," he continued. "Because I want your mind begging before I take your body again."

He stepped back suddenly. The music cut off.

The violinist disappeared without a word, like a ghost dismissed. And then they were alone again.

Jaxon walked to the bar and poured himself a drink. Raven stood rooted, trembling in her heels, fists clenched.

"That's it?" she said finally. "You bring me here. Dress me up. Dance with me. And then just walk away?"

He turned, drink in hand. "Did you want more?"

She stared at him. "You know I did."

"Then say it."

"No."

He took a slow sip, eyes locked to hers. "There it is again. That pride. That fire."

He walked toward her, stopping only when their bodies nearly touched. "I'll break it eventually."

"You'll try."

"You're already cracking."

He reached up and cupped her jaw, his thumb brushing her lower lip. "You want me to kiss you, don't you?"

She said nothing.

"You want my hand between your thighs."

Still, she stayed silent.

"You want to be bent over that piano like a song I've already written."

Her breath hitched.

"And yet," he murmured, "you're still standing here, pretending you have control."

She glared at him. "Because I do."

He smiled, dark, amused, reverent. Then he stepped back, just far enough to cool the air.

"You're dismissed, Raye."

The elevator ride down was longer than it should've been. Long enough for her pulse to slow. Long enough for the shame to sneak in. Long enough for her panties to stay soaked and her jaw to stay clenched.

She wanted him. And he knew it. But he hadn't touched her. He didn't have to.

Back in her room, she stripped off the dress slowly, letting it slide to the floor like blood.

She stood in front of the mirror, naked and flushed, and stared at her reflection like it was someone else. Someone who'd danced with the devil and begged him not to stop.

She opened the black journal and wrote: He didn't fuck me tonight. He danced with me. And it was worse. Because now I want him more than ever. Not just his cock. I want his attention. I want his time. I want to matter.

She closed the book. But the truth didn't stay closed.

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