The elevator doors slid shut with a soft thud, trapping us in a space that suddenly felt smaller than a coffin. The Tom Ford cologne that used to make my knees weak now made my stomach turn. Kade's breathing was harsh in the confined space, his chest rising and falling like he'd just run a marathon.
His fingers wrapped around my wrist with bruising force, pressing me back against the cool metal wall. The elevator's soft jazz music played on, absurdly cheerful against the tension crackling between us.
"What the hell are you playing at?" he snarled, his face inches from mine. "Some kind of sick game? Playing hard to get?"
I glanced down at his hand on my wrist, then back up to his face with the same expression I might use to examine a mildly interesting insect. "Kade," I said, my voice perfectly calm, "you have a coffee stain on your collar. Didn't Abagail mention it?"
His grip tightened, and I felt my pulse throb against his fingers. But my heart rate stayed steady. Fascinating how death changes your perspective on pain.
"Don't play dumb with me, Sloane." His voice dropped to that dangerous whisper he used in boardrooms when he was about to destroy someone's career. "I know what you're doing. This whole act—the hotel room, the calm routine—you think if you pretend not to care, I'll come crawling back?"
The elevator descended past the twentieth floor, nineteenth, eighteenth. Each number lighting up like a countdown to something inevitable.
"You want to know what I think?" His breath was hot against my cheek, reeking of the expensive coffee he'd probably shared with Abagail. "I think you're desperate. I think you're terrified of losing me, so you're putting on this ice queen act to save face."
I tilted my head slightly, studying him like he was a fascinating specimen. "Are you done?"
Something flickered in his eyes—confusion, maybe even a hint of unease. This wasn't the reaction he'd expected. In our previous fights, I would have been screaming by now, tears streaming down my face, begging him to explain, to choose me.
"Because if you're quite finished," I continued, my voice still maddeningly even, "I have something to show you."
I pulled out my phone with my free hand, swiping to the BeReal app. The screenshot was crystal clear—Kade's hands tangled in Abagail's hair, her skirt hiked up around her thighs, both of them lost in their little office rendezvous. The timestamp showed it was taken exactly seven minutes ago.
"BeReal is such a wonderful app," I mused, holding the screen where he could see it clearly. "So authentic. So... real-time."
Kade's face went white, then red, then an interesting shade of purple. His grip on my wrist loosened slightly.
"You wouldn't," he breathed.
"Wouldn't I?" I smiled, the expression feeling sharp on my face. "Let's see... I have about three thousand followers. Half of them are investors, board members, or financial journalists. The other half are our employees and competitors."
I swiped to my drafts, where a post was already waiting: "When your fiancé gives new meaning to 'hands-on management.' #CorporateLife #Truth #Hopwood"
"One little tap," I said, my finger hovering over the share button, "and this goes live. The stock market opens in six hours, Kade. How do you think this will play with our shareholders?"
"You're bluffing." But his voice cracked slightly, and sweat was beading on his forehead despite the elevator's air conditioning.
"Am I?" I met his gaze steadily. "Try me."
The elevator continued its descent. Fifteenth floor. Fourteenth. Thirteenth.
"You think you can threaten me?" His voice was getting higher, more desperate. "You think you hold all the cards here? I'll divorce you, Sloane. I'll take everything. The house, the cars, half the company—"
"With what prenup?" I interrupted softly.
His mouth snapped shut.
"Oh, that's right," I continued, my voice taking on a mock-sympathetic tone. "We never signed one, did we? You were so confident in your ability to keep me wrapped around your finger. So sure I'd never leave."
The elevator shuddered slightly as it passed the tenth floor.
"But here's the thing about divorce proceedings, darling," I said, savoring each word. "They're public record. And judges tend to frown on adultery, especially when it involves workplace harassment. Abagail is twenty-two, Kade. An intern. Your subordinate."
I leaned closer, my voice dropping to a whisper that somehow felt more threatening than his shouts.
"How do you think that will play in family court?"
Kade's hand fell away from my wrist entirely. He stumbled back against the opposite wall, his perfect composure finally cracking.
"What do you want?" The words came out strangled.
I smoothed down my blazer, checking my reflection in the polished elevator doors. Perfect. Composed. In control.
"I want you to sign the papers," I said simply. "Clean. Quick. No contest."
"And if I don't?"
I held up my phone again, finger still poised over the share button. "Then tomorrow's headlines will be very interesting reading."
The elevator chimed softly as we reached the ground floor. The doors slid open with a mechanical whisper, revealing the gleaming marble lobby of Hopwood Industries. Afternoon sunlight streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting everything in golden light that felt almost theatrical.
Employees moved through the space like well-dressed ants, their conversations creating a low hum of corporate ambition. Several heads turned our way—we were, after all, the company's golden couple, the power duo everyone either envied or feared.
I stepped out of the elevator with practiced grace, my heels clicking against the marble in a steady rhythm. Behind me, I heard Kade's ragged breathing, but I didn't look back.
That's when I collided with him.
Not literally—I was too graceful for that. But the impact was just as jarring. One moment I was walking toward the exit, and the next I was looking up into a pair of steel-gray eyes that seemed to see straight through me.
Ryker Vance.
Kade's greatest rival, the CEO of Vance Enterprises, and the one man in the city who could make my ex-fiancé break out in a cold sweat just by existing.
He was taller than I remembered, his dark hair perfectly styled in that effortless way that probably took his stylist an hour to achieve. His charcoal suit was tailored to perfection, emphasizing broad shoulders and a lean frame that spoke of early morning workouts and disciplined living.
But it was his eyes that caught me. They flicked from my face to my wrist—the one Kade had been gripping—and I saw something dangerous flicker in their depths.
"Ms. Hartwell," he said, his voice low and smooth as aged whiskey. "Interesting afternoon?"
Behind me, I heard Kade's sharp intake of breath. The lobby seemed to hold its breath, waiting.
The marble floor beneath my feet felt solid, real, in a way that nothing had for months. But the moment those steel-gray eyes locked onto mine, the world shifted slightly on its axis.
Ryker Vance stood before me like a force of nature barely contained in a thousand-dollar suit. His presence commanded the entire lobby—conversations quieted, heads turned, and even the ambient lighting seemed to bend around him. This was a man who didn't just enter rooms; he conquered them.
But it wasn't his reputation or his devastating good looks that made my breath catch. It was the way his gaze immediately dropped to my wrist, where Kade's fingers had left angry red marks against my pale skin.
Something dangerous flickered in those gray depths.
"Hopwood先生," Ryker's voice cut through the lobby's hushed atmosphere like a blade through silk, "在公共场合对女士动粗,这就是你们家族的教养?"
The words rolled off his tongue with the kind of controlled menace that made grown men in boardrooms break out in cold sweats. His accent carried just the faintest hint of something foreign—refined, educated, lethal.
Behind me, I heard Kade's sharp intake of breath. When I glanced back, my ex-fiancé's face had gone the color of old parchment. His mouth opened and closed soundlessly, like a fish gasping for air.
In the corporate hierarchy of New York, there were kings, and then there was Ryker Vance. Even Kade, with all his inherited wealth and family connections, was just another pretender to the throne.
"Vance," Kade finally managed, his voice cracking slightly. "This is a private matter—"
"Nothing about manhandling a woman in a public lobby is private," Ryker interrupted smoothly. Then, without breaking eye contact with Kade, he extended his hand toward me.
Not for a handshake. Not for introduction.
His fingers covered my bruised wrist with surprising gentleness, the warmth of his skin sending an unexpected shiver through my entire body. His touch was careful, almost reverent, as if he were handling something precious and fragile.
"Ms. Hartwell," he said, his voice dropping to that low, whiskey-smooth register that probably made shareholders sign contracts without reading the fine print. "Are you quite alright?"
The concern in his voice seemed genuine, which was more unsettling than if he'd been playing some corporate power game. In my previous life, no one had ever looked at me like I was worth protecting. Kade certainly never had.
"I'm perfectly fine," I said, surprised by how steady my voice sounded. "Kade was just... excited about some news I shared with him."
I caught sight of a passing server carrying a tray of cold brew coffee—probably heading to one of the afternoon meetings in the conference rooms upstairs. Without hesitation, I plucked a glass from the tray, ignoring the server's startled expression.
The cold brew was bitter and perfect, exactly what I needed to wash away the taste of Kade's desperation.
"After all," I continued, taking another sip and meeting Ryker's amused gaze over the rim of the glass, "it's not every day a man receives such a generous gift from his fiancée."
Ryker's eyebrows rose slightly, and I caught the faintest hint of a smile playing at the corners of his mouth. He was clearly reassessing me, this woman who stood in a corporate lobby making casual conversation while her ex-fiancé looked like he was about to have a coronary.
"How... generous of you," Ryker said, his tone suggesting he understood far more than he was letting on. His fingers were still wrapped around my wrist, his thumb now tracing gentle circles over the bruised skin in a way that was both soothing and oddly intimate.
Kade made a strangled sound that might have been protest or panic. "Sloane, we should go. This conversation—"
"Is over," I finished for him, finally pulling my wrist free from Ryker's gentle grip. The absence of his touch felt like a loss, which was ridiculous. I'd just met the man.
Well, met him properly. We'd been in the same social circles for years, but always at opposite ends of rooms, separated by the invisible barriers of corporate rivalry and social politics.
"Quite right," Ryker agreed, but his eyes never left my face. There was something calculating in his expression now, like a chess master who'd just spotted a particularly interesting move on the board.
I set the empty coffee glass on a nearby reception desk and smoothed down my blazer. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, I could see my Uber Black idling at the curb, the driver probably wondering what was taking so long.
"Gentlemen," I said with a polite smile that didn't reach my eyes, "it's been... illuminating."
I turned toward the exit, my heels clicking against the marble in a rhythm that felt like a countdown. Behind me, I could hear Kade's labored breathing and what sounded like him trying to form words that wouldn't come.
I was almost to the revolving doors when I heard footsteps behind me—not Kade's hesitant shuffle, but the confident stride of someone who was used to getting what he wanted.
"Ms. Hartwell."
Ryker's voice stopped me just as I reached for the door handle. I turned to find him standing closer than I'd expected, close enough that I could smell his cologne—something expensive and understated that reminded me of cedar and rain.
He held out a business card, but not the standard corporate kind. This was personal—heavy cardstock, minimalist design, with just a phone number embossed in silver.
"Tomorrow morning, ten o'clock," he said, his voice low enough that only I could hear. "DUMBO district, Brooklyn. There's a boxing gym called Precision—ask for Marcus, tell him I sent you."
I took the card, my fingers brushing his for just a moment. The contact sent another one of those unexpected shivers through me.
"I think," he continued, his gray eyes holding mine with an intensity that made my heart skip, "you need somewhere to work out your frustrations. Somewhere that won't involve going back to whatever suffocating situation you're trying to escape."
The words hit closer to home than they should have. How could he possibly know about the empty penthouse waiting for me, with its pristine white walls and carefully curated loneliness?
"And why," I asked, surprising myself with my boldness, "would the great Ryker Vance care about my... frustrations?"
His smile was sharp enough to cut glass. "Because, Ms. Hartwell, I have a feeling we're going to be seeing a lot more of each other. And I prefer my allies to be properly... prepared."
Allies. The word hung in the air between us like a promise and a threat rolled into one.
Before I could respond, he stepped back, giving me space to leave. But his eyes never left mine, and I felt the weight of his attention like a physical thing.
I pushed through the revolving door and stepped into the afternoon sunlight, Ryker's card still warm between my fingers. Behind me, the lobby of Hopwood Industries felt like a stage I'd just walked off of, leaving behind a performance that had changed everything.
As the Uber pulled away from the curb, I caught a glimpse of Ryker in the side mirror, still standing in the lobby, still watching. And for the first time since I'd walked back into this life, I felt like I wasn't facing the future alone.
The morning air in DUMBO carried the scent of salt and coffee, mixing with the industrial tang of old warehouses converted into trendy spaces. I stood outside Precision Boxing Gym at exactly ten o'clock, wearing head-to-toe Alo Yoga—leggings that hugged every curve, a sports bra that left nothing to the imagination, and a cropped hoodie that somehow managed to look both athletic and effortlessly chic.
The gym's exterior was deceptively modest, just a black door with frosted glass and minimal signage. But the moment I stepped inside, the atmosphere hit me like a physical force. The rhythmic thudding of gloves against heavy bags, the squeak of sneakers on canvas, the sharp exhales of fighters pushing their limits—it was a symphony of controlled violence that made my pulse quicken.
"You must be Sloane." A voice cut through the noise, and I turned to see a mountain of a man approaching. Marcus, presumably—all muscle and scars, with kind eyes that seemed incongruous with his intimidating frame. "Ryker said you might be stopping by."
I nodded, suddenly feeling out of place among the serious athletes who populated this space. Everyone here looked like they belonged, like they'd earned their right to throw punches and draw blood. I was just a corporate princess playing dress-up.
"First time?" Marcus asked, leading me toward a row of heavy bags.
"Is it that obvious?"
He chuckled, a low rumble that somehow put me at ease. "Your hands. Too soft. Too perfect. But don't worry—we'll fix that."
The next twenty minutes were a blur of instruction. How to wrap my hands, how to stand, how to keep my guard up. Marcus was patient but demanding, correcting my form with the kind of attention to detail that spoke of years spent training fighters.
I was just starting to find my rhythm, throwing tentative jabs at the heavy bag, when I felt him.
The presence behind me was unmistakable—a wall of heat and controlled power that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up. I didn't need to turn around to know it was Ryker. The very air seemed to shift when he entered a room.
"Your form is terrible," he said, his voice low and amused.
I stopped mid-punch, my gloved hands dropping to my sides. "Good morning to you too."
He moved closer, close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from his body. He was dressed for the gym—black athletic shorts that showcased legs that were pure muscle, and a fitted tank top that left his arms bare. The sight of him should have been distracting, but it was his proximity that made my breath catch.
"May I?" he asked, his hands hovering near mine.
I nodded, not trusting my voice.
His body pressed against my back as he reached around me, his hands covering my gloved ones. The contact sent electricity shooting through every nerve ending. His chest was solid against my shoulders, his breath warm against my ear as he guided my arms into the proper position.
"Like this," he murmured, his voice vibrating through my entire body. "Power comes from your core, not your arms. Feel the rotation."
He guided me through a slow-motion punch, his body moving with mine in perfect synchronization. The intimacy of it was overwhelming—more intense than any kiss I'd ever shared with Kade. This was raw, primal, dangerous in a way that had nothing to do with the boxing gloves on my hands.
"Now try it," he said, stepping back just enough to give me space but staying close enough that I could still feel his presence like a magnetic field.
I threw the punch, putting my whole body behind it the way he'd shown me. The impact with the bag was satisfying in a way I hadn't expected, sending vibrations up my arms.
"Better," he said, and I could hear the approval in his voice. "Again."
We fell into a rhythm—him correcting my form, me throwing punches with increasing confidence. The repetitive motion was meditative, almost hypnotic. With each strike, I felt something loosening inside me, some tight knot of rage and pain that had been festering for months.
"Why boxing?" I asked during a water break, pulling off my gloves to wipe sweat from my forehead.
Ryker leaned against the wall, his gray eyes studying me with that unsettling intensity. "Because sometimes the only way to deal with anger is to hit something. Better a bag than a person."
"And you think I'm angry?"
His smile was sharp. "I think you're furious. The question is whether you're going to channel that fury into something productive or let it eat you alive."
The words hit closer to home than I cared to admit. "Maybe I like being angry. Maybe it's the only thing keeping me warm at night."
"Then let's see what that anger can do."
He led me to the boxing ring in the center of the gym, holding the ropes apart so I could climb through. The canvas felt different under my feet—softer, more forgiving than the concrete floor, but somehow more significant. This was where real fights happened.
Ryker pulled on a pair of focus mitts, holding them up in front of him. "Show me what you've got."
I threw a tentative jab, and he shook his head.
"Harder. You're not going to hurt me, Sloane. I can take whatever you've got."
Something in his tone—the challenge, the certainty—ignited something inside me. I threw another punch, this one with real force behind it. The impact against the mitt sent a shock up my arm.
"Why did you leave Kade?" Ryker asked suddenly, his voice casual despite the intensity of our sparring.
The question caught me off guard, and my next punch went wide. "Why do you care?"
"Because I'm trying to figure out if you're running from something or running toward something. There's a difference."
I reset my stance, throwing a combination that he caught easily on the mitts. "Maybe I'm not running at all. Maybe I'm hunting."
His eyes flashed with something that might have been approval. "What are you hunting?"\n
"Power. Control. Everything that was taken from me." Each word was punctuated by a punch, harder and more focused than the last. "Because dead people don't need cheap love. They need absolute power."
The words slipped out before I could stop them, and I saw something shift in Ryker's expression. He lowered the mitts, studying my face with new interest.
"Dead people?" he repeated quietly.
"Figure of speech," I said quickly, but he was already seeing too much.
Before he could respond, a commotion at the gym entrance caught our attention. The door slammed open with enough force to rattle the windows, and there was Kade, looking like he'd slept in his clothes. His hair was disheveled, his usually pristine appearance completely undone.
In his hands was a bouquet of red roses—expensive ones, the kind that cost more than most people's rent. His eyes swept the gym until they found me in the ring, and his face went through a series of emotions: relief, confusion, and then something darker when he saw Ryker standing so close to me.
"Sloane!" he called out, his voice echoing in the suddenly quiet gym. Every head turned toward us, the atmosphere crackling with tension.
I didn't move, didn't even acknowledge him. Instead, I kept my eyes on Ryker, watching as his jaw tightened with controlled anger.
"Friend of yours?" Ryker asked, his voice deceptively calm.
"Ex-fiancé," I corrected. "Emphasis on ex."
Kade was pushing through the gym now, ignoring the glares from serious athletes who didn't appreciate the disruption. His expensive shoes looked ridiculous against the utilitarian flooring.
"We need to talk," he said when he reached the ring, holding up the roses like they were some kind of peace offering. "I've been calling you all night. Your phone's going straight to voicemail."
"Because I blocked your number," I said simply.
Ryker stepped closer to me, close enough that his arm brushed mine. The gesture was subtle but unmistakable—a claiming, a protection, a line drawn in the sand.
Kade's eyes narrowed as he took in our proximity, our matching workout clothes, the sheen of sweat that made it obvious we'd been training together for a while.
"What is this?" he demanded, his voice rising. "Some kind of revenge fuck? You're using my biggest competitor to get back at me?"
The gym went dead silent. Even the background music seemed to pause, waiting for my response.
I turned to Ryker, letting a slow smile spread across my face. The kind of smile that had probably launched a thousand corporate wars.
"Can you help me throw him out?" I asked sweetly.
Ryker's answering grin was pure predator.