Chapter 2

The silence in the precinct was suffocating. Griffin's eyes—those piercing, intelligent eyes that had haunted my dreams for six years—locked onto mine with an intensity that made my knees buckle. Sonny's innocent declaration echoed between us: 'I found Dad!' The words hung in the air like a death sentence for every lie I'd built my life upon. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't think. I could only act on pure, desperate instinct.

I grabbed Sonny's hand, my fingers trembling as I pulled him toward the exit. 'We need to go,' I whispered, my voice cracking. 'Now.'

The humid summer air hit us like a wall as we burst onto the street. I fumbled with my keys, rushing toward my ancient Honda parked in the precinct lot. My hands shook so violently I could barely fit the key into the ignition. I turned it with a desperate twist.

Nothing. The engine made a sick, grinding noise and then went silent.

'Come on, come on, come on,' I muttered, trying again. The car responded with a feeble click.

'Mom, why is our car dying?' Sonny asked from the backseat, clutching his T-Rex dinosaur.

Before I could answer, a shadow fell across my window. I looked up to find Griffin standing there, his tall frame backlit by the harsh afternoon sun. He didn't say a word. He simply opened my car door and held it, his expression unreadable.

'Get out,' he said quietly. It wasn't a request.

I opened my mouth to protest, but the words died in my throat when I saw his eyes. There was no rage there, only a cold, controlled intensity that was far more dangerous.

Griffin walked to a gleaming black SUV parked nearby and opened the back door. Sonny, oblivious to the tension crackling in the air, scrambled out of my car and into the luxury vehicle with a delighted gasp.

'Wow! This is the coolest car I've ever seen!'

I had no choice but to follow. The interior of Griffin's SUV was a shrine to perfection—leather seats, climate control, and the subtle scent of his cologne that made my heart race with memories I'd tried so hard to bury. I slid into the passenger seat, keeping my eyes fixed straight ahead as Griffin started the engine.

The drive to my apartment was excruciating. Sonny chattered happily from the backseat, detailing every twist and turn of his bus journey across Manhattan. 'I took the M15 to 42nd, then the 7 train to Grand Central, and then—'

'Sonny,' I interrupted, 'how did you know where to go?'

Griffin's hands tightened imperceptibly on the steering wheel.

'Dad's letter,' Sonny said simply. 'He wrote it all down.'

The word 'Dad' hit Griffin like a physical blow. His jaw clenched, and for a moment I thought he might pull over and demand answers right there. But he kept driving, his eyes never leaving the road.

When we pulled up to my building—a run-down walk-up with peeling paint and a perpetually broken intercom—I saw Griffin's face darken. He took in the cracked concrete steps, the graffiti on the wall beside the door, the general air of decay that permeated the place I called home.

We trudged up the stairs in heavy silence. When we reached my apartment door, I fumbled with my keys, my nerves making the simple task nearly impossible.

The door swung open before I could unlock it. Margaret stood in the doorway, her hands on her hips, her eyes narrowing as they landed on Griffin.

'You took long enough,' she said by way of greeting, her voice as sharp as broken glass.

She stepped aside, gesturing for us to enter. 'Sit. You'll be eating with us. I assume you can stomach soup, Mr. Billionaire?'

Griffin's gaze swept over our cramped apartment—the threadbare furniture, the ancient appliances, the makeshift dining table where we ate all our meals. I watched his expression shift from shock to something darker, more possessive.

'Soup is fine,' he said, his voice carefully controlled.

Dinner was a blur of awkward silence and Margaret's pointed remarks. Sonny eventually excused himself to play, and the fragile peace held until he was tucked into bed, his dinosaur clutched tightly in his small arms.

Then Griffin cornered me in the tiny kitchen, his fury finally breaking through the careful mask he'd worn all evening.

'Why?' he demanded, his voice low and dangerous. 'Why did you hide him from me? Why did you marry another man?'

The accusation in his eyes cut deeper than any knife. I reached into my purse with shaking hands and pulled out a folded, worn piece of paper.

'It's not what you think,' I whispered. 'Zain was—is—gay. We married so Sonny would have a father's name. He died the day Sonny was born.'

Griffin stared at the letter in my hand, his expression shifting from rage to something I couldn't name—pain, regret, and a devastating realization of his own.

Without another word, he turned and walked out the door, leaving me standing alone in the wreckage of the life I'd built to protect us both.

Chapter 3

The breakroom at Miller & Associates smelled of burnt decaf and the cloying, expensive cologne of a man who thought money bought consent. Marcus Holt leaned against the laminate counter, effectively pinning me between the coffee machine and the sink. He was a 'whale'—the kind of client my boss warned me to coddle at all costs.

“You know, Adalyn,” Marcus murmured, his hand sliding onto the counter inches from my hip, “a woman with your… assets shouldn’t be wasting her time showing studio apartments in Queens. I have a penthouse that needs a certain touch. A private viewing, perhaps?”

My skin crawled. I could feel the heat of his breath, the predatory focus in his eyes. I tightened my grip on my clipboard until my knuckles went white. “I’m a professional, Mr. Holt. If you’re interested in the penthouse, we can schedule a formal walkthrough during office hours.”

“I think we both know I’m interested in more than the floor plan,” he said, his voice dropping to a greasy whisper as he reached out to tuck a strand of hair behind my ear.

I flinched, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I was trapped by the paycheck, by the rent, by the fear of losing the only stability I had. Then, the heavy swinging door to the breakroom didn’t just open; it slammed against the wall with the force of a thunderclap.

The air in the room didn’t just cool—it froze. Griffin Ellis stood in the doorway, his silhouette a dark, jagged tear in the mundane office setting. He didn’t look at me. His gaze was a lethal laser leveled directly at Marcus’s hand.

“Remove your hand,” Griffin said. His voice was a low, vibrating growl that made the spoons in the sink rattle.

Marcus bristled, trying to summon his own meager authority. “Who the hell are you? This is a private—”

Griffin moved with the silent, terrifying speed of a predator. In two strides, he was in Marcus’s space, his towering frame casting a shadow that swallowed the smaller man whole. He didn't strike him; he simply leaned in, his presence an overwhelming physical threat.

“I am the man who owns the debt on your firm’s headquarters,” Griffin said, his voice terrifyingly calm. “And as of this second, you are blacklisted from every property managed by Empire Holdings. If I see your name on a lease or a deed in this city again, I will ruin you. Get out.”

Marcus didn't argue. He turned tail and vanished, the door swinging frantically in his wake.

Silence rushed back in, heavy and suffocating. Griffin finally turned to me. His eyes were dark with a turbulent mix of fury and something that looked suspiciously like agony.

“Quit,” he commanded. “Now. Pack your things. You aren't staying in this den of vultures another minute.”

My fear snapped into a sharp, jagged pride. “I can’t just quit, Griffin. Unlike you, I don’t have a billion-dollar safety net. I have a son to feed. I have a life that doesn't involve you.”

He stepped closer, his jaw tight enough to crack bone. “You think I’m letting you stay here? After that?”

“It’s my job,” I hissed, the insecurity of six years boiling over. “I’m a real estate agent. This is what I do. You don't get to swoop in and dictate my life just because you’re angry.”

He stared at me for a long, pulse-pounding minute. “Fine,” he said, the word a sharp blade. “If you want to work, you’ll work for me.”

An hour later, my manager was practically bowing at Griffin’s feet. Empire Holdings had just retained me as an exclusive consultant. The task: ten commercial property tours. Today.

By the second building, my feet were screaming. I had bought these flats at a discount warehouse three years ago; the soles were thin as paper, and the backs were stiff, unforgiving plastic. With every step on the cold pavement and the hard industrial floors, the material sawed into my heels.

Griffin marched ahead, his strides long and purposeful. He was testing me, pushing me to break, to admit I couldn't handle it. My internal monologue was a mantra of stubbornness: *Don't show it. Don't let him see you're struggling. You are nothing to him but a ghost.*

By the fourth building—a soaring glass cathedral of a lobby in Midtown—the dull ache had turned into a searing, rhythmic fire. I could feel the warmth of blood slicking the back of my heels, soaking into the cheap fabric of my hosiery. Every step was a fresh stab of glass.

I stopped in the center of the white marble lobby, my breath hitching. I couldn't do it. The world tilted slightly as the pain spiked.

Griffin stopped ten paces ahead and turned, his expression a mask of cold impatience. “Is there a problem, Adalyn? We have six more sites.”

I didn't answer. I couldn't. I just stood there, my head bowed, trying to keep my reflection on the polished floor from blurring behind tears of sheer exhaustion.

Griffin’s eyes dropped. He followed the line of my trembling legs down to my shoes. On the pristine, snowy marble, two small, dark red smears marked where I had stood.

The mask of the billionaire CEO shattered. In an instant, he was across the lobby.

“Adalyn,” he breathed, his voice stripped of all its iron.

“I’m fine,” I lied, my voice cracking. “I just need a minute. I can finish the tour.”

“Shut up,” he snapped, but there was no heat in it, only a raw, jagged edge of remorse.

Before I could protest, he reached down. One arm hooked behind my knees, the other behind my back. With a grunt of effortless power, he hoisted me into his arms, pulling me flush against the expensive wool of his suit.

“Griffin! Put me down!” I gasped, my face flushing scarlet as the security guards and suited executives in the lobby stopped to stare. “Everyone is looking!”

“Let them look,” he growled, his grip tightening as if he were afraid I’d vanish if he let go. He tucked my head into the crook of his neck, his heartbeat thudding a heavy, possessive rhythm against my ear. “I don’t give a damn about them. I’m taking you home, and if you try to take a single step on those feet, I’ll tie you to the bed myself.”

I should have fought him. I should have demanded my independence. But as he strode out of the lobby, carrying me like I was the most precious thing he had ever lost and finally found, I let my forehead rest against his shoulder. For the first time in six years, I let someone else carry the weight.

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