Zane Reyes’s mornings ran like a precision instrunt.
By eight, his Maserati sat in the underground bay of Star Engineering Tower. By eight five, he was in his office, a high-walled expanse of glass, slate, and chro overlooking a city he had helped engineer into obedience.
The skyline was a grid of promises, his day a schedule carved into minutes filled with contracts, investors, and board reviews. Control was a currency he never squandered.
At eight-thirty, the door chid. Jordan, tablet in hand, entered first while Lisabeth followed with her mint-scented calm and a folder of neat paper.
"Quick update before nine-thirty," Jordan said, crisp as clockwork.
Zane didn’t look up. His eyes stayed on the schematic blueprints flickering on the display. "Proceed."
Lisabeth set the folder down. "Departnt reports and signatures. Also IT finalized two audits and signed a new developnt partnership. External vendor: Silverline Systems."
"Vendor?" His tone was professional and automatic, but a na in the folder snagged his attention like a splinter.
Jordan scrolled. "Custom logistics and supplier integration platform. Full build, not a patch."
Zane reached for the folder and read the list carefully, company overview, budgets, and tiline. Then one line froze him, the lead developer printed in sober type.
Willow Hale, Silverline Systems.
For a mont the air thinned and his pulse skipped before hamring twice against his ribs. He read the na again, slower, as if the letters might change.
In his mind’s eye he saw her again in the low light of the rooftop, the way she had stepped into that kiss like soone walking through fire she had lit for soone else. He rembered the soft defiance in her eyes and the taste that had started as punishnt and ended as a confession.
Jordan noticed the stillness. "Sir?"
Zane said evenly. "Continue."
Jordan ran through the rest of the agenda but the words blurred together. Outside the windows the city produced a low electric hum, while inside the folder another current moved quietly, a return address he had not asked for.
Ten days had passed since the balcony and since her mouth had been a map he had morized without permission.
Lisabeth closed the file with a soft thud. "The initial eting between IT and Silverline is being coordinated, likely Friday in conference room 3-B."
"Good." He shut the folder softly. "Copy on all correspondence. I’ll review the proposal myself."
Jordan hesitated before asking, "You’ll attend?"
"Yes," Zane replied with asured calm. "I prefer to evaluate the frawork firsthand."
When they left, silence folded around him like dark glass.
He turned toward the window and slipped his hands into his pockets while watching the city breathe below. He had built this empire from the ground up through structures, deals, and discipline, and he did not believe in coincidence. Yet here she was again on paper, deliberate and inevitable.
He let himself replay the mory of that night, the taste of her bright and defiant, the sound of her breath catching when his control broke and he had pulled her closer. He rembered the warmth of her back beneath his palms and the sudden flare of everything he had trained himself to bury.
Amnesia had beco a ghost between them, a convenient lie ant to protect Miles’s reputation and her sanity. He had told himself it was rcy and a necessary deception, but the truth was simpler. He had wanted proximity and he had wanted her.
He told himself he had earned that right after years of standing on the periphery as the loyal friend watching from the sidelines while Miles took everything he wanted without understanding its worth.
Miles had seen Willow as an ornant while Zane had seen her as architecture, elegant and intricate, capable of holding weight without collapsing. He rembered every glance across crowded rooms, every conversation that lingered too long, and every look that almost said what neither of them could risk. The night she first walked into Miles’s orbit he had known she was the variable that would destroy them both, though he had not known when.
Now her na sat atop a contract that belonged to him and the architecture on paper could be folded into any story he chose.
He anded his plan.
If she wanted revenge he would beco indispensable to it. If she needed an ally he would be that ally. He would orchestrate a partnership that looked clean in daylight and combustible in the dark, sothing that could be justified in a boardroom yet rewritten in silence.
He smiled without warmth.
By mid-afternoon reports stacked up like obedient soldiers across his desk and Zane ran his thumb along the edge of the Silverline packet.
Jordan returned and asked carefully, "Everything all right, sir?"
"Perfect," Zane answered calmly even though his pulse remained unsettled.
He could already see the eting unfold with Willow seated across the table, professional and contained, trying not to et his eyes. He would be patient and asured, steering the conversation just enough, not toward software but toward her.
Lisabeth returned with a tablet. "You’ll lead the eting, Mr. Reyes?"
"I will. Set hospitality to formal. I want the room precise but comfortable."
She nodded. "I’ll inform IT."
When she left, the quiet pressed close again.
Zane let out a slow breath and leaned back in his chair while studying his reflection in the glass, his own face superimposed over the city he ruled. From this height control felt inevitable and even chaos looked small, yet she remained the one equation that refused to balance.
He could still feel her presence like static beneath his skin, the faint scent of her perfu and the warmth that had lingered in his palms when she leaned in. It was absurd how mory could feel physical.
He had spent years mastering logic only to discover that emotion was more volatile than any market, and Willow Hale embodied that volatility.
What he did not admit even to himself was that he wanted more than participation in her revenge. He wanted possession and he wanted the slow collapse of her defenses to happen under his hands. He wanted the mont she stopped pretending she felt nothing, not for Miles but for the man who had always been watching.
Friday was already fixed in his calendar.
He pictured the mont vividly, her walking into his boardroom expecting departnt heads and technical leads instead of him, his voice the first thing she would hear. The subtle shock would flash in her eyes before she forced herself to recover. She would straighten, adjust her blazer, and pretend indifference while he remained calm as stone and watched the cracks form one breath at a ti.
He almost smiled with anticipation as she played her part to perfection, unaware she had stepped into his design. She was a mystery he intended to map one truth at a ti.
He imagined the conference room with glass walls and bright lights and a table long enough to turn every word into a duel. He would sit at its head composed and professional while she walked in not knowing she already stood inside his next plan.
Outside the window the city reorganized itself in reflection, lines of light and motion forming a perfect network of control.
He reached for the folder again and brushed a thumb across her printed na the way a man might test the edge of a blade before using it. The irony was clear to him that for all his titles and towers and for all the people who feared his precision it was one woman’s defiance that had finally made him reckless.
He closed the folder carefully without creasing a single page and for the first ti in years he felt the exquisite danger of sothing he might not be able to contain.
It was a danger nad Willow Hale.
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