The impact sent a jolt through her. A familiar scent-clean, sharp, like wood and rain-filled her senses before she even looked up.
Her head snapped back. She was staring up into the cold, unreadable eyes of Knox Carter.
He looked down at her, his expression a blank mask, but his eyes were dark and intense. He didn't move, didn't push her away. He simply held her gaze.
Alya scrambled back as if she'd been burned, her cheeks flushing with heat. "I'm so sorry," she stammered. "I didn't... I was just..."
She trailed off, realizing where she was. The room was a private study, dominated by a massive, antique Chinese screen. She had stumbled into the lion's den.
Knox's gaze dropped from her face, sweeping over her. He noted the cheap fabric of her dress, the wrinkles creased into it from her flight. His eyes lingered for a fraction of a second on the red marks on her shoulder where Thorne's hand had been.
His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. A storm gathered in his eyes, a flicker of something cold and dangerous.
The look pinned her in place. She felt like a butterfly under glass. She tried to step around him, to escape back into the hallway.
"Alya!"
The roar came from the other side of the screen. Her father.
Gilberto stormed into the room, his face purple with rage. He saw Alya, and his fury intensified. His gaze was so locked on her that he failed to scan the rest of the room. He clearly thought she was shirking her duties.
"There you are!" he bellowed, grabbing a fistful of Alya's hair and yanking her forward.
Pain exploded at her scalp. A sharp cry escaped her lips as her head was forced back.
"Dressed like a beggar, hiding in corners! Do you have any idea how much you are humiliating this family tonight?"
Tears sprang to Alya's eyes, but she bit her lip, refusing to let them fall. She would not give him the satisfaction.
From behind the screen, Knox's hand, which had been resting at his side, slowly curled into a fist.
Gilberto, now realizing they had an audience, grew even more flustered. To assert his authority in front of the powerful guest, to show he had his house in order, he raised his other hand.
Alya saw the motion and squeezed her eyes shut, bracing for the slap. The air in the room grew thick and still.
The blow never came.
A low, calm voice sliced through the tension. "Mr. Harrell."
Gilberto's hand froze in mid-air. He stared as Knox Carter stepped out from behind the screen, his expression one of cold, silent judgment. The dawning horror on Gilberto's face was absolute.
Knox took a single, deliberate step forward. The soft sound of his leather shoe on the Persian rug was louder than a gunshot.
He didn't raise his voice. He didn't have to. His gaze was a weapon, cold and sharp, aimed directly at Gilberto. The sheer, suffocating pressure of his silent disapproval was enough to make Gilberto's arm drop to his side.
"Mr. Harrell," Knox said again, his voice a low, chilling rumble. "I find displays of domestic violence... distasteful. Particularly when I am a guest in your home."
A bead of sweat trickled down Gilberto's temple. He let go of Alya's hair and instantly morphed into a fawning host. "Mr. Carter! A misunderstanding. Just a family matter."
Alya stared at Knox, her mind reeling. This man, this cold-hearted oligarch, had just intervened. For her. It didn't make sense.
Knox's gaze slid past her, as if she wasn't even there. He turned toward a small bar in the corner of the room.
Gilberto, desperate to salvage the situation, rounded on Alya. "What are you standing there for? Go to the cellar. Fetch the 1945 Romanee-Conti. Now!"
Granted a reprieve, Alya didn't need to be told twice. She turned and practically ran for the door.
As she passed Knox, she felt his eyes on her again. This time, the gaze wasn't cold. It was something else. Something intense and burning that seemed to see right through her. Gilberto, eager to please, added, "Mr. Carter, the 1945 is housed in our historical vault. Perhaps you'd care for a look while she retrieves it?"
The spiral staircase leading down to the wine cellar was cool and damp. Alya's hand trembled on the iron railing.
Knox Carter's gaze was seared into her mind. It wasn't pity. It wasn't kindness. It was... possessive. The thought sent a shiver down her spine that had nothing to do with the cellar's chill.
She reached for the handkerchief in her pocket, her thumb tracing the embroidered 'L'. A desperate, foolish thought flickered through her mind. Could it be?
No. It was impossible. She was letting the stress of the evening get to her. The boy from the storm was a memory. Knox Carter was a predator. They couldn't be the same person.
The cellar was vast, the air thick with the smell of old wine and damp earth. Dim lights illuminated thousands of bottles resting in their racks like sleeping soldiers.
She found the climate-controlled cabinet at the far end, her eyes scanning for the 1945 Romanee-Conti. Her thoughts were a tangled mess. Why did the scent of his cologne feel so familiar, so safe?
She shook her head, scolding herself for the fantasy. He was a billionaire. She was the illegitimate daughter her family used as a pawn. Their worlds were not meant to intersect.
There it was. A dark, dust-covered bottle, lying in its designated slot.
As her fingers closed around the cool glass, a sound from behind made her jump.
She spun around, her heart leaping into her throat.
Knox Carter was standing at the bottom of the staircase, watching her. The dim light cast long shadows, making him look taller, more imposing. A panther in the gloom. There was no sign of her father. He must have slipped away from Gilberto with the ease of a man who was used to getting exactly what he wanted, exactly when he wanted it.
Alya instinctively clutched the wine bottle to her chest like a shield.
He didn't speak but started walking toward her with slow, deliberate steps that echoed softly in the cavernous space, each footfall seeming to match the frantic beat of her own heart, and stopped a few feet in front of her, close enough that she had to tilt her head back to meet his eyes, the air between them crackling with a strange, heavy energy.
She felt like she couldn't breathe. That dizzying sense of familiarity washed over her again, stronger this time, undeniable.
His voice was low, a quiet statement of fact. "Alya Harrell."
The sound of her own name, spoken so deliberately, caught her off guard. Her breath hitched. How did he know her full name? "Alya," she stammered. "Yes."
He repeated it, his voice barely a whisper. "Alya." He said it not like a discovery, but like a confirmation. Like he was tasting the word, fitting it to a memory.
His gaze dropped to her hands, clenched white-knuckled around the bottle, and he reached out.
She flinched, a lifetime of expecting blows making her recoil.
But his hand was gentle as he took the heavy bottle from her. His fingers brushed against hers, sending a jolt of electricity up her arm.
He held the priceless bottle of wine in one hand as if it were a bottle of water. With his other, he made a small gesture toward the stairs, indicating she should go first.
Feeling like she was in a dream, Alya turned and walked, her legs stiff and unsteady. She could feel his eyes on her back the entire way, a heavy, tangible weight.
At the top of the stairs, at the cellar door, she couldn't stop herself. She glanced back over her shoulder.
He was standing there, watching her, his face half in shadow. Their eyes met, and in the dark depths of his, she saw a flicker of something ancient and intense.
Her heart didn't just beat. It stopped.