Trouble had already found her .
And unfortunately ...it lived next door
Racheal woke the next morning with a headache she fully blamed on her new neighbor. Not because he did anything in particular well, he sort of did-but because her brain refused to stop replaying that conversation.
She pushed her pillow over her face and groaned.
"This is not my portion today."
But the universe clearly had plans.
By the time she stepped outside with her handbag and a leftover meat pie for breakfast, the compound was already buzzing. A delivery truck was parked by the duplex next door, the same one Adrian Cole had moved into. Boxes were being offloaded-massive ones. Furniture, equipment, even a grand piano that definitely did not match the energy of the estate.
Neighbors stood at their doorways pretending not to stare.
Racheal was not pretending. She stared openly.
"How many things does one person need?" she muttered.
One of the movers struggled past her, and she had to step aside so he wouldn't drop a chandelier the size of her entire kitchen.
A chandelier.
She clutched her bag tighter. "Okay. So he's not rich... he's unnecessarily rich."
Just then, a familiar voice came from behind her.
"Good morning, Ms. Nwosu."
Her entire body stiffened. She turned slowly.
Adrian stood a few feet away, dressed sharply in a charcoal button-down and dark trousers. No sweatpants. No relaxed expression. Just polished, intimidating calm.
How was someone allowed to look that put together before 8 a.m.?
Racheal forced a polite smile. "Morning."
His gaze flicked to the chaos around them. "Apologies for the disturbance. My staff should have finished earlier, but there were delays."
"Another apology with no actual apology," she said before she could stop herself.
His lips twitched-just slightly. "Would you prefer something more... formal?"
"No," she said quickly, mortified by her own sarcasm. "Forget I said anything."
He nodded once. "Noted."
There it was again. That word.
Dry. Sharp. Infuriating.
She exhaled slowly, determined not to let him ruin her day. "Well, I'm off to work."
"Do you need a ride?" he asked suddenly.
Racheal almost tripped. "A ride? No! No, thank you. I'm fine."
"You seem in a hurry."
"I'm always in a hurry."
"I see."
He studied her-quietly, intensely-like he was observing a puzzle piece that didn't fit the picture.
Racheal tugged her bag higher on her shoulder. "Have a good day, Mr. Cole."
"You too."
She walked away quickly, refusing to look back.
But halfway down the street, curiosity poked at her, and she risked a glance over her shoulder.
He was still there, watching her leave.
Not in a creepy way.
Not in a romantic way.
Just... watching.
Like he was trying to understand something about her that didn't add up.
She swallowed and turned away.
At the bakery, Tola was waiting at the counter with her arms folded dramatically.
"You have exactly five seconds to spill before I combust," she said. "Start talking."
Racheal set down her bag. "Nothing happened."
"Lies." Tola leaned in. "Your 'nothing' face is the same face you had when you caught feelings for that guy in NYSC camp who didn't know your name."
Racheal glared. "Nobody is catching feelings."
"Good," Tola said, tapping the counter. "Now tell me what Mr. Fine-Face did."
Racheal sighed. "He didn't do anything. He just... exists."
Tola blinked. "Explain."
Racheal paced a little. "He stands there with that 'I'm above earthly nonsense' expression, he talks like I'm an item in his schedule, and he sent noise-canceling headphones for noise that didn't exist."
Tola grinned. "And he watches you."
Racheal froze. "What?"
"I haven't even heard the story yet, but I know men. They watch the women they notice."
Racheal felt her stomach flip-annoyingly.
"He doesn't notice me."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes."
"Are you very sure?"
"YES, TOLA!"
Her friend lifted her hands. "If you say so. But let me warn you now-men like that? The quiet, brooding, fine-till-it-hurts type? They are walking trouble."
Racheal grabbed a tray of pastries to avoid the conversation. "I don't plan to talk to him again."
"Good. Because I have a feeling he's going to complicate your life."
Racheal rolled her eyes.
"Why would he complicate anything?"
But just as the words left her mouth, her phone vibrated.
Unknown Number:
Good morning, Ms.Racheal. I believe this belongs to you.
A picture followed-her staff ID card... lying on the ground in front of his gate.
Tola snatched the phone from her hand. "Oh. My. God."
Racheal pressed her fingers into her temples.
Trouble had not only found her-
It was texting her now.
Racheal stared at the screen, her pulse picking up speed.
How did he even get her number? She didn't remember giving it out. Then again, a man who moved with bodyguards and sent apology gifts worth a small fortune probably had access to more information than the average neighbor.
"This is how Nollywood movies start," Tola whispered dramatically beside her. "Next thing, he will ask you if you're home alone."
Racheal shot her a glare and typed quickly.
Racheal:
How did you get my number?
She hit send and immediately imagined him reading it with that cold, unreadable expression of his.
Three dots appeared.
Disappeared.
Reappeared.
Then his reply came in.
A.C.:
You dropped your ID card outside the house. I used the number on the emergency contact slip at the back.
Racheal turned the ID card over in her hand.
"Oh," she whispered.
He wasn't being creepy.
Just observant. Too observant.
Tola peeked. "Hmm. So he's attentive. I like that for you."
"There is no 'for me' here," Racheal muttered.
Another message buzzed in.
A.C.:
I'm by the gate now if you want to pick it up.
Racheal felt something tug in her stomach.
Nerves?
Annoyance?
Curiosity she absolutely didn't want to have?
She wasn't sure.
"Go," Tola urged, nudging her forward. "Collect your destiny-sorry, your ID card."
"I hate you," Racheal said, slipping her phone into her pocket.
"No you don't," Tola called after her. "Text me the moment he says anything suspicious or sexy!"
Racheal didn't respond.
She needed to focus.
It was just a man holding her ID card. Nothing dramatic.
But when she stepped outside the bakery, she saw him immediately.
Adrian stood at the gate, leaned slightly against the hood of a sleek black car, ID card between his fingers. The morning sun hit his hair just right, giving him the kind of effortless glow that should be illegal before noon.
He saw her approaching and straightened.
"Ms. Nwosu," he greeted, holding out the ID.
"Thank you," she murmured, taking it.
But instead of leaving, he hesitated.
"You should be careful," he said quietly. "Someone else could have picked this up."
Racheal swallowed. "Yeah. I know. I was in a rush."
"And you often rush," he noted.
She blinked. "You've seen me twice."
"I pay attention."
The words hung in the air-simple, but heavy enough to make her heartbeat stumble.
Racheal looked away, suddenly flustered. "Well... thanks. Again."
She turned to walk back, but his voice stopped her.
"Racheal."
It was the first time he said her first name.
And the way it sounded-precise, careful, almost like he was testing how it fit on his tongue-sent an unexpected shiver through her.
She faced him slowly. "Yes?"
He slipped his hands into his pockets. "I didn't mean to offend you yesterday. Or this morning."
She blinked.
Was he... trying to be human now?
"I-it's fine," she said quietly.
A soft nod. "All right."
He stepped back, as if giving her space.
Racheal turned away and walked back toward the bakery, heart beating faster than she liked.
Just before she pushed the door open, her phone buzzed again.
She didn't need to check it to know who it was.
A.C.:
Have a good day.
She stood there for a moment, staring at the message.
Tola peeked through the bakery window, mouthing, "WHAT DID HE SAY?"
Racheal exhaled shakily.
Trouble wasn't just texting her now
It was learning her name.
Racheal woke the next morning with her phone still in her hand, the last unread message from Kai glowing faintly against her pillow. She'd fallen asleep somewhere between overthinking and pretending she wasn't. Now, in the soft wash of early sunlight, the truth hit her she had been waiting for him to text again.
She sat up slowly, stretching, her mind replaying every moment from last night: his stare, the warmth in his voice, the way he'd said her name like he already knew it. And then the message short, late, unexpected.
You got home safe?
Simple. Too simple. But somehow it made her heart stumble.
Before she could think too deeply, her phone buzzed again. She froze. Then looked.
Good morning, Racheal.
Her pulse kicked. She stared at the text longer than necessary, half suspicious of it and half drawn to it like a moth to fire.
Why was he texting her this early? Why did he care? They weren't friends. They were barely acquaintances. And yet... there he was. Already inside her morning.
She got up, brushed her teeth, changed into something clean, and tried to act like a normal human who did not have a billionaire neighbor sending her good morning texts. But even as she made her coffee, she felt it the strange shift in the air, like something in her world had quietly tilted.
Her phone buzzed again.
Are you busy later? I need to talk to you about something.
Racheal blinked at the screen.
Talk to her? About what?
She typed, erased, typed again.
Finally:
Depends... what's it about?
A minute passed. Two. She paced the small kitchen, the coffee cooling untouched.
Then his reply came.
It's better said in person. Can I come by?
She should say no. She knew she should. The night before still lingered the tension, the silence, the way he had looked at her like he wanted to tell her a secret he wasn't supposed to share.
But somehow her fingers moved on their own.
Okay. When?
This time, the reply was immediate.
Now.
Racheal's breath caught.
A knock sounded at her door just as her heart finished its next beat.
She froze.
He was already here.
For a moment she simply stared at her front door, frozen, as if hoping the knock had been a mistake. Her heart pounded too loudly for the quiet of her apartment, and she wasn't even sure she'd taken a proper breath.
Another knock firmer this time, but still gentle. Controlled. Exactly like him.
She wiped her palms against her shorts and forced herself to move toward the door. Every step felt heavier, her pulse thudding against her ribs like it was trying to warn her.
When she opened the door, Adrian Cole was standing there.
Hands in his pockets. Shoulders relaxed but eyes alert. The morning light softened the sharpness of his features, giving him an almost disarmingly warm look nothing like the guarded man she'd met the first day.
"Hey," he said quietly.
Just one word, but it landed somewhere in her chest and stayed there.
"Hey," she replied, hoping her voice didn't betray the chaos inside her.
He looked her over not with judgment, but with something that felt dangerously close to concern. Like he'd shown up early just to make sure she was okay.
"Can I come in?" he asked.
She hesitated for a heartbeat not because she didn't trust him, but because she trusted him a little too easily. Still, she stepped aside.
As Adrian walked in, the subtle scent of his cologne brushed past her, clean and expensive, making her kitchen feel suddenly too small.
He turned to face her once he was inside. His expression was tense, but not cold. More like he was wrestling with something he'd been carrying for too long.
"I didn't mean to come earlier than I said," he began, rubbing the back of his neck. "I just... didn't want to explain this over text."
Racheal swallowed. "Explain what?"
Adrian took a slow breath and stepped a little closer, his gaze steady in a way that made her nerves spark.
"Last night wasn't a mistake," he said. "And this me being here it's not casual."
Her chest tightened. "Adrian... what are you trying to say?"
He studied her for a moment, his jaw flexing like he was choosing his words carefully.
"I need you to trust me," he said softly. "Because something's happening-and you're already involved, whether you realize it or not."
A strange chill swept through her.
"Involved in what?"
Adrian's eyes didn't waver. "In something you weren't supposed to see. Something you weren't supposed to be anywhere near." His voice lowered, almost regretful.
"But I didn't stay away. And now... it's too late for distance."
Racheal's breath caught.
He hadn't come to interrupt her morning or flirt or pretend nothing changed.
He'd come to pull her into something real.
Something dangerous.
Racheal stepped back just enough to anchor herself. "Adrian... what did I see? What are you talking about?"
He exhaled slowly, as if he'd been holding the truth in his chest for too long. "Last night, when you left your apartment... you walked right into something you shouldn't have. Something that wasn't meant for public eyes."
Her eyebrows pulled together. "I just saw you talking to a man in the hallway."
Adrian shook his head. "Not just talking. That man wasn't a visitor. He's tied to a deal that shouldn't be leaking through the cracks." He paused, his voice dipping lower. "And you showed up at the exact moment the situation was supposed to stay buried."
Racheal's skin prickled. "You mean... I walked into something illegal?"
His jaw tightened ,not with guilt but with frustration at the situation itself. "Not illegal. Complicated. Dangerous in ways you don't understand yet."
She swallowed hard, trying to piece together the edges of a puzzle she didn't even know existed. "So what you're saying I'm in danger?"
Adrian stepped closer, instinctively, as if shielding her from something invisible. "I'm saying I won't let anything touch you. But I need you to know what you're walking into, because pretending it didn't happen won't fix it."
Her voice trembled despite her effort to stay steady. "Why tell me all this? You could've ignored me. Avoided me. Let it fade."
Adrian studied her for a long, quiet moment-too quiet.
And then his expression shifted, softened in a way she wasn't prepared for.
"Because," he said slowly, "the moment I heard your footsteps in that hallway... I knew I'd already crossed a line."
Racheal's heart thudded, unsteady.
"What line?"
Adrian's gaze held hers, steady and unflinching, but vulnerable in a way she had never seen from him.
"The line between keeping you at a distance," he murmured, "and wanting you close."
Her breath jammed in her throat.
He wasn't guessing.
He wasn't flirting.
He meant every word.
"Adrian..." she whispered, but she didn't know what was supposed to come after that.
He took one more step toward her slow, deliberate like he was giving her time to stop him, even though she didn't move.
"There's more you need to know," he said, his voice dropping to a low, steady rumble. "But before I tell you everything... you have to promise me one thing."
Racheal's pulse fluttered. "What?"
"That no matter how complicated this gets," Adrian said, "you won't run from me."
Silence settled between them, thick and electric.
Her world had already shifted - because of him, because of this morning, because of the truth pressing between them.
But she lifted her chin, grounding herself.
"What am I promising," she said softly, "if I don't even know the whole story yet?"
Adrian's mouth curved -barely, almost imperceptibly but it wasn't amusement. It was relief mixed with something warmer.
"Then," he said, stepping close enough for his warmth to brush against her skin, "let me tell you everything."
Racheal nodded slowly, her heart pounding hard enough to make her chest feel tight. "Okay. I'm listening."
Adrian exhaled-a deep, controlled breath that felt like he was steadying himself. Then he walked past her and took a seat at her tiny kitchen table, the one that suddenly felt too modest for a man like him. He rested his hands on the surface, fingers laced together, eyes down for a moment before meeting hers again.
"This isn't easy to explain," he began, "because it's not a world I ever intended you to be near."
She moved closer but didn't sit yet, bracing herself against the edge of the counter.
"Then start with the part I did see," she said gently. "The man in the hallway."
Adrian's jaw flexed. "His name is Victor Lagos. And he doesn't show up anywhere unless he wants something."
Racheal's brows pulled together. "From you?"
"From my company," Adrian corrected. "From the deal I'm trying to close. He's not someone you push without consequences."
The seriousness in his voice sent a cold shiver down her spine.
"And what does that have to do with me?" she whispered.
"You walked out at the exact moment we were arguing-when I was telling him I wouldn't agree to his terms." Adrian leaned back, eyes locked on hers. "You heard enough to be considered a liability to him."
A pulse of fear moved through her, sudden and sharp. "I didn't hear anything."
"Victor doesn't care," Adrian said softly. "If you were close enough to witness it, that's enough for him."
Racheal swallowed hard. "So what does he want?"
Adrian hesitated. "He wants leverage."
"Leverage... like me?"
His silence was the confirmation she didn't want.
Racheal's breath stuttered. "Adrian-tell me the truth. Am I in danger because of you?"
His eyes softened, a flicker of something almost painful passing through them. "You're in danger because of the world I'm part of. One I've tried very hard to keep separate from my personal life."
A bitter, quiet laugh escaped her. "Funny, considering you've barely known me a week."
"That's exactly why it's a problem," Adrian said, voice low and tense. "I don't get attached. Not to neighbors. Not to anyone who can complicate my business."
"Then why me?"
His gaze deepened, almost unbearably sincere. "Because the moment you glared at me in that hallway... I forgot the rules."
The room stilled.
Racheal finally sank into the chair across from him, her hands trembling slightly.
"So what now?" she asked. "You just expect me to... what? Stay inside? Pretend none of this is happening?"
"No." Adrian leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees. "I expect you to let me protect you."
She blinked, stunned. "Protect me? Adrian, we barely know each other."
"Trust doesn't need time," he said quietly. "It needs intent. And mine is clear."
Her mouth went dry. "And what intent is that?"
His eyes dropped to her lips for a fraction of a second-so quick she almost doubted it, but not enough to forget it-before lifting back to meet her gaze.
"To keep you safe," he said. "Even if it means standing between you and a man who would ruin everything just to get to me."
Racheal's pulse stumbled.
"So you're saying someone might come after me... because of you?"
"I won't let it get that far." Adrian's voice sharpened with certainty. "But you need to stay close. You need to trust me when I say this isn't over."
Racheal felt the weight of his words settle over her. Heavy. Real. Unavoidable.
She drew in a slow breath. "Then you tell me what happens next."
Adrian stood up, steps measured, controlled. He walked toward her, stopping right in front of her chair.
His voice dropped to a soft, intimate calm.
"What happens next," he said, "is that I don't leave you alone again."
Racheal didn't move for a few seconds after Adrian spoke.
I don't leave you alone again.
The words echoed in her chest, unsettling and strangely grounding at the same time.
He stood in front of her, tall and steady, like he was waiting for her to push him away or pull him closer. She did neither. She just looked up at him, searching for something answers, reassurance, maybe even the truth behind the way he was looking at her.
"Adrian," she said finally, her voice soft but steady, "this isn't normal."
His expression barely shifted. "Nothing about my life is normal."
"That's not what I mean," she continued. "I barely understand what's going on, and you're telling me you can't leave me alone. You expect me to be okay with that?"
"No," he admitted quietly. "I expect you to tell me what you need."
Racheal wasn't prepared for that. For the openness in his tone. For someone who moved through life with control stitched into every step, he suddenly looked like a man waiting-hoping-for the right to stay.
And she hated how much a part of her wanted him to.
Racheal stood, the chair scraping softly against the floor. She wasn't running, just trying to breathe properly. She walked toward the window, pulling the curtain aside. The street below looked normal quiet, calm, like nothing had shifted.
But everything had.
Adrian stayed where he was, giving her space but watching her carefully.
Not possessively protectively.
"Tell me what Victor actually wants," she said without turning around. "Not the business version. The real one."
Adrian hesitated. She felt it more than she heard it.
"He wants control," Adrian finally said. "Doesn't matter if he gets it through a contract, a threat, or a weakness."
He paused.
"And he thinks you're mine."
Racheal spun. "I'm not yours."
A muscle ticked in his jaw. "I know that. But he doesn't."
"Well, tell him," she shot back, fighting the sudden wave of heat rushing to her face. "Tell him we're not anything."
Adrian's voice gentled. "That won't help."
"Why not?"
He took a step forward. Then another. Slow. Measured.
"Because Victor will believe the opposite," he said quietly. "The harder I deny it, the more power he thinks you have over me."
Racheal's pulse climbed. "So either way, I'm stuck."
"Yes," Adrian said. "But not unprotected."
She turned away again, frustration and fear tangling inside her chest. She wasn't weak-she handled her life on her own, every responsibility, every bill, every quiet battle. But this wasn't a late payment or a broken appliance. This was a man with influence and intentions she didn't understand.
And Adrian-this complicated, intense man-was the only shield standing between her and whatever Victor wanted.
"Racheal," Adrian said, taking one more step toward her.
She didn't turn.
"I need you to trust me," he continued. "Not because I'm some billionaire with resources. Not because I'm the only one who can handle a man like him."
His voice softened.
"Trust me because I'm choosing you."
Those words made her breath catch.
Slowly, she turned back toward him. He wasn't closer than before, but the space between them felt smaller. More charged.
"And what if I don't want to be chosen?" she whispered.
Adrian's expression didn't falter, but something warm flickered in his eyes. "Then I'll step back. But I won't pretend you're not already part of this."
Racheal held his gaze for a long moment. His honesty unsettled her more than the danger did.
"Okay," she finally said, her voice steadying. "Then tell me what happens now."
Adrian's shoulders eased just slightly-as if her words gave him permission to breathe again.
"Now," he said, "I move you into my apartment."
Racheal's eyes widened. "Absolutely not."
"It's the safest place in the building," he replied calmly. "Victor doesn't know which units belong to me. I have security. Cameras. A private entrance."
"Adrian," she said, incredulous, "I'm not moving into your place."
Something like a smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. "I assumed you'd say that."
"Good," she shot back.
"But you are."
"Absolutely n-"
"I'm not asking," Adrian said softly, but with a firmness that sent a quiet tremor through her. "I'm telling you what will keep you safe."
Their eyes locked.
Something shifted.
And in that moment, Racheal realized something she hadn't wanted to admit.
Adrian Cole was used to being obeyed-feared, even.
But with her?
He was asking her to let him stay close.
And that was far more dangerous than Victor Lagos.
Racheal folded her arms tightly across her chest, partly to steady herself, partly because she needed a barrier-anything-to keep her thoughts from spilling into places she wasn't ready for.
"You can't just decide where I live," she said quietly.
Adrian stepped closer-not crowding, just enough to make her aware of every breath he took. "I'm not trying to control you."
"You are," she whispered. "Maybe not intentionally, but you are."
He exhaled, slow and regretful. "I just want you safe."
"And I want to feel like my life is still mine," she shot back.
That made him still.
For the first time since he walked in, Adrian's confidence cracked-only slightly, but enough for her to see it. He ran a hand through his hair, pacing once across the small room before stopping again.
"I don't know how to do this," he admitted quietly.
"Do what?" Racheal asked, thrown off by his vulnerability.
"Balance both worlds," he said. "The one that requires control... and the one that involves you."
Her chest tightened.
"Adrian-"
"No," he said softly, turning toward her. "Let me say this without choosing my words." He inhaled sharply. "I am used to being in charge. To having situations fall in line. To deciding without asking."
His voice dropped.
"But you... you make me want to ask."
Racheal's heart did something she didn't like-something warm, something foolish, something dangerous.
"Then ask," she whispered.
He stepped closer-slow, deliberate, careful.
"Will you stay where I can protect you?" Adrian asked. "Not because I insist... but because you choose it?"
The room went quiet.
Her breathing felt too loud.
Her thoughts too tangled.
Staying with him meant safety-but it also meant proximity. Constant proximity. His presence. His intensity. His world pressing against hers until the line blurred.
Leaving meant danger-but it meant independence, too.
She lifted her eyes to his, searching for anything manipulative, anything hidden. But Adrian's gaze was open-earnest in a way she hadn't expected.
"Let me keep you safe," he said softly.
Racheal's grip on her arms loosened. "Adrian... I don't even know the full truth yet."
"Then let me give it to you," he promised. "All of it."
Her breath shook slightly.
"Okay," she said. "Give me the truth."
Adrian nodded once-slow, like he was bracing himself.
But before he could speak, a sharp, insistent knock rattled the door.
Racheal stiffened. Adrian's entire body went still.
That one moment of silence stretched out like a warning.
The knock came again-slower this time, but firmer.
Adrian's expression changed instantly. His jaw tightened, shoulders squared, and something cold, dangerous flickered in his eyes.
"Racheal," he said quietly, stepping in front of her, "get behind me."
She didn't argue.
The knock came a third time-deep, echoing, patient.
Adrian leaned close enough for his breath to brush her ear.
"No matter what happens," he murmured, "do not open your mouth."
Racheal swallowed hard.
"Who is it?" she whispered.
Adrian's eyes never left the door.
"Someone who shouldn't know where you live," he said.
Her pulse broke into a sprint.
"Is it-?"
"Yes." Adrian's voice dropped into a cold, controlled whisper.
"It's Victor Lagos."
At her door.
Adrian didn't move-not even a fraction. His entire posture shifted into something she hadn't seen before: calm, cold, and lethal around the edges. The air in the apartment felt tighter, heavier, as if even the walls understood what kind of man stood outside.
The knock came again.
Three slow, deliberate taps.
Adrian stepped forward, blocking her completely from the doorway. "Stay behind me," he repeated-quiet but absolute.
Racheal pressed back against the wall, her breath shallow and uneven. Adrian reached for the handle, pausing only long enough to give her a look-one that said don't panic, don't move, don't speak.
Then he opened the door.
Victor Lagos stood there like he owned the hallway.
Tall. Clean-cut. A dark suit that fit too perfectly. His smile was polite-too polite-but his eyes moved with the sharpness of a man who never entered a room without knowing how to control it.
"Well," Victor said, his voice smooth as polished glass. "You answered quicker than I expected."
Adrian didn't smile. "You're on the wrong floor."
Victor's gaze flicked past Adrian's shoulder-just a split-second glance, but enough to send heat rushing up Racheal's spine. He knew someone else was in the apartment. Adrian stepped half an inch to block him further.
"You're early," Adrian said, voice low.
Victor lifted a brow. "Punctuality is a strength. You should know that."
Adrian didn't react, but the tension between them stretched so tight it felt like static in the air.
Victor leaned against the doorframe, pretending to admire the interior beyond Adrian's stance. "Interesting little place you've chosen to visit this morning."
"It's not your concern," Adrian replied.
"Everything you do is my concern," Victor said. "Especially now."
Racheal's fingers curled against the wall.
Victor smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "I saw her last night, you know. Pretty girl. Seemed... startled." His gaze sharpened. "People overhear things when they walk around too freely."
Adrian's jaw tightened. "Leave her out of this."
Victor tilted his head. "So you do know her."
Adrian stepped forward, forcing Victor a half-step back. "Walk away."
Victor didn't flinch. He looked amused-like he'd been waiting for exactly this reaction.
"Adrian, Adrian..." he sighed. "You know I don't walk away from leverage."
Something inside Racheal snapped cold. Leverage. That was all she was to him-a pressure point.
Before she could shift, Adrian blocked even more of the doorway with his body, lowering his voice so only Victor could hear-but Racheal caught every word.
"If you go near her," Adrian said, voice dangerously soft, "I will ruin you in ways you can't recover from."
Victor's smile widened. "Ah. So you do care."
A flicker of triumph lit in his eyes-like he'd just uncovered a secret weapon.
Adrian didn't blink. "This is your last warning."
Victor straightened his suit cuffs, unfazed. "Noted. But I don't think you understand, Adrian." He leaned in, his voice dropping. "This isn't about warning me. It's about controlling what happens next. Something you're clearly losing your grip on."
Adrian stayed silent. A storm quiet, not calm.
Victor adjusted his tie, took one slow step back, and smiled like a man who'd already won something unseen.
"Tell your neighbor I said hello," he murmured.
Adrian slammed the door before the last word fully landed.
Silence swallowed the room.
Adrian stood there, breathing carefully-too carefully-in a way that told her he was holding something back.
Racheal swallowed. "He... he knows about me."
Adrian turned around, eyes burning with a fury he was too controlled to unleash.
"Yes," he said. "And that changes everything."
Racheal's hands trembled. "What do we do now?"
Adrian stepped forward, closing the space between them, gripping the sides of her arms-not hard, but firmly enough to ground her.
"You pack your things," he said, voice low and unwavering. "You're coming with me."
Racheal stared at him, her pulse thundering. "Adrian..."
"No arguments. No hesitation." His voice dropped into something dark, protective, and dangerously sincere. "I'm not letting him use you as a weapon against me."
Racheal's throat tightened. "And what if moving in with you makes it worse?"
Adrian shook his head. "It won't."
He leaned closer, his forehead almost touching hers.
"Because if Victor wants a fight... he's about to get one."