Elias's "office" wasn't a room; it was a cathedral of glass and humming servers at the heart of the estate. The temperature was precisely sixty-eight degrees.
Elias sat behind a desk made of a single slab of translucent obsidian. He didn't look up as Jax entered. He was typing with a rhythmic, frantic speed, his eyes reflecting the blue light of three floating monitors.
"Sit," Elias commanded. He didn't point to a chair.
Jax looked around. There were no chairs on his side of the desk. He remained standing, his arms crossed over his chest, his presence taking up enough space for three men. "I prefer to stand."
The typing stopped. Elias looked up, his grey eyes narrowed behind thin-rimmed glasses Jax hadn't seen earlier. "In this house, preference is a luxury you've forfeited. If I tell you to sit, you find a way to lower your center of gravity. However..." He leaned back, his slight frame disappearing into the shadows of his chair. "Since you're so fond of your height, let's discuss how you'll be using it."
Elias swiped a hand across the air, and a holographic display projected a list between them.
"The terms of your 'employment' are non-negotiable," Elias said. "Rule one: You are my shadow, but you are a silent one. You do not speak to my guests, my board, or my competitors unless I specifically address you. You are a ghost with a pulse."
Jax's jaw tightened so hard it ached. "You want a bodyguard. Just say it."
"I want an extension of my will," Elias corrected softly. "Rule two: Total accessibility. You sleep in the suite connected to mine. If I have a nightmare, if I have an idea at 3:00 AM, if I require a glass of water-you are there. You do not leave the grounds without my express permission."
"I'm an assistant, not a butler," Jax spat. "And I'm certainly not a servant."
Elias stood up. He walked around the obsidian desk, his movements fluid and strangely graceful for someone so fragile-looking. He stopped inches from Jax. The top of his head barely reached Jax's chin. The scent of sandalwood and something metallic-like a computer cooling system-wafted off him.
"You are whatever I need you to be, Jaxson," Elias whispered. "Forty-two million dollars buys a lot of 'whatever.' Rule three: Physical boundaries. You do not touch me. Not to guide me through a crowd, not to steady me, not for any reason unless my life is in immediate, verifiable danger. Do you understand?"
Jax looked down at him. From this close, he could see the slight tremor in Elias's fingers, hidden in the folds of his sweater. The man was a bundle of raw nerves wrapped in a billion-dollar ego.
"Understood," Jax gritted out.
"Good. Rule four: You will attend the solstice gala with me tomorrow night. You will wear the suit I've laid out for you. You will stand exactly two paces behind my left shoulder. You will look intimidating, you will stay silent, and you will not let anyone-anyone-get within three feet of me."
Elias turned his back, returning to his desk as if Jax had already ceased to exist. "Dismissed. Go find the kitchen. You look like you require a staggering amount of calories to maintain that much useless muscle."
Jax turned and walked out, the automatic glass doors hissing shut behind him. He made it halfway down the hallway before he slammed his fist into the reinforced wall. The sting in his knuckles was the only thing that felt real.
He had survived IEDs in the desert and hostile takeovers in Manhattan. But standing two paces behind a man who looked like a stiff breeze could break him?
That was going to be the hardest mission of his life.
The suit was a masterpiece of tailoring, but to Jax, it felt like a straitjacket. It was charcoal silk-wool, cut so precisely to his measurements that it emphasized every inch of his broad shoulders and narrow waist. He looked less like an assistant and more like a high-end weapon wrapped in a gift box.
"Two paces," Elias reminded him, his voice echoing in the marble foyer of the museum where the gala was being held.
Elias looked different tonight. He wore a tuxedo of midnight blue that made his silver hair shimmer like mercury. He looked ethereal, fragile, and utterly commanding all at once. But as they approached the heavy oak doors of the ballroom, Jax noticed the way Elias's throat hitched. His breathing was becoming shallow.
"Mr. Vance," Jax said, his voice low and instinctively steady. "Focus on the stride. Just keep walking."
Elias didn't look back, but his shoulders dropped a fraction of an inch. "I told you not to speak unless addressed, Jaxson."
"Consider it a tactical observation," Jax grunted.
They entered the room, and the wall of noise-clinking crystal, orchestral strings, and the hum of a thousand elite conversations-hit them. Jax immediately felt his old instincts flare. He scanned the room: exits, lines of sight, potential threats. He positioned himself exactly two paces behind Elias's left shoulder, a looming, silent shadow.
For two hours, Jax watched the world interact with Elias Vance. It was a strange dance. People wanted Elias's attention, his money, his genius-but they were terrified of him. Elias moved through the crowd like a ghost, offering clipped, brilliant responses while his hands stayed buried in his pockets to hide their shake.
Then, a man approached. He was older, thickset, with the predatory smile of a shark who had never lost a meal.
"Elias," the man boomed, reaching out a hand to clap Elias on the shoulder.
Jax moved before he even thought about it.
He didn't draw a weapon; he didn't have to. He simply stepped into the space between them. One moment there was a path to Elias; the next, there was a wall of muscle and charcoal wool. Jax didn't touch the man, but his sheer presence forced the intruder to stumble back.
"The rule is three feet," Jax said, his voice a low, dangerous vibration.
"Who the hell is this?" the man sputtered, looking up at Jax with wide eyes.
Elias stepped around Jax's arm, his face a mask of cold indifference. "This is my... security liaison. And he's quite literal-minded, Arthur. You were saying?"
The man beat a hasty retreat after two more minutes of awkward Smalltalk. When they were finally alone in a corner of the terrace, Elias turned to Jax. His face was pale, his eyes wide.
"I told you not to speak," Elias hissed, but there was no heat in it. He looked like he was vibrating.
"He was going to touch you," Jax said, looking down at him. "You didn't want him to."
Elias opened his mouth to snap a retort, but a sudden tremor took hold of his frame. He reached out, his fingers brushing against the cold stone of a balustrade, his breath coming in sharp, jagged gasps.
"Elias?" Jax's voice lost its edge.
The billionaire didn't answer. He slumped toward the floor, his knees buckling.
Jax caught him before he hit the marble.
Forget the "no touching" rule. Jax scooped Elias up as if he weighed nothing, feeling the frantic, hummingbird beat of the man's heart through the expensive fabric of his tuxedo. He ducked into a private coat-check room, kicking the door shut behind them.
"Breathe," Jax commanded, sitting Elias down on a velvet bench. He didn't let go, keeping his large hands firmly on Elias's shoulders to ground him. "Look at me. Elias, look at me."
Elias's eyes were unfocused, darting around the small room. "Too loud... too many... I can't..."
"Focus on my voice," Jax said, dropping his tone into the deep, rhythmic register he used to use for wounded soldiers in the field. "The room is empty. It's just us. Count my breaths. In... out."
Jax took deep, exaggerated breaths. Slowly, Elias began to mimic him. The tremors subsided, replaced by a heavy, exhausted slump. Elias leaned forward, his forehead coming to rest against Jax's chest.
Jax froze. He should pull away. The contract, the rules, the forty-two million dollars-it all screamed at him to maintain the distance. But Elias was shivering, his small hands clutching at Jax's lapels like a lifeline.
"You're okay," Jax whispered, surprised by the sudden, fierce protectiveness blooming in his chest. It wasn't the duty of a bodyguard; it was something sharper. Something more personal.
Elias pulled back after a long minute, his face flushed with a mix of shame and lingering adrenaline. He smoothed his hair, his cold mask sliding back into place, though it was cracked at the edges.
"Don't," Elias said, his voice barely audible. "Don't tell anyone you saw that."
"I'm not in the business of talking, remember?" Jax said, standing up and offering a hand.
Elias stared at the hand-large, scarred, and steady. He didn't take it. He stood up on his own, though his legs were still shaky.
"We're leaving," Elias said. "The car is out front."
As they walked out, Jax took his position. Two paces back. Left shoulder. But as he watched Elias's retreating back, the dynamic had shifted. The man wasn't just a paycheck or a debt anymore. He was a secret Jax wanted to keep.