"A threat"
There was no smile on his face, just calm calculation. But there was something else, too. Beneath the corporate menace beneath the tailored suit and strategic stillness something dangerous flickered.
Interest.
Desire.
She could use that.
“Then maybe you should have left me downstairs,” she said, brushing past him, fingers trailing the edge of a velvet curtain.
“I tried,” he said, his voice low and close. “But then you turned around in that dress, and I forgot every rule I made about unknown women.”
She turned. “I’m not unknown.”
“Not yet.”
He stepped closer. She didn’t back away.
Cassian’s eyes dipped, slowly, deliberately—past her mouth, down her throat, then up again. “Where are you from?”
“Nowhere you’d recognize.”
“What do you want?”
“To disappear.”
“Why are you lying?”
“Because it’s safer.”
The honesty was so stark, it stole the smirk from his lips. For the first time, he paused—not because he doubted her, but because she’d said it like a woman who’d had to.
He stared at her, and in that second, she wasn’t a con. She wasn’t a mark.
She was something else.
Zara stepped into his space, looking up at him.
“If you’re trying to intimidate me, Mr. Wolfe,” she said, “you’re going to have to do better than staring and brooding. I’ve been threatened by men with fewer resources and more imagination.”
Cassian exhaled a low, amused breath. “You really don’t scare easy, do you?”
“I used to.”
“What changed?”
“I died once.”
Cassian’s expression shifted. For the first time, she saw something like respect flicker in his eyes.
He reached out—slowly—and brushed a strand of hair from her cheek. His fingers were warm. Callused. Too gentle for the way he looked at the world.
Zara didn’t move.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he said softly.
“I know.”
And then—
He kissed her.
Not with hesitation.
Not with sweetness.
With claiming.
His hand slid to the back of her neck as he pulled her against him, and the kiss landed like a match to oil. Zara’s fingers twisted in his shirt, anchoring herself to something she knew was going to ruin her.
It wasn’t gentle. It wasn’t tentative.
It was war.
And she didn’t pull away.
Not even when her mind screamed that this was dangerous.
Not even when his breath against her mouth growled, “Tell me to stop.”
Because she wouldn’t.
Because she didn’t want him to.
The door clicked behind her.
Zara stepped into the night air, her breath fogging faintly as the wind whipped through the high ledge of the rooftop. Her heels clicked against the stone. She didn’t stop walking until she hit the edge—gripping the cool railing like it might anchor her.
Her lips still tingled from the kiss.
She’d let him kiss her.
Worse, she’d kissed him back.
She pressed a hand to her mouth like she could erase it. Stupid. She wasn’t supposed to make mistakes like this. Not with men like him. Not on jobs this close to exposure.
Behind her, the rooftop door groaned open again.
She didn’t turn.
“Can’t handle five minutes alone?” she said flatly.
Cassian’s voice followed, steady and low. “You didn’t strike me as the type to run.”
“I didn’t. I walked.”
“You kissed me like someone who doesn’t walk away.”
“You kissed me like someone who thinks kissing fixes anything.”
Silence.
The wind tossed a strand of her hair across her cheek. Cassian came to stand beside her, not too close—but close enough for her to feel the gravity of his presence.
He looked out over the glittering skyline. “Tell me the truth.”
“About what?”
“Why you’re really here.”
Zara didn’t look at him. “I could ask you the same.”
“You know who I am.”
“I do.”
“And you still let me touch you.”
She let out a breath—part laugh, part exhale. “You think that was your power?”
He turned, facing her now. “No. I think you’re dangerous.”
Zara met his gaze. “I am.”
There was something between them again, something sharp, unstable, like glass under pressure.
Cassian stepped forward. “Then show me what you’re hiding.”
“You wouldn’t survive it.”
He didn’t answer with words.
He reached for her—slowly, giving her every second to move. She didn’t. She didn’t even blink.
When his hand touched her waist, Zara’s breath hitched. His palm was warm, firm. Possessive in a way that should have pissed her off. Instead, it sent lightning down her spine.
He leaned in.
“I don’t want the version of you that fits in this dress,” he said, voice rough against her ear. “I want the one who keeps knives in her purse.”
“I don’t carry a purse.”
“Then where’s the knife?”
“Wouldn’t you like to know.”
He kissed her again.
This time, it wasn’t a question.
Zara pushed him back until his spine hit the stone wall beside the roof’s stairwell entrance. Their mouths collided with urgency—teeth, breath, hands tangling fast. He grabbed her hips, lifting her slightly, and she let out a soft gasp against his throat.
Her thigh hitched around his waist, and his jacket hit the floor.
Clothes became interruptions.
Words disappeared.
This wasn’t soft.
This wasn’t safe.
This was two people desperate to forget who they were.
The rooftop became a blur—cold air, hot skin, the hum of danger in her veins. Cassian was all fire and fury, but beneath it, there was control. Always control. The way he gripped her thighs. The way he breathed her name into her collarbone like a secret.
And Zara?
She didn’t stop it.
Because somewhere deep down, she wanted to be ruined by him.
Just once.
Just tonight.
When it was over, they didn’t speak. He tucked her hair behind her ear like he was tempted to pretend this was more than it was.
She slipped back into her dress without a word.
And disappeared down the stairs before he could even button his shirt.
The bed was cold when he reached for her.
Cassian’s eyes opened to soft morning gray filtering in through the penthouse suite’s massive windows, but the warmth beside him was gone. No weight. No voice. No movement.
Just the faint imprint of her body in the sheets, and the fading scent of something floral and forbidden—like jasmine and danger.
He sat up slowly.
No sound of heels on the floor. No running shower. No creak of a door. The suite was silent.
She was gone.
Cassian stared at the empty space beside him, then reached for the side table, checking for a note, a card, a damn lipstick kiss on a napkin. Nothing.
Only the ring from her wine-red dress, still hanging on the armchair across the room—like she’d stood there, watching him sleep, and then vanished into thin air.
She hadn’t left in a rush.
No.
She planned it.
He ran a hand down his face, trying to ignore the strange tightness in his chest.
He should’ve seen it coming.
She’d been a ghost from the start. No last name. No details. Just a look, a smirk, and eyes that didn’t blink when he leaned too close.
Cassian swung his legs over the edge of the bed and stood, bare feet brushing the cool tile. His suit jacket lay where she’d pushed it aside. He picked it up and paused.
Something was missing.
His pocket watch—an antique, silver, a gift from his grandfather—was gone.
Of course.
He laughed, dry and bitter. “Clever girl.”
He wasn’t even mad.
Well, maybe a little.
But mostly?
He was curious.
Cassian walked to the window, letting the full sweep of the city skyline hit his eyes. Down below, limos crawled like insects, people moved like data points, and somewhere out there…
She was walking away like none of this had happened.
She didn’t even look back.
And that?
That was new.
Cassian Wolfe didn’t get left.
Not without a reason.
He stood there, shirt half-buttoned, jaw tense, pulse ticking louder than the traffic below—and made a decision.
Find her.
Not because he missed her.
Not because he wanted to.
But because no one disappears on him.
Not without consequences.
Cassian Wolfe didn’t get rattled.
He made billion-dollar decisions before breakfast. Signed off on mergers that gutted empires. He walked through his world like a king in a city built to kneel.
But that morning, as the glass elevator carried him to the top floor of Wolfe Enterprises, the silk ring of her perfume still clung to the inside of his jacket—and it bothered him.
He didn’t know her name.
Didn’t know where she went.
Didn’t even know if Zara was real.
But he remembered the way she said it, cool and offhand, like she’d done this before—like disappearing was a habit, not a trick.
The elevator doors opened into glass and gold.
His assistant, Leona Vixon, stood at her desk, typing at speeds that suggested someone had already pissed her off.
She looked up.
Paused.
“You look like you committed murder in a tux,” she said without missing a beat.
Cassian didn’t answer. He walked past her, tossing his jacket onto the back of the nearest leather chair.
“I need you to find someone,” he said.
Leona arched a brow. “Romantic entanglement, corporate threat, or personal vendetta?”
“Yes.”
She sighed, following him inside. “You’re in rare form.”
“I need guest list access from last night’s gala. Cross-check with security footage. There was a woman—wine-red silk, black hair, around five-six. She left early.”
Leona’s fingers paused over her phone. “You brought a stranger home?”
“I didn’t bring her anywhere. She brought herself.”
“Well, that’s ominous.” Leona tilted her head. “What do I call this file? ‘Femme Fatale’?”
“Call it what you want,” he said, sliding behind his desk. “Just find her.”
Leona watched him for a moment. “This about your father’s charity deal? Because if you’re spiraling again—”
“She stole from me.”
That made her pause.
Leona’s eyes narrowed. “What?”
“My grandfather’s pocket watch. Gone.”
For the first time, she looked genuinely surprised.
“You think it was a setup?”
“I think she played me.”
Leona let out a low whistle. “Damn. She must’ve been good.”
Cassian didn’t respond. He was staring at his phone, the screen blank, her name unsaved.
No name.
No number.
No leverage.
He hated it.
“I’ll see what I can dig up,” Leona said, stepping out. “But just a heads up—ghosts are hard to track.”
“She wasn’t a ghost,” he muttered.
But even as he said it, he wasn’t sure he believed it.
The woman from last night wasn’t just someone passing through.
She’d taken something far more valuable than the watch.
She’d taken control.
And Cassian Wolfe didn’t lose control.
Not to anyone.
The apartment smelled like printer toner, fake Chanel, and burnt toast.
Zara stood barefoot in front of the mirror, tugging the zipper of her newest silk blouse with one hand while Emilio paced behind her, laptop open, balancing on a teetering stack of forged banking files and birth certificates.
“Okay,” he said, typing with one hand and pouring cereal with the other, “our fabricated trust fund is now ‘active’ with $4.2 million of not-real dollars backed by five equally not-real holding companies. Your new financial advisor? Also fake. But the website is stunning.”
“Don’t forget to upload the photos of me in Monaco,” Zara said absently, smoothing her hair into a bun sleek enough to murder someone with.
“Done. And I added a blurry one where you're wearing sunglasses and looking off a yacht deck like you just told someone to drown themselves.”
“Perfect. She’d absolutely do that.”
He grinned. “You’re officially a legend.”
Zara didn’t respond. She was staring at her reflection—specifically at the small bruise beneath her collarbone.
She touched it once, then let her hand drop.
“You’re quiet,” Emilio said, turning around. “Is it nerves or something worse?”
“I’m thinking.”
“Liar. You’re spiraling. I know the difference. Your left eye does that twitch thing when you spiral.”
“I am not spiraling.”
“You slept weird, didn’t you? You never wear your bun this tight unless something’s off.”
“Nothing’s off.”
He crossed his arms, skeptical. “You’ve got that look. The ‘I did something reckless and I’m trying to emotionally blackmail myself into pretending it didn’t happen’ look.”
Zara turned to him. “You give my facial expressions too much credit.”
He studied her face for another second.
Then: “Okay. Hypothetically… you didn’t just disappear in the middle of the night and do something impulsive like, say, hook up with someone dangerous.”
She froze.
Emilio blinked. “No.”
Zara said nothing.
“Oh my God,” he hissed. “Z.”
“It wasn’t planned.”
“Who?”
She hesitated. “He was at the party.”
“You told me not to touch anyone at that party. You practically slapped a flute out of my hand because it wasn’t sealed.”
“I was careful.”
“You were stupid.”
“It was just one night.”
Emilio gave her a hard look. “Was he rich?”
“Obviously.”
“Was he married?”
“No.”
“Was he someone we’ll never see again?”
She opened her mouth—then closed it.
That was all he needed.
“Oh no,” Emilio said, dropping his cereal. “Oh no no no—who was it?”
Zara ran a hand over her face.
Then, quietly: “Cassian Wolfe.”
Dead silence.
The only sound was the soft clink of the spoon hitting the floor.
“You… slept with Cassian Wolfe?” Emilio asked, voice thin with disbelief.
“I didn’t know who he was at the time.”
“He’s literally the face of every Forbes spread in the tri-state area. He’s got his own cologne.”
“He wasn’t wearing it.”
“I cannot believe you.”
“I didn’t do it on purpose.”
Emilio paced in a wide, angry circle. “Do you realize what this means? You’re about to walk into Wolfe Enterprises as a fake heiress and seduce intel out of the man who literally owns it—and also maybe still has your underwear?”
Zara winced. “He doesn't have—”
“Z!”
“I panicked, okay?” she snapped. “I didn’t plan to sleep with the CEO of the company tied to my mother’s death. It just happened.”
“Well,” Emilio muttered, “now we have a new rule.”
“No more one-night stands with billionaires?”
“No more one-night stands with billionaires who might accidentally recognize you while you’re committing corporate espionage!”
Zara walked to the small table and picked up the forged Moretti dossier, flipping it open.
“Too late,” she said. “I already sent in the proposal.”
Emilio stared. “You what?”
She looked up.
And smiled.
Wolfe Enterprises' 38th-floor boardroom was all white leather, black marble, and cold power. The kind of space built to intimidate. No clutter, no color, no mercy.
Cassian sat at the head of the table, fingers steepled, face unreadable as Leona briefed the room.
“Our next file,” she said, placing a folder in front of him, “is from Moretti Holdings.”
The name tugged something deep in his chest.
He flipped the file open and stopped.
The photo clipped to the top corner was in high resolution. Better lighting. Better clothes.
But it was her.
Zara.
Hair pulled back. Perfect posture. A wine-red lipstick he recognized far too well.
The name printed beneath the image: Zara Moretti, Principal Stakeholder, Moretti Holdings Group.
For a half-second, the room narrowed.
So this was her move.
She hadn’t run.
She’d walked straight into the lion’s den—and dressed like the one who owned it.
“She’s requested a private pitch,” Leona added. “One-on-one. Her firm’s discretion clause requires tight confidentiality.”
Cassian closed the file and looked up slowly.
“One-on-one?”
Leona nodded. “She said she prefers to negotiate directly with power.”
Of course she did.
Cassian stood. “Schedule it. And clear the floor when she arrives.”
Leona hesitated. “Sir, we usually require—”
“She’s not usual.”
He walked out before she could ask questions. His pulse was steady, but only because he made it be.
In the elevator, alone, he let himself smile. Just slightly.
She came to him.
He didn’t need to chase her anymore.
Now?
She would stay exactly where he wanted her.
One hour later.
The door opened.
She stepped in like she’d been here a thousand times.
Tailored black pants. A sleeveless silk blouse tucked just so. Hair slicked back. Heels like a quiet threat.
Zara Moretti.
Cassian didn’t rise.
He watched her walk the full length of the boardroom table—each step deliberate, slow, confident. She stopped across from him. Didn’t extend her hand.
“Mr. Wolfe,” she said smoothly. “Thank you for the meeting.”
He tilted his head. “You’re hard to forget.”
“I get that a lot.”
“No,” he said. “You don’t.”
Her lips twitched.
She sat.
Their eyes locked across the table.
He could see it in her—the effort to appear calm, unfazed. The shield was up. But he knew better now. He’d seen her without it. Heard her breath catch when she let go. Tasted the truth on her skin.
She was lying again.
And he was going to let her.
For now.
“I reviewed your proposal,” he said, opening her folder with lazy interest. “Looks clean. Impressive, even.”
“Thank you. I like my lies to be tidy.”
He looked up. “You’re not even trying to deny it?”
She smiled. “If I were lying.”
He nodded, smirking faintly. “Right.”
A long silence settled. Tense. Charged.
Finally, Cassian slid the file aside and leaned back.
“I’m not interested in a partnership.”
Her expression didn’t falter. “Then why take the meeting?”
“I’m offering you a job.”
She blinked.
He smiled. Slow. Dangerous.
“Executive assistant. High compensation. Full access. Proximity guaranteed.”