ADDISON
Back in the Castino building, the city lights twinkled far below my floor-to-ceiling windows, but they felt like a million miles away. I was trapped in a thorn filled cage of my own, with a week to find a golden key.
I curled up on my massive white sofa, pulling out my phone. Devin had, true to his word, sent a text with a few names and numbers. No pleasantries, just a list. My life currently was solely reliant on this list.
The first name was Matthew Rhys. I typed it into the search bar. A picture of a guy in a hoodie popped up, standing in front of a flashy office with a neon sign. A tech bro. His company had done well, sure, but a quick scroll through a business profile showed his net worth was... modest. Modest for our world, anyway. He was still climbing. My mother would eat him alive. She'd take one look at his casual clothes and call him "unserious." I sighed. "Not influential enough," I muttered to the empty room, swiping his picture away. Next.
The second name made my stomach clench a little. Bane Killian. Now that was a name that sounded like money and power. He was older, in his forties, with sharp, handsome features and a cold smile. A proper business tycoon. But a few more clicks told the real story. There were articles, not about his mergers, but about his mergers and the models on his arm. A whole series of them. "Notorious playboy," one headline read. "Heartbreaker Bane strikes again."
I could just imagine it. I'd bring him home, and my mom would be thrilled... until the first scandal broke. I'd be humiliated, and she'd blame me for not being able to "keep him." It would be a different kind of prison. "Too risky," I whispered, feeling a wave of hopelessness. "He's a womanizer."
There were two others. One was based in London, which was just impossible. The other was twice my age and, according to a society blog, notoriously reclusive and rude to everyone. My heart sank lower with each profile. This was impossible. They were either not enough, too much trouble, or completely out of reach.
And then my eyes landed on the last name. The one Devin had mentioned so casually.
Axel Rex.
I tapped his name, and his profile loaded. The air in my room suddenly felt still. The photo wasn't a casual snapshot. It was a press photo, probably from a charity gala. And he was... breathtaking.
He wasn't just handsome. He was devastating. He had dark, almost black hair, styled perfectly but with a slight wave that looked like he'd run his hand through it. His jaw was strong, his features carved like he was some kind of god. But it was his eyes that held me. Even in a photo, his deep green eyes seemed to look right through me. He wasn't smiling. He had an intense, powerful stillness about him, like a predator perfectly calm before it moved. He wore a black tuxedo that fit his tall, muscular build like it was made for him-which it probably was.
I stared, my thumb hovering over the screen. I'd seen pictures of him before, in financial magazines, but I'd never really looked. Now, I couldn't look away.
I scrolled down, reading his profile. Rex Corporation. Billionaire. Real estate, tech, private equity. His business record was flawless. No scandals. No messy divorces. No history of dating a string of models. In fact, there was almost no personal information at all. He was like a ghost. A powerful, gorgeous, and mostly important almost perfect.
And then I saw it. The detail that made my heart jump into my throat.
Primary Residence: Penthouse, Castino Tower.
He lived here. In this building. The mysterious owner of the top-floor penthouse, the one I'd never once seen in the lobby, never shared an elevator with. The man was my neighbor, and I hadn't even known it. I then remembered Devin had said he lived here, but I wasn't paying much attention to his words.
A wild, crazy hope bubbled up inside me. This was it. He was perfect. Richer, more powerful, more influential than Feign could ever dream of being. My mother would be speechless.
But just as quickly, the hope was crushed by fear.
How? How on earth was I supposed to "woo" a man like that? A man who clearly valued his privacy above all else. A man who could probably have anyone he wanted.
I imagined walking up to his penthouse door and knocking. Hi, I'm your neighbor, and my mommy is making me find a rich boyfriend. Wanna be mine? Or would you date me?
He'd have security throw me out. He'd see me as cheap. An irritating social climber. A gold-digger. The kind of woman he probably had to avoid every single day.
I tossed my phone onto the couch like it had burned me and stood up, pacing across the soft rug. My reflection in the dark window looked pale and worried.
"This is insane," I told my reflection. "He'll never go for it."
But then I heard my mother's voice in my head. "One week, Addison." I saw Feign's smug, possessive smile.
I looked back at my phone, lighting up on the couch. At Axel Rex's intense, green-eyed stare.
He was my only real shot. And I had no idea how to take it. The plan was crazy, but the alternative-going back to Feign-was a nightmare. I had to try. I just had to figure out how to meet him without looking like a complete fool.
ADDISON
Four days.
The number was a drumbeat in my head, a constant, panicked rhythm counting down my doom. Five days since the suffocating dinner, and I had precisely forty-eight hours left to produce a human shield wealthier and more powerful than Feign Paxton.
My "research" had been a spectacular failure. The list from Devin was a graveyard of maybes and no-chances. The tech bro, the London-based heir, the notoriously rude old money... all dead ends. The only viable, terrifying option was Bane Killian, the womanizer. My brother had, in a last-ditch effort, actually set up a date with him for tomorrow night. The thought made my skin crawl.
Which is why I was currently lurking around the Castino's lobby like a total creep for the fifth day in a row. My target: Axel Rex. I'd spent hours perched on a plush velvet bench, pretending to read a magazine while my eyes were glued to the private elevator bank that led to the penthouses. I'd seen no one who even remotely matched his description.
Giving up for the night, I trudged toward the elevators, my heels clicking a sad rhythm on the marble floor. I pressed the call button and stepped inside, leaning against the mirrored wall with a sigh of defeat. Just as the doors began to slide shut, a large, masculine hand shot through the gap, making them bounce back open.
My heart leaped into my throat.
And then he stepped in.
Axel Rex.
In person, he was... more. So much more. The photos didn't capture the sheer presence of the man. He seemed to suck all the air and light out of the elevator, leaving only a charged, heavy silence. He was taller than I'd imagined, his shoulders impossibly broad in a perfectly tailored black suit that cost more than my car. His eyes, that deep, forest green, flicked to me for a half-second, a silent acknowledgment, before he turned and pressed the button for the PH-the Penthouse.
The doors closed. We were alone.
I tried to be cool, to be the confident model the world saw. But my palms were sweating. I could feel the heat radiating from him, smell the faint, expensive scent of his cologne-sandalwood and something wild, like a storm on the horizon.
This is it. Say something. Anything.
But my mind was a perfect, terrified blank. The elevator began its smooth, silent ascent.
Then, with a sickening, violent lurch, it jolted to a halt. The lights flickered wildly before settling into an dim, emergency amber glow. A blaring alarm cut through the silence for a moment, then stopped, leaving a ringing quiet that was somehow worse.
I gasped, stumbling backward into the wall, my heart hammering against my ribs. This wasn't happening.
"Are you hurt?"
His voice was a low, calm rumble, so at odds with my panic. He was standing perfectly still, his posture relaxed, as if elevator malfunctions were a normal part of his day.
"N-no," I stammered, clutching my purse like a lifeline. "I'm fine. Just... startled."
"The backup system will engage. It will just be a moment," he said, his voice utterly sure. He pulled out his phone, typed a brief message with an unnerving calm, and then slid it back into his pocket. His gaze returned to me, intense and unnervingly focused.
The silence stretched, thick and awkward. My phone, clutched in my hand, lit up with a notification. A text from Devin.
Don't forget. Dinner with Bane tomorrow. 8 PM. Don't be late.
I felt a wave of nausea. My eyes flicked back to the screen, the countdown clock in my head screaming.
"Trouble in paradise?"
His question startled me. I looked up to find him watching me, a faint, unreadable curiosity in his green eyes.
"No," I said, a little too quickly. I let out a shaky breath, deciding on a sliver of the truth. "No, it's just... my brother. He set me up on a date. For tomorrow."
"I see." He leaned a shoulder against the mirrored wall, making the small space feel even smaller. "I thought you didn't date much. Weren't you with someone else recently? Feign Paxton."
The air left my lungs. How did he know that? For a second, it felt creepy, but then I dismissed it. Of course he knew. I was a public figure. Our "relationship" had been in all the society columns. "We broke up," I said, the words tasting bitter. "And now I need to find a new boyfriend, or my parents will... well, let's just say it won't be pleasant."
The words just tumbled out, fueled by claustrophobia and desperation. "They've given me a week to find someone... better." I made air quotes around the word, my voice dripping with sarcasm. "Someone wealthier, more influential. Or else I have to go crawling back to him." I shook my head, muttering more to myself than to him, "At this point, I'd take a fake boyfriend. Anything just to get my mother's eyes off me for a while."
I hadn't meant to say that last part out loud. I braced myself for his pity, or worse, his disdain.
Instead, he was silent for a long moment, just studying me. I felt like a specimen under a microscope.
"I see," he said again, his voice thoughtful. Then, he straightened up. "I'll do it."
I blinked. "What?"
"I will be your fake boyfriend, Ms. Amber." He said it with the same finality as when he'd declared the backup system would engage. "It would be an advantage. And for your family's criteria... I am not a millionaire. I am a billionaire. I assume that will be 'good enough'?"
My mouth fell open. I just stared at him, sure I had hallucinated from the lack of oxygen. "R-really?"
He gave a single, firm nod.
The hope that surged in me was so violent it was almost painful. But I was still an accountant at heart. There was always a price. "What... what would you want in return?"
"Simple," he said, a ghost of a smile touching his lips, there and gone so fast I might have imagined it. "You will be my plus-one to various events. I am tired of the rumors-Axel Rex is too ruthless, too solitary, he can't keep a partner. Being seen with you would be... good for my public image."
It made a cold, corporate sense. A mutually beneficial transaction. Just like I'd proposed.
Just then, the elevator jolted back to life, the lights flickering on brightly before we continued our smooth ascent as if nothing had happened.
"Okay," I said, my voice stronger now. "Okay, but we need rules."
The doors pinged open on my floor. He placed a hand over the door sensor, holding them open. His gaze was unwavering. "Name them."
"First, the arrangement lasts for two months. That's it."
"Agreed."
"Second,no sex. Nothing intimate. This is strictly business."
A faint,almost imperceptible shadow crossed his features, but he nodded. "Of course."
"And third,"I took a deep breath. "We can both still see other people. Since it's not real."
For a long moment, he just looked at me, his green eyes seeming to see right through to my soul. The silence stretched, and I wondered if I'd pushed too far.
"Those terms are acceptable," he finally said, his voice a low hum.
A dizzying wave of relief washed over me. "Okay. Then... we have a deal."
"We have a deal," he repeated.
I stepped out into my hallway, my legs feeling like jelly. As the elevator doors began to close, I saw him still standing there, a powerful, immovable figure in the center of the small space, his intense eyes locked on me until the very last second.
?
ADDISON
Two days left. The deal I'd made in that stalled elevator felt less like a rescue and more like a dream I'd stupidly believed. Maybe he'd been oxygen-deprived and just agreed to get me to stop talking. Maybe I had been too open to him, I mean what kind of girl tells a man she just met almost everything about herself. Maybe Axel Rex had already forgotten I existed.
I was staring into the hopeless abyss of my coffee cup when the intercom buzzed, sharp and insistent. My heart jumped. I walked over, my bare feet cold on the floor. "Yes?"
"Package for you, Ms. Amber. From Mr. Rex's office."
The world tilted. I managed to mutter a "thank you," and leaned against the wall, my legs suddenly weak.
A moment later, my doorman was placing a long, elegant white box in my hands. It was heavy. I carried it to my dining table like it might explode, my fingers trembling as I lifted the lid.
Inside, nestled in tissue paper as black as midnight, were flowers. But not just any flowers. They were the most dramatic, dangerous-looking flowers I had ever seen. Deep, blood-red roses, so dark they were almost black, mixed with strange, elegant black lilies that looked like they'd been grown in moonlight. There was no sweet, gentle scent. It was something richer, spicier. It smelled like power.
There was a simple, thick card nestled among the stems. No handwritten note. Just crisp, typed words.
Our first public appearance is tonight.
The Vanguard Charity Gala.
A car will collect you at 7 PM.
Wear something that makes you feel powerful.
- A.R.
Tonight. It was happening. Tonight.
The panic morphed into a different, more frantic energy. I snatched my phone and called the only person who could handle this.
"Jules," I breathed the second she answered. "Code red. I need you. Now."
An hour later, my bedroom looked like a tornado had hit a very expensive boutique. Dresses were flung across my bed, my chairs, the floor. Silk, satin, sequins-a rainbow of desperation.
"Powerful, he says," Jules muttered, holding up a slinky silver dress. "What does that even mean? CEO powerful or assassin powerful?"
"I don't know!" I wailed, pulling a pale pink gown over my head. "It's Axel Rex. It probably means 'don't embarrass me.'"
I looked in the mirror. The pink was soft, pretty. It was the kind of dress my mother would approve of. It made me look like a piece of expensive candy.
"No," Jules said, reading my mind. "That's 'controlled' powerful. He didn't say controlled. He said powerful." She dove back into the pile and emerged with a garment bag I'd forgotten about. She unzipped it with a dramatic flourish.
Inside was a dress I'd bought on a whim and never had the courage to wear. It was a deep emerald green, the exact color of his eyes. It was sleeveless, with a high neckline that was both modest and severe, but the back was completely open, dipping low. The fabric was heavy, liquid silk that clung in a way that was both elegant and a little bit dangerous.
"This one," Jules declared.
I put it on. I looked in the mirror. The woman staring back wasn't the scared girl from the dinner table or the panicked mess in the elevator. She was someone else. Someone who belonged on the arm of a man like Axel Rex.
"Yeah," I whispered. "This one."
---
The black McLaren car was silent and smooth as a shark. By the time we pulled up to the museum where the gala was being held, my hands were ice-cold. The red carpet was a blur of flashing lights and shouted questions. I fixed my model smile in place, a mask I knew how to wear.
Then I felt a hand on the small of my back.
I jumped, turning to find him there. Axel. In a tuxedo that was clearly not rented, but forged onto his body. His eyes did a quick, head-to-toe sweep of me, pausing for a fraction of a second on the green of my dress. Something unreadable flickered in his gaze.
"You look... appropriate," he said, his voice low.
It wasn't a compliment, not really. But from him, it felt like one. "Thank you," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "So do you."
He kept his hand on my back as we walked, a firm, warm pressure that felt less like an affection and more like a brand. A claim. He didn't stop for the press, didn't smile. He just moved through the crowd, and it parted for him like the Red Sea.
Inside, the gala was a whirl of champagne and diamonds. He introduced me to people, his tone always the same. "This is Addison Amber." Not "my girlfriend." Not "my date." Just my name, with a weight behind it that made people pay attention.
For a little while, I almost forgot it was fake. The way he'd lean down to hear me over the music, the way his hand never left my back or arm. It felt real. And that was the most dangerous part.
Then I saw him. Feign Paxton. He was standing near the bar, his face like thunder, a glass of whiskey clenched in his hand. Our eyes met across the room, and the hatred in his was a physical force.
I instinctively flinched, my step faltering. Axel's hand tightened on my back instantly.
"Addison," Feign spat, stepping into our path. He was already a little drunk. "Moving up in the world, I see. Or just trading one controller for another?"
Before I could form a word, Axel shifted slightly, putting his body subtly between me and Feign. He didn't raise his voice. He didn't have to.
"Paxton," Axel said, the single word dripping with frost. "You're in our way."
Feign, emboldened by alcohol, puffed out his chest. "I was just talking to my ex-girlfriend."
"She is not your anything," Axel replied, his voice so quiet it was almost a whisper, yet it cut through the party noise. "And if you value your business, and your health, you will turn around and walk away. Now."
The threat wasn't loud or dramatic. It was absolute. I saw the color drain from Feign's face. He looked from Axel's cold, dead-eyed expression to me, and for the first time, I saw real fear in his eyes. He muttered something under his breath and stumbled back, disappearing into the crowd.
Axel turned back to me, his hand returning to my back. "Shall we?" he asked, as if he'd just commented on the weather.
In that moment, surrounded by a hundred people, I felt completely alone with him. The noise of the party faded into a distant hum. All I could see were his green eyes, all I could feel was the solid, terrifying warmth of his hand. He wasn't just playing a part. He was like a king, and he'd just defended his territory. And for a terrifying, thrilling second, I was glad to be in it.