Chapter 4

Danny’s apartment smelled of stale pizza and desperation. The curtains were drawn even though it was noon, and the only light came from the bluish flicker of the television. Dust hung in the air, stirred by the faint hum of a box fan in the corner.

Claire pushed the door open with her hip, balancing a grocery bag that dug into her arm. The hinges groaned, the sound oddly loud in the dim room.

“Danny?” she called.

A muffled groan answered from the couch. Her brother sat slumped against a cushion, eyes bloodshot, hair sticking up in wild tufts. A controller dangled from his limp hand, the screen flashing a taunting red Game Over.

Claire sighed, dropped the grocery bag on the counter, and crossed her arms. “You look like you’ve been run over. Twice.”

Danny squinted up at her. “Good morning to you too, sis.”

“It’s afternoon.” She yanked open the fridge, grimaced at the half-empty energy drinks, and began unloading her bag, milk, eggs, bread, actual food. “You’ve been living on sugar and caffeine again. No wonder you look like death.”

“Better than feeling like it.”

She froze, turning slowly. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

Danny waved a dismissive hand. “Nothing. Just tired.”

“Don’t lie to me.” She crossed the room and sat on the edge of the couch, forcing him to meet her eyes. “I know you borrowed money. Who from?”

Danny shifted, guilt scrawled across his face like ink bleeding through paper. “It’s not what you think.”

“It’s always what I think.” Her voice sharpened. “You promised me after the last time you wouldn’t go near those people again.”

“I didn’t have a choice.”

“There’s always a choice.”

Danny ran both hands through his hair, tugging hard. “You don’t get it, Claire. I was behind on tuition, the job at the record store barely covers anything, and when I asked for an extension they laughed in my face. So yeah, I borrowed. Just a little. I can pay it back once I get it”

“Once you what?” Claire cut in. “Win the lottery? Sell your soul?”

Danny’s voice cracked. “Once I figure it out, okay? Stop acting like I’m some screw-up junkie. I’m trying.”

The rawness in his voice deflated her anger. She reached out, squeezed his arm gently. “I know you’re trying. But you keep trusting the wrong people. That’s what scares me.”

Danny pulled away, his jaw tightening. “You’re not my mother.”

“No,” Claire said softly. “I’m the sister who bailed you out of three messes already.”

Silence stretched between them. The television kept looping the same red-lettered Game Over, as if mocking them both.

Finally, Danny muttered, “They said if I don’t pay soon, they’ll come after me.”

Her stomach clenched. “Who?”

He hesitated, then dropped his gaze. “Some guy named Trent. He works security for one of Westbrook’s clubs. I guess the money traces back to that circle.”

Claire’s pulse skipped. “Westbrook again.” The name left her mouth like a curse. His empire was a spider’s web, strands reaching everywhere, nightclubs, property deals, politicians’ pockets. And Danny, without even realizing it, had stumbled into the sticky threads.

She stood abruptly, pacing the small room. “How much do you owe?”

Danny flinched. “Five grand.”

She spun on him. “Five thousand? Danny!”

“I said I’ll fix it!” he snapped, then shrank under her glare. His voice dropped. “I just need time.”

Claire pressed her fingers to her temples. Time was the one thing they didn’t have. Men like Trent didn’t give extensions. If Leo Westbrook’s world was already circling Danny, then her story wasn’t just about ambition anymore. It was survival.

Danny’s voice softened. “Don’t look at me like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like you’re already planning to throw yourself in front of me.”

“Maybe I am,” Claire whispered before she could stop herself.

Danny looked away, shame flickering across his face.

Claire crouched beside him again, brushing her fingers through his messy hair the way she had when he was a boy. “Listen to me. I’ll find a way. But you have to promise me something.”

He glanced at her warily. “What?”

“No more loans. No more deals. Not from anyone tied to Westbrook or otherwise. You’re done.”

He opened his mouth to argue, but she held up a finger, sharp as a blade. “Promise me, Danny.”

His shoulders slumped in defeat. “Fine. I promise.”

She searched his face, trying to decide if she believed him. She wanted to. But wanting and knowing were never the same. For now, it would have to do.

The knock at the door made them both jump. Claire rose quickly, scanning the room. Danny stiffened, clutching the couch arm like it might anchor him.

“Who is it?” she called.

A deep male voice answered, steady and unemotional. “Delivery.”

Claire frowned. She hadn’t ordered anything. She shot a glance at Danny, whose expression had gone pale.

“Don’t open it,” he hissed.

The knock came again, louder this time, rattling the doorframe. “Delivery for Sullivan.”

Her heart thudded. “Which Sullivan?” she demanded.

“Claire.”

She froze.

Moving slowly, she unlatched the lock but kept the chain in place. The door opened a crack, just enough for her to see a man in a dark suit. His polished shoes gleamed, his posture rigid, his expression unreadable. In his hand, a plain envelope.

“For you, Ms. Sullivan.”

Claire narrowed her eyes. “From who?”

“Mr. Westbrook.”

The name landed like a blow. Danny swore under his breath, pushing himself upright.

“I don’t take gifts,” Claire said through the narrow gap.

The man slid the envelope through anyway, the movement brisk, practiced. “Mr. Westbrook insists. Good day, ma’am.”

Before she could argue, he turned and walked away, his footsteps echoing down the hall until silence swallowed them.

Claire picked up the envelope with cautious fingers, half-expecting it to burn her skin. Inside was a single card, heavy stock, embossed in clean silver letters:

Tomorrow. Eight o'clock. The Mondrian Hotel rooftop. Don’t be late.

Danny stared at it, horrified. “Claire, what the hell is going on?”

She folded the card shut, sliding it into her pocket as if she could erase it from existence. “Nothing you need to worry about.”

“The hell it isn’t!” Danny’s voice rose, frantic. “If Westbrook knows your name”

“I said don’t worry,” she snapped, though her own pulse was racing.

Danny pushed himself up, shaky but defiant. “Promise me you’re not getting involved with him.”

Claire looked at her brother, his face pale and desperate, then looked away. The card pressed against her thigh like a brand.

Some promises, she realized, were harder to make than others.

Chapter 5

Leo Westbrook liked his office best at night. The floor-to-ceiling windows turned the city into a fractured mirror, each tower outside a shard of steel and ambition piercing the dark. The rest of Los Angeles slept or drowned in its vices, clubs, penthouses, the chaos of neon. But up here, above it all, Leo ruled in silence.

He stood at the glass, tie loosened, drink in hand. The whiskey burned his throat, though he hardly tasted it. His gaze was locked on the horizon where the red lights of aircraft blinked against the heavy clouds, like signals from another world. The city stretched out before him as if it belonged to him, and in many ways, it did. Still, the view carried no comfort.

Behind him, footsteps padded across marble, slow and deliberate.

“Still working?” Henry Holloway’s gravelly voice broke the quiet. His father’s old friend and Leo’s most trusted advisor lowered himself into a leather chair with a groan. “You’ll outlast the city, but not your liver.”

Leo didn’t turn. “The city will rot before I do.”

“You say that,” Holloway muttered, “as if you’re not part of it.”

Leo finally looked away from the glass. Holloway, silver-haired and thickset, studied him with the same watchful eyes that had followed him from boyhood into manhood. Few dared to challenge Leo Westbrook. Holloway made a habit of it.

“I had a visitor today,” Leo said.

“Dominic?” Holloway guessed.

A humorless smile ghosted across Leo’s lips. “Not this time. A journalist.”

“Name?”

“Claire Sullivan.”

Recognition flickered in Holloway’s expression. “The heartbreaker. Papers have been circling her for years. Doesn’t she leave men bleeding in print, and in bed?”

“She wanted an interview.”

“And you gave it?” Holloway’s brow rose.

Leo swirled the amber liquid in his glass. “Part of it. Enough to intrigue her. Not enough to hang me with.”

Holloway chuckled. “Then you like her.”

Leo’s gaze hardened. “I don’t like anyone.”

“Leo,” Holloway leaned forward, voice low, “you invited her closer, didn’t you?”

Leo said nothing. Instead, he remembered her eyes, sharp, assessing, unafraid. Most women in his orbit had either fawned or fled. She had done neither. Claire Sullivan had studied him the way he studied markets: calculating, relentless, already imagining where to strike. It had been… refreshing. Dangerous, but refreshing.A

“I know that look,” Holloway muttered. “It’s the same one you gave the markets in your twenties. Hungry. Ruthless. Wanting to own.”

Leo drained his glass. “Ownership is easy. Control is harder.”

“And she makes you feel out of control?”

A flicker of irritation crossed his face. “She’s reckless. And I don’t tolerate recklessness. Especially not when it comes wrapped in ambition and red hair.”

Holloway’s mouth tugged into a wry smile. “You sound more rattled than you want to admit.”

Before Leo could answer, the office phone buzzed. He crossed the room and pressed speaker.

“Yes?”

His assistant’s crisp voice cut through. “Sir, Mr. Dominic Westbrook is in the lobby. He refuses to leave without a word.”

Holloway groaned. “Here we go.”

Leo’s jaw tightened. “Send him up.”

Moments later, the elevator chimed. Dominic strode into the office as if the building already belonged to him. Taller than Leo by an inch, hair slicked with too much polish, Dominic wore his tailored suit like armor. His smile was sharp, his eyes colder than the whiskey melting in Leo’s glass.

“Little brother,” Dominic drawled, “burning the midnight oil?”

Leo didn’t move from behind his desk. “Some of us build, Dominic. Others leech.”

Dominic smirked. “Still clinging to that story? You built nothing. You inherited scraps from our father and turned them into a circus of glass towers. I build industries. I build permanence.”

Leo’s expression didn’t shift, though his voice dropped lower, cutting. “You build nothing but resentment.”

“Gentlemen,” Holloway interjected, his voice weary.

“Stay out of this,” Dominic snapped, eyes never leaving Leo. Then he leaned across the desk, palms flat, his presence looming. “I hear you’ve been entertaining journalists. Claire Sullivan, isn’t it? Fiery, stubborn. Not your usual taste.”

Something flickered in Leo’s eyes, gone as quickly as it came. “She’s irrelevant.”

Dominic’s smile widened, cruel. “No one is irrelevant if they know how to use their charm. She’ll dig, Leo. She’ll find the cracks.” He straightened, smoothing his jacket. “And when she does, I’ll be there to watch you crumble.”

Leo rose slowly, deliberate as a predator. He met his brother’s gaze across the desk, two forces colliding in silence.

“You’ve already lost, Dominic,” he said quietly. “You just don’t realize it yet.”

Dominic’s eyes glittered. “Then prove it.”

He turned on his heel, heading for the elevator. Just before the doors closed, he looked back and called, “I’ll enjoy watching her break you.”

The silence that followed was heavy, the kind that pressed into the walls and lingered in the air.

Holloway exhaled, rubbing a hand over his face. “You should tread carefully. Your brother smells blood, and that girl may be the knife.”

Leo sank back into his chair, setting his empty glass on the desk. His fingers steepled as his mind wandered, no longer on Dominic but on the card he had sent Claire earlier that day. An invitation, polished, precise, impossible to ignore. She had not yet refused. He doubted she would.

“She won’t break me,” he murmured. “But I might break her.”

Holloway gave him a long, steady look. “And what if she’s the one person who refuses to bend?”

Leo didn’t answer. He turned back to the window where the city stretched endless and glittering, a kingdom of glass and light. Yet for the first time in years, a sliver of uncertainty lodged itself in his chest. Not about his empire, not about his brother, but about a woman who carried fire in her eyes and danger in her voice.

The city was his. The power, the wealth, the walls he had built, they were all his. But somewhere out there, Claire Sullivan was waiting, and Leo Westbrook, who had never feared a rival, found himself wondering whether the empire he built could withstand a single determined woman.

Chapter 6

Leo Westbrook liked his office best at night. The floor-to-ceiling windows turned the city into a fractured mirror, each tower outside a shard of steel and ambition piercing the dark. The rest of Los Angeles slept or drowned in its vices, clubs, penthouses, the chaos of neon. But up here, above it all, Leo ruled in silence.

He stood at the glass, tie loosened, drink in hand. The whiskey burned his throat, though he hardly tasted it. His gaze was locked on the horizon where the red lights of aircraft blinked against the heavy clouds, like signals from another world. The city stretched out before him as if it belonged to him, and in many ways, it did. Still, the view carried no comfort.

Behind him, footsteps padded across marble, slow and deliberate.

“Still working?” Henry Holloway’s gravelly voice broke the quiet. His father’s old friend and Leo’s most trusted advisor lowered himself into a leather chair with a groan. “You’ll outlast the city, but not your liver.”

Leo didn’t turn. “The city will rot before I do.”

“You say that,” Holloway muttered, “as if you’re not part of it.”

Leo finally looked away from the glass. Holloway, silver-haired and thickset, studied him with the same watchful eyes that had followed him from boyhood into manhood. Few dared to challenge Leo Westbrook. Holloway made a habit of it.

“I had a visitor today,” Leo said.

“Dominic?” Holloway guessed.

A humorless smile ghosted across Leo’s lips. “Not this time. A journalist.”

“Name?”

“Claire Sullivan.”

Recognition flickered in Holloway’s expression. “The heartbreaker. Papers have been circling her for years. Doesn’t she leave men bleeding in print, and in bed?”

“She wanted an interview.”

“And you gave it?” Holloway’s brow rose.

Leo swirled the amber liquid in his glass. “Part of it. Enough to intrigue her. Not enough to hang me with.”

Holloway chuckled. “Then you like her.”

Leo’s gaze hardened. “I don’t like anyone.”

“Leo,” Holloway leaned forward, voice low, “you invited her closer, didn’t you?”

Leo said nothing. Instead, he remembered her eyes, sharp, assessing, unafraid. Most women in his orbit had either fawned or fled. She had done neither. Claire Sullivan had studied him the way he studied markets: calculating, relentless, already imagining where to strike. It had been… refreshing. Dangerous, but refreshing.A

“I know that look,” Holloway muttered. “It’s the same one you gave the markets in your twenties. Hungry. Ruthless. Wanting to own.”

Leo drained his glass. “Ownership is easy. Control is harder.”

“And she makes you feel out of control?”

A flicker of irritation crossed his face. “She’s reckless. And I don’t tolerate recklessness. Especially not when it comes wrapped in ambition and red hair.”

Holloway’s mouth tugged into a wry smile. “You sound more rattled than you want to admit.”

Before Leo could answer, the office phone buzzed. He crossed the room and pressed speaker.

“Yes?”

His assistant’s crisp voice cut through. “Sir, Mr. Dominic Westbrook is in the lobby. He refuses to leave without a word.”

Holloway groaned. “Here we go.”

Leo’s jaw tightened. “Send him up.”

Moments later, the elevator chimed. Dominic strode into the office as if the building already belonged to him. Taller than Leo by an inch, hair slicked with too much polish, Dominic wore his tailored suit like armor. His smile was sharp, his eyes colder than the whiskey melting in Leo’s glass.

“Little brother,” Dominic drawled, “burning the midnight oil?”

Leo didn’t move from behind his desk. “Some of us build, Dominic. Others leech.”

Dominic smirked. “Still clinging to that story? You built nothing. You inherited scraps from our father and turned them into a circus of glass towers. I build industries. I build permanence.”

Leo’s expression didn’t shift, though his voice dropped lower, cutting. “You build nothing but resentment.”

“Gentlemen,” Holloway interjected, his voice weary.

“Stay out of this,” Dominic snapped, eyes never leaving Leo. Then he leaned across the desk, palms flat, his presence looming. “I hear you’ve been entertaining journalists. Claire Sullivan, isn’t it? Fiery, stubborn. Not your usual taste.”

Something flickered in Leo’s eyes, gone as quickly as it came. “She’s irrelevant.”

Dominic’s smile widened, cruel. “No one is irrelevant if they know how to use their charm. She’ll dig, Leo. She’ll find the cracks.” He straightened, smoothing his jacket. “And when she does, I’ll be there to watch you crumble.”

Leo rose slowly, deliberate as a predator. He met his brother’s gaze across the desk, two forces colliding in silence.

“You’ve already lost, Dominic,” he said quietly. “You just don’t realize it yet.”

Dominic’s eyes glittered. “Then prove it.”

He turned on his heel, heading for the elevator. Just before the doors closed, he looked back and called, “I’ll enjoy watching her break you.”

The silence that followed was heavy, the kind that pressed into the walls and lingered in the air.

Holloway exhaled, rubbing a hand over his face. “You should tread carefully. Your brother smells blood, and that girl may be the knife.”

Leo sank back into his chair, setting his empty glass on the desk. His fingers steepled as his mind wandered, no longer on Dominic but on the card he had sent Claire earlier that day. An invitation, polished, precise, impossible to ignore. She had not yet refused. He doubted she would.

“She won’t break me,” he murmured. “But I might break her.”

Holloway gave him a long, steady look. “And what if she’s the one person who refuses to bend?”

Leo didn’t answer. He turned back to the window where the city stretched endless and glittering, a kingdom of glass and light. Yet for the first time in years, a sliver of uncertainty lodged itself in his chest. Not about his empire, not about his brother, but about a woman who carried fire in her eyes and danger in her voice.

The city was his. The power, the wealth, the walls he had built, they were all his. But somewhere out there, Claire Sullivan was waiting, and Leo Westbrook, who had never feared a rival, found himself wondering whether the empire he built could withstand a single determined woman.

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