Summary

King of Pride is a new romance novel by Ana Huang, featuring a captivating story of love, intrigue, and passion. The novel, published by Piatkus in 2023, follows the intertwined lives of Isabella and Kai Young, who navigate challenging circumstances alongside an impressive supporting cast. The novel captivates with romantic elements and intriguing character interactions.

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Ana Huang is a USA Today, international, and No.1 Amazon bestselling author. Best known for her Twisted series, she writes New Adult and contemporary romance with deliciously alpha heroes, strong heroines, and plenty of steam, angst, and swoon sprinkled in. Her books have been so...

Ana Huang is a USA Today, international, and No.1 Amazon bestselling author. Best known for her Twisted series, she writes New Adult and contemporary romance with deliciously alpha heroes, strong heroines, and plenty of steam, angst, and swoon sprinkled in. Her books have been sold to over two dozen foreign publishers for translation and featured in outlets such as NPR, Cosmopolitan, Financial Times, and Glamour UK. A self-professed travel enthusiast, she loves incorporating beautiful destinations into her stories and will never say no to a good chai latte. When sheā€™s not reading or writing, Ana is busy daydreaming and scouring Yelp for her next favourite restaurant. By Ana Huang KINGS OF SIN A series of interconnected standalones King of Wrath King of Pride King of Greed TWISTED SERIES A series of interconnected standalones Twisted Love Twisted Games Twisted Hate Twisted Lies IF LOVE SERIES If We Ever Meet Again (Duet Book 1) If the Sun Never Sets (Duet Book 2) If Love Had a Price (Standalone) If We Were Perfect (Standalone) Copyright Published by Piatkus ISBN: 978-0-349-43634-0 All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Copyright Ā© 2023 by Ana Huang The moral right of the author has been asserted. Editor: Becca Hensley Mysoor at the Fairy Plotmother, Amy Briggs at Briggs Consulting LLC Proofreader: Britt Tayler Cover Designer: Cat Imb, TRC Designs All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher. Piatkus Little, Brown Book Group Carmelite House 50 Victoria Embankment London EC4Y 0DZ www.littlebrown.co.uk www.hachette.co.uk Contents About the Author Also by Ana Huang Copyright Dedication Playlist Content Notes Chapter 1: Isabella Chapter 2: Kai Chapter 3: Kai Chapter 4: Isabella Chapter 5: Kai Chapter 6: Isabella Chapter 7: Isabella Chapter 8: Kai Chapter 9: Isabella Chapter 10: Isabella Chapter 11: Kai Chapter 12: Kai Chapter 13: Isabella Chapter 14: Isabella Chapter 15: Isabella Chapter 16: Kai Chapter 17: Kai Chapter 18: Isabella Chapter 19: Kai Chapter 20: Isabella Chapter 21: Kai Chapter 22: Isabella Chapter 23: Kai Chapter 24: Kai Chapter 25: Isabella Chapter 26: Kai Chapter 27: Isabella Chapter 28: Isabella Chapter 29: Kai Chapter 30: Isabella Chapter 31: Kai Chapter 32: Isabella Chapter 33: Kai Chapter 34: Kai Chapter 35: Isabella Chapter 36: Kai Chapter 37: Isabella Chapter 38: Kai Chapter 39: Isabella Chapter 40: Isabella Chapter 41: Kai Chapter 42: Kai Epilogue Acknowledgments For all the girls who think smart is sexy. (And who know the quiet ones are the freakiest). I Knew You Were Trouble (Taylorā€™s Version) Taylor Swift You Put a Spell on Me Austin Giorgio Love You Like a Love Song Selena Gomez Body Electric Lana Del Rey Collide Justin Skye Middle of the Night Elley DuhĆ© Shameless Camila Cabello You Say Lauren Daigle Bleeding Love Leona Lewis Be Without You Mary J. Blige CONTENT NOTES This story contains explicit sexual content, profanity, and topics that may be sensitive to some readers. For a detailed list, please visit anahuang.com/content-warnings CHAPTER 1 Isabella ā€œSo you didnā€™t use the glow-in-the-dark condoms I gave you?ā€ ā€œNope. Sorry.ā€ Tessa returned my crestfallen stare with an amused one of her own. ā€œIt was our first date. Where did you get those condoms anyway?ā€ ā€œAt last monthā€™s neon skate party.ā€ Iā€™d attended the party in hopes it would free me from my creeping life rut. It hadnā€™t, but it had supplied me with a bag of delightfully lurid party favors that Iā€™d doled out to friends. Since I was suffering from a self-imposed man ban, I had to live vicariously through them, which was hard when said friends didnā€™t cooperate. Tessaā€™s brow wrinkled. ā€œWhy were they handing out condoms at a skate party?ā€ ā€œBecause those parties always turn into giant orgies,ā€ I explained. ā€œI saw someone use one of those condoms right there in the middle of the ice rink.ā€ ā€œYouā€™re kidding.ā€ ā€œNope.ā€ I restocked the garnishes, then turned to straighten the various glasses and tumblers. ā€œWild, right? It was fun, even if some of the things I witnessed traumatized me for a good week afterā€¦ā€ I rambled on, only half paying attention to my movements. After a year of bartending at the Valhalla Club, an exclusive members-only society for the worldā€™s rich and powerful, most of my work was muscle memory. It was six on a Monday eveningā€”prime happy hour in other establishments but a dead zone at Valhalla. Tessa and I always used this time to gossip and catch each other up on our weekends. I was only here for the paycheck until I finished my book and became a published author, but it was nice to work with someone I actually liked. A majority of my previous coworkers had been creeps. ā€œDid I tell you about the naked flag dude?ā€ I said. ā€œHe was one of the ones who always participated in the orgies.ā€ ā€œUh, Isa.ā€ My name squeaked out in a decidedly un-Tessa-like manner, but I was on too much of a roll to stop. ā€œHonestly, I never thought Iā€™d see a glowing dick inā€”ā€ A polite cough interrupted my spiel. A polite, masculine cough that very much did not belong to my favorite coworker. My movements ground to a screeching halt. Tessa let out another distressed squeak, which confirmed what my gut already suspected: the newcomer was a club member, not our laid-back manager or one of the security guards dropping by on their break. And theyā€™d just overheard me talking about glowing dicks. Fuck. Flags of heat scorched my cheeks. Screw finishing my manuscript; what I wanted most now was for the earth to yawn and swallow me whole. Sadly, not a single tremor quaked beneath my feet, so after a moment of wallowing in humiliation, I straightened my shoulders, pasted on my best customer service smile, and turned. My mouth barely completed its upward curve before it froze. Just up and gave out, like a webpage that couldnā€™t finish loading. Because standing less than five feet away, looking bemused and far more handsome than any man had the right to look, was Kai Young. Esteemed member of the Valhalla Clubā€™s managing committee, heir to a multibillion-dollar media empire, and owner of an uncanny ability to show up in the middle of my most embarrassing conversations every time, Kai Young. A fresh wave of mortification blazed across my face. ā€œApologies for interrupting,ā€ he said, his neutral tone betraying no hint of his thoughts on our conversation. ā€œBut Iā€™d like to order a drink, please.ā€ Despite an all-consuming desire to hide under the bar until he left, I couldnā€™t help but melt a little at the sound of his voice. Deep, smooth and velvety, wrapped in a British accent so posh it put the late Queenā€™s to shame. It poured into my bloodstream like a half dozen shots of potent whiskey. My body warmed. Kaiā€™s brows lifted a fraction, and I realized Iā€™d been so focused on his voice that I hadnā€™t responded to his request yet. Meanwhile Tessa, the little traitor, had disappeared into the back room, leaving me to fend for myself. Sheā€™s never getting a condom out of me again. ā€œOf course.ā€ I cleared my throat, attempting to lighten the cloud of thickening tension. ā€œBut Iā€™m afraid we donā€™t serve glow-in-the-dark gin and tonics.ā€ Not without a black light to make the tonic glow, anyway. He gave me a blank look. ā€œBecause of the last time you overheard me talking about conā€”er, protective products,ā€ I said. Nothing. I might as well be babbling about rush hour traffic patterns, for all the reaction he showed. ā€œYou ordered a strawberry gin and tonic because I was talking about strawberry- flavoredā€¦ā€ I was digging myself into a deeper and deeper hole. I didnā€™t want to remind Kai about the time he overheard me discussing strawberry condoms at the clubā€™s fall gala, but I had to say something to divert his attention away from, well, my current condom predicament. I should really stop talking about sex at work. ā€œNever mind,ā€ I said quickly. ā€œDo you want your usual?ā€ His one-off strawberry gin and tonic aside, Kai ordered a scotch, neat every time. He was more predictable than a Mariah Carey song during the holidays. ā€œNot today,ā€ he said easily. ā€œIā€™ll have a Death in the Afternoon instead.ā€ He lifted his book so I could see the title scrawled across the worn cover. For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway. ā€œSeems fitting.ā€ Invented by Hemingway himself, Death in the Afternoon was a simple cocktail consisting of champagne and absinthe. Its iridescent green color was also as close to glow-in-the-dark as a regular drink could get. I narrowed my eyes, unsure whether that was a coincidence or if he was fucking with me. He stared back, his expression inscrutable. Dark hair. Crisp lines. Thin black frames and a suit so perfectly tailored it had to have been custom made. Kai was the epitome of aristocratic sophistication, and heā€™d nailed the British stoicism that went with it. I was usually pretty good at reading people, but Iā€™d known him for a year and I had yet to crack his mask. It irritated me more than I cared to admit. ā€œOne Death in the Afternoon, coming right up,ā€ I finally said. I busied myself with his drink while he took his customary seat at the end of the bar and retrieved a notebook from his coat pocket. My hands went through the motions, but my attention was split between the glass and the man quietly reading. Every once in a while, he would pause and write something down. That in and of itself wasnā€™t unusual. Kai often showed up to read and drink by himself before the evening rush. What was unusual was the timing. It was Monday afternoon, three days and two hours before his weekly, precision-timed arrival on Thursday evenings. He was breaking pattern. Kai Young never broke pattern. Curiosity and a strange breathlessness slowed my pace as I brought him his drink. Tessa was still in the supply room, and the silence weighed heavier with each step. ā€œAre you taking notes?ā€ I placed the cocktail on a napkin and glanced at his notebook. It lay open next to Kaiā€™s novel, its pages filled with neat, precise black writing. ā€œIā€™m translating the book into Latin.ā€ He flipped the page and scribbled another sentence without looking up or touching his drink. ā€œWhy?ā€ ā€œItā€™s relaxing.ā€ I blinked, certain Iā€™d heard him wrong. ā€œYou think translating a five- hundred-page novel into Latin by hand is relaxing?ā€ ā€œYes. If I wanted a mental challenge, Iā€™d translate an economics textbook. Translating fiction is reserved for my downtime.ā€ He tossed out the explanation casually, like it was a habit as common and ingrained as throwing a coat over the back of his couch. I gaped at him. ā€œWow. Thatā€™sā€¦ā€ I was at a loss for words. I knew rich people indulged in strange hobbies, but at least they were usually fun eccentricities like throwing lavish weddings for their pets or bathing in champagne. Kaiā€™s hobby was just boring. The corners of his mouth twitched, and realization dawned alongside embarrassment. Seems to be the theme of the day. ā€œYouā€™re messing with me.ā€ ā€œNot entirely. I do find it relaxing, though Iā€™m not a huge fan of economics textbooks. I had enough of them at Oxford.ā€ Kai finally glanced up. My pulse leapt in my throat. Up close, he was so beautiful it almost hurt to face him straight on. Thick black hair brushed his forehead, framing features straight out of the classic Hollywood era. Chiseled cheekbones sloped down to a square jaw and sculpted lips, while deep brown eyes glinted behind glasses that only heightened his appeal. Without them, his attractiveness wouldā€™ve been cold, almost intimidating in its perfection, but with them, he was approachable. Human. At least when he wasnā€™t busy translating classics or running his familyā€™s media company. Glasses or no glasses, there was nothing approachable about either of those things. My spine tingled with awareness when he reached for his drink. My hand was still on the counter. He didnā€™t touch me, but his body heat brushed over me as surely as if he had. The tingles spread, vibrating beneath my skin and slowing my breath. ā€œIsabella.ā€ ā€œHmm?ā€ Now that I thought about it, why did Kai need glasses anyway? He was rich enough to afford laser eye surgery. Not that I was complaining. He may be boring and a little uptight, but he reallyā€” ā€œThe gentleman at the other end of the bar is trying to get your attention.ā€ I snapped back to reality with an unpleasant jolt. While Iā€™d been busy staring at Kai, new patrons had trickled into the bar. Tessa was back behind the counter, tending to a well-dressed couple while another club member waited for service. Shit. I hurried over, leaving an amused-looking Kai behind. After I finished with my customer, another one approached, and another. Weā€™d hit Valhalla happy hour, and I didnā€™t have time to dwell on Kai or his strange relaxation methods again. For the next four hours, Tessa and I fell into a familiar rhythm as we worked the crowd. Valhalla capped its membership at a hundred, so even its busiest nights were nothing compared to the chaos I used to deal with at downtown dive bars. But while there were fewer of them, the clubā€™s patrons required more coddling and ego stroking than the average frat boy or drunken bachelorette. By the time the clock ticked toward nine, I was ready to collapse and thankful as hell that I only had a half shift that night. Still, I couldnā€™t resist the occasional peek at Kai. He usually left the bar after an hour or two, but here he was, still drinking and chatting with the other members like there was nowhere else heā€™d rather be. Somethingā€™s off. Timing aside, his behavior today didnā€™t match his previous patterns at all, and the closer I looked, the more signs of trouble I spotted: the tension lining his shoulders, the tiny furrow between his brows, the tightness of his smiles. Maybe it was the shock of seeing him off schedule, or maybe I was trying to pay Kai back for all the times he couldā€™ve gotten me fired for inappropriate behavior (a.k.a. talking about sex at work) but didnā€™t. Whatever it was, it compelled me to walk another drink over to him during a lull. The timing was perfect; his latest conversation partner had just left, leaving Kai alone again at the bar. ā€œA strawberry gin and tonic. On me.ā€ I slid the glass across the counter. Iā€™d made it on a whim, thinking itā€™d be a funny way to lift his mood even if it was at my expense. ā€œYou look like you could use the pick-me-up.ā€ He responded with a questioning arch of his brow. ā€œYouā€™re off schedule,ā€ I explained. ā€œYouā€™d never go off schedule unless somethingā€™s wrong.ā€ The arch smoothed, replaced with a tiny crinkle at the corners of his eyes. My heartbeat faltered at the unexpectedly endearing sight. Itā€™s just a smile. Get it together. ā€œI wasnā€™t aware you paid so much attention to my schedule.ā€ Flecks of laughter glimmered beneath Kaiā€™s voice. Heat flooded my cheeks for the second time that night. This is what I get for being a Good Samaritan. ā€œI donā€™t make a point of it,ā€ I said defensively. ā€œYouā€™ve been coming to the bar every week since I started working here, but youā€™ve never showed up on a Monday. Iā€™m simply observant.ā€ I shouldā€™ve stopped there, but my mouth ran off before my brain could catch up. ā€œRest assured, youā€™re not my type, so you donā€™t have to worry about me hitting on you.ā€ That much was true. Objectively, I recognized Kaiā€™s appeal, but I liked my men rougher around the edges. He was as straitlaced as they came. Even if he wasnā€™t, fraternization between club members and employees was strictly forbidden, and I had no desire to upend my life over a man again, thank you very much. That didnā€™t stop my traitorous hormones from sighing every time they saw him. It was annoying as hell. ā€œGood to know.ā€ The flecks of laughter shone brighter as he brought the glass to his lips. ā€œThank you. I have a soft spot for strawberry gin and tonics.ā€ This time, my heartbeat didnā€™t so much falter as stop altogether, if only for a split second. Soft spot? What does that mean? It means nothing, a voice grumbled in the back of my head. Heā€™s talking about the drink, not you. Besides, heā€™s not your type. Remember? Oh, shut up, Debbie Downer. Great. Now my inner voices were arguing with each other. I didnā€™t even know I had more than one inner voice. If that wasnā€™t a sign I needed sleep and not another night agonizing over my manuscript, nothing was. ā€œYouā€™re welcome,ā€ I said, a tad belatedly. My pulse drummed in my ears. ā€œWell, I shouldā€”ā€ ā€œSorry Iā€™m late.ā€ A tall, blond man swept into the seat next to Kaiā€™s, his voice as brisk as the late September chill clinging to his coat. ā€œMy meeting ran over.ā€ He spared me a brief glance before turning back to Kai. Dark gold hair, navy eyes, the bone structure of a Calvin Klein model, and the warmth of the iceberg from Titanic. Dominic Davenport, the reigning king of Wall Street. I recognized him on sight. It was hard to forget that face, even if his social skills could use improvement. Relief and an annoying niggle of disappointment swept through me at the interruption, but I didnā€™t wait for Kaiā€™s response. I booked it to the other side of the bar, hating the way his soft spot comment lingered like it was anything but a throwaway remark. If he wasnā€™t my type, I definitely wasnā€™t his. He dated the kind of woman who sat on charity boards, summered in the Hamptons, and matched their pearls to their Chanel suits. There was nothing wrong with any of those things, but they werenā€™t me. I blamed my outsize reaction to his words on my self-imposed dry spell. I was so starved for touch and affection Iā€™d probably get giddy off a wink from that half-naked cowboy always roaming Times Square. It had nothing to do with Kai himself. I didnā€™t return to his side of the bar again for the rest of the night. Luckily, working a half shift meant I could clock out early. At five to ten, I transferred my remaining tabs to Tessa, said my goodbyes, and grabbed my bag from the back room, all without looking at a certain billionaire with a penchant for Hemingway. I couldā€™ve sworn I felt the heated touch of dark eyes on my back when I left, but I didnā€™t turn to confirm. It was better I didnā€™t know. The hall was hushed and empty this late at night. Exhaustion tugged at my eyelids, but instead of bolting for the exit and the comfort of my bed, I made a left toward the main staircase. I should go home so I could hit my daily word count goal, but I needed inspiration first. I couldnā€™t concentrate with the stress of facing a blank page clouding my head. The words used to flow freely; I wrote three-quarters of my erotic thriller in less than six months. Then I read it over, hated it, and scrapped it in favor of a fresh project. Unfortunately, the creativity thatā€™d fueled my first draft had vanished alongside it. I was lucky if I wrote more than two hundred words a day these days. I took the stairs to the second floor. The clubā€™s amenities were off-limits to employees during working hours, but while the bar was open until three in the morning, the rest of the building closed at eight. I wasnā€™t breaking any rules by visiting my favorite room for some decompression. Still, my feet tread lightly against the thick Persian carpet. Down, down, all the way past the billiards room, the beauty room, and the Parisian-style lounge until I reached a familiar oak door. The brass knob was cool and smooth as I twisted it open. Fifteen minutes. That was all I needed. Then Iā€™d go home, wash the day off, and write. But as always, time fell away when I sat down. Fifteen minutes turned into thirty, which turned into forty-five, and I became so immersed in what I was doing I didnā€™t notice the door creak open behind me. Not until it was too late. CHAPTER 2 Kai ā€œDonā€™t tell me you invited me here to watch you read Hemingway for the dozenth time.ā€ Dominic cast an unimpressed look at my book. ā€œYouā€™ve never seen me read Hemingway.ā€ I glanced at the bar, but Isabella had already moved on to another customer, leaving the gin and tonic in her stead. Strawberries floated lazily in the drink, their vibrant red hue a shocking contrast to the barā€™s dignified earth tones. I typically avoided sweet drinks; the harsh burn and subdued amber of scotch was much more to my taste. But like I said, I had a soft spot for this particular flavor. Fine, but if you change your mind, I have strawberry-flavored condoms. Magnum-size, ribbed for yourā€” Apologies for interrupting, but Iā€™d like to order another drink. Gin and tonic. Strawberry flavored. Reluctant amusement drifted through me at the memory of Isabellaā€™s horrified expression. Iā€™d interrupted her and her friend Vivianā€™s condom conversation at last yearā€™s fall gala, and I still remembered the interaction in vivid detail. I remembered all our interactions in vivid detail, whether I wanted to or not. Sheā€™d touched down in my life like a tornado, gotten my drink wrong during her first shift at Valhalla, and hadnā€™t left my thoughts since. It was aggravating. ā€œI havenā€™t seen you read him in person.ā€ Dominic flicked his lighter on and off, drawing my attention back to him. He didnā€™t smoke, yet he carried that lighter around the way a more superstitious person would cling to a lucky charm. ā€œBut I imagine thatā€™s what you do when youā€™re holed up in your library every night.ā€ A smile pushed through my turbulent mood. ā€œSpend a lot of time imagining me in the library, do you?ā€ ā€œOnly to contemplate how sad your existence is.ā€ ā€œSays the workaholic who spends most of his nights in his office.ā€ It was a miracle his wife tolerated him as long as she had. Alessandra was a saint. ā€œItā€™s a nice office.ā€ On. Off. A tiny flame burst into life only to die a quick death at his hand. ā€œIā€™d be there right now if it werenā€™t for your call. Whatā€™s so urgent you demanded I rush here on a Monday, of all nights?ā€ Iā€™d requested, not demanded, but I didnā€™t bother correcting him. Instead, I tucked my pen, paperback, and notebook in my coat pocket and cut straight to the point. ā€œI got the call today.ā€ Dominicā€™s bored impatience fell away, revealing a spark of intrigue. ā€œThis early?ā€ ā€œYes. Five candidates, including myself. The vote is in four months.ā€ ā€œYou always knew it wouldnā€™t be a coronation.ā€ Dominic tapped his lighterā€™s spark wheel. ā€œBut the vote is a formality. Of course youā€™ll win.ā€ I offered a noncommittal noise in response. As the eldest child and presumptive heir to the Young Corporation, Iā€™d lived with the expectation of becoming CEO all my life. But I was supposed to take over in five to ten years, not in four months. A fresh wave of apprehension swept through my chest. Leonora Young would never willingly cede power this early. She was only fifty-eight years old. Sharp, healthy, beloved by the board. Her life revolved around work and hounding me about marriage, yet itā€™d undeniably been her on the video call that afternoon, informing me and four other executives that we were in the running for the CEO position. No warning, no details other than the date and time of the vote. I ran a distracted hand over the gin and tonic glass, taking strange solace in its smooth curves. ā€œWhenā€™s the news going public?ā€ Dominic asked. ā€œTomorrow.ā€ Which meant for the next four months, all eyes would be on me, waiting for me to fuck up. Which I never would. I had too much control for that. Though there were technically five candidates, the position was mine to lose. Not only because I was a Young, but because I was the best. My record as president of the North America division spoke for itself. It had the highest profits, the fewest losses, and the best innovations, even if certain board members didnā€™t always agree with my decisions. I wasnā€™t worried about the voteā€™s outcome, but its timing nagged at me, twisting what shouldā€™ve been a career highlight into a muddied pool of unease. If Dominic noticed my muted enthusiasm, he didnā€™t show it. ā€œThe marketā€™s going to have a field day.ā€ I could practically see the calculations running through his head. In the past, I wouldā€™ve called Dante first and sweated out my worries in the boxing ring, but ever since he got married, dragging him away from Vivian for an unscheduled match was harder than prying a bone away from a dog. It was probably for the best. Dante would see right through my composed mask, whereas Dominic only cared about facts and numbers. If it didnā€™t move markets or expand his bank account, he didnā€™t give a shit. I reached for my drink while he laid out his predictions. Iā€™d just drained the last of the gin when a burst of rich, throaty laughter stole my attention. My gaze slid over Dominicā€™s shoulder and rested on Isabella, who was chatting with a cosmetics heiress near the end of the bar. She said something that made the normally standoffish socialite grin, and the two bent their heads toward each other like best friends gossiping over lunch. Every once in a while, Isabella would gesticulate wildly with her hands, and another one of her distinctive laughs would fill the room. The sound worked its way into my chest, warming it more than the alcohol sheā€™d handed me. With her purple-black hair, mischievous smile, and tattoo inking the inside of her left wrist, she looked as out of place as a diamond among rocks. Not because she was a bartender in a room filled with billionaires, but because she shone too brightly for the dark, traditional confines of Valhalla. Iā€™m afraid we donā€™t serve glow-in-the-dark gin and tonics. A tiny smile snuck onto my lips before I quashed it. Isabella was bold, impulsive, and everything I typically avoided in an acquaintance. I valued propriety; she had none, as her apparent fetish for discussing sex in the most inappropriate of locations indicated. Still, there was something about her that drew me in like a siren calling to a sailor. Destructive, certainly, but so beautiful it would almost be worth it. Almost. ā€œDoes Dante know?ā€ Dominic asked. Heā€™d finished his market predictions, of which Iā€™d only heard half, and was now busy answering emails on his phone. The man worked longer hours than anyone else I knew. ā€œNot yet.ā€ I watched as Isabella broke away from the heiress and fiddled with the register. ā€œItā€™s date night with Vivian. He made it clear no one is to interrupt him unless theyā€™re dyingā€”and only if every other person on their contact list is otherwise preoccupied.ā€ ā€œTypical.ā€ ā€œHmm,ā€ I agreed distractedly. Isabella finished her work at the register, said something to the other bartender, and disappeared into the back room. Her shift mustā€™ve ended. Something flickered in my gut. Try as I might, I couldnā€™t mistake it for anything other than disappointment. Iā€™d successfully kept my distance from Isabella for almost a year, and I was well-versed enough in Greek mythology to understand the dreadful fates that awaited sailors lured in by sirensā€™ songs. The last thing I should do was follow her. And yetā€¦ A strawberry gin and tonic. On me. You look like you could use the pick- me-up. Dammit. ā€œApologies for cutting the night short, but I just remembered I have an urgent matter I must take care of.ā€ I stood and slid my coat from its hook beneath the counter. ā€œShall we continue our conversation later? Tonightā€™s drinks are on me.ā€ ā€œSure. Whenever youā€™re free,ā€ Dominic said, sounding unfazed by my abrupt departure. He didnā€™t look up when I closed out our tabs. ā€œGood luck with the announcement tomorrow.ā€ The absentminded clicks of his lighter followed me halfway across the room until the barā€™s escalating noise swallowed them up. Then I was in the hallway, the door shut behind me, and the only sound came from the soft fall of my footsteps. I wasnā€™t sure what Iā€™d do once I caught up with Isabella. Despite our mutual acquaintancesā€”her best friend Vivian was Danteā€™s wifeā€”we werenā€™t friends ourselves. But the CEO news had thrown me off-kilter, as had her unexpected but thoughtful gift. I wasnā€™t used to people offering me things without expecting something in return. A rueful smile crossed my lips. What did it say about my life when a simple free drink from a casual acquaintance stood out as a highlight of my night? I took the stairs to the second floor, my heartbeat steady despite the small voice urging me to turn and run in the opposite direction. I was operating on a hunch. She might not be there, and I certainly had no business seeking her out if she was, but my usual restraint had frayed beneath a more pressing urge for distraction. I needed to do something about this frustrating want, and if I couldnā€™t figure out what was going on with my mother, then I needed to figure out what was going on with me. What was it about Isabella that held me captive? Tonight, that might be the easier question to answer. My mother had reassured me she was fine during our post-conference call chat. She wasnā€™t sick, dying, or being blackmailed; she was simply ready for a change. If it were anyone else, I wouldā€™ve taken her words at face value, but my mother didnā€™t do things on a whim. It went against her very nature. I also didnā€™t think she was lying; I knew her well enough to spot her tells, and sheā€™d displayed none during our call. Frustration knotted my brow. It didnā€™t add up. If it wasnā€™t her health or blackmail, what else could it be? A disagreement with the board? A need to destress after decades of helming a multibillion-dollar corporation? An alien hijacking her body? I was so engrossed in my musings I didnā€™t notice the soft strains of a piano drifting through the hall until I stood directly in front of the source. She was here after all. My heartbeat tripped once, so lightly and quickly I barely noticed the disturbance. My frown dissolved, replaced with curiosity, then astonishment as the whirlwind of notes fell into place and recognition clicked. She was playing Beethovenā€™s ā€œHammerklavier,ā€ one of the most challenging pieces ever composed for piano. And she was playing it well. A cool rush of shock swept the breath from my lungs. I rarely heard the ā€œHammerklavierā€ played at its intended speed, and the stunning realization that Isabella could outperform even seasoned professionals crushed any reservations I may have had about seeking her out. I had to see it for myself. After a brief hesitation, I closed my hand around the doorknob, twisted, and stepped inside. CHAPTER 3 Kai The piano room was as grand as any other in the club, with luxurious drapes cascading to the floor in swaths of rich velvet and golden sconces glowing softly against the deep rose walls. A proud Steinway grand stood center stage, its polished black curves gilded silver by a blanket of moonlight. Seated in front of it, her back to me and her fingers flying over the keys at a speed that was almost dizzying to witness, was Isabella. Sheā€™d entered the sonataā€™s final movement. A bold trill announced the start of the first theme, which twisted and stretched and turned upside down over the next two-hundred-something odd measures. Then, it was quiet, an intermission before the second themeā€™s choir hummed into existence. Soft, haunting, dignifiedā€¦ Until the first theme crashed in again, its rushing notes sweeping over its successorā€™s quieter existence with such force it was impossible for the second not to bend. The two themes curled around each other, their temperaments diametrically opposed yet inexplicably beautiful when conjoined, climbing higher and higher and higher stillā€¦ Then a plunge, a free-falling grand finale that nosedived off the cliff in a magnificent splash of double trills, parallel scales, and leaping octaves. Through it all, I stood, body frozen and pulse pounding at the sheer impossibility of what Iā€™d witnessed. Iā€™d played the same sonata before. Dozens of times. But not once did it sound like that. The final movement was supposed to be thick with sorrow, an emotionally draining twenty minutes that had earned it mournful superlatives from commentators. Yet in Isabellaā€™s hands, itā€™d transformed into something uplifting, almost joyful. Granted, her technique wasnā€™t perfect. She leaned too heavy on some notes, too light on others, and her finger control wasnā€™t quite developed enough to bring out all the melodic lines. Despite all that, sheā€™d accomplished the impossible. Sheā€™d taken pain and turned it into hope. The last note hung in the air, breathless, before it faded and all was quiet. The spell holding me captive cracked. Air filled my lungs again, but when I spoke, my voice sounded rougher than usual. ā€œImpressive.ā€ Isabella visibly tensed before the last syllable passed my lips. She whipped around, her face suffused with alarm. When she spotted me, she relaxed only to stiffen again a second later. ā€œWhat are you doing here?ā€ Amusement pulled at the corners of my mouth. ā€œI should be asking you that question.ā€ I didnā€™t disclose the fact that I knew sheā€™d been sneaking into the piano room for months. Iā€™d discovered it by accident one night when Iā€™d stayed late in the library and exited in time to catch Isabella slipping out with a guilty expression. She hadnā€™t spotted me, but Iā€™d heard her play multiple times since. The library was right next to the piano room; if I sat near the wall dividing the two, I could hear the faint melodies coming from the other side. Theyā€™d served as an oddly soothing soundtrack for my work. However, tonight was the first night Iā€™d heard her play something as complex as the ā€œHammerklavier.ā€ ā€œWeā€™re allowed to use the room after hours if thereā€™s no one else here,ā€ Isabella said with a defiant tilt of her chin. ā€œWhich I guess there now is.ā€ She faltered, her brows drawing together in a tight V. She moved to stand, but I shook my head. ā€œStay. Unless you have other plans for the night.ā€ Another involuntary glimmer of amusement. ā€œI hear neon skate parties are all the rage these days.ā€ Crimson bloomed across her cheeks, but she lifted her chin and pinned me with a dignified glare. ā€œItā€™s impolite to eavesdrop on other peopleā€™s conversations. Donā€™t they teach you that at boarding school?ā€ ā€œAu contraire, thatā€™s where the most eavesdropping happens. As for your accusation, Iā€™m not sure what you mean,ā€ I said, tone mild. ā€œI was merely commenting on nightlife trends.ā€ Logic told me I shouldnā€™t engage with Isabella any more than necessary. It was inappropriate, considering her employment and my role at the club. I also had the unsettling sense that she was dangerousā€”not physically, but in some other way I couldnā€™t pinpoint. Yet instead of leaving as my good sense dictated, I closed the distance between us and skimmed my fingers over the pianoā€™s ivory keys. They were still warm from her touch. Isabella relaxed into her seat, but her eyes remained alert as they followed me to her side. ā€œNo offense, but I canā€™t picture you in a nightclub, much less a neon anything.ā€ ā€œI donā€™t have to take part in something to understand it.ā€ I pressed the minor key, allowing the note to signal a transition into my next topic. ā€œYou played well. Better than most pianists who attempt the ā€˜Hammerklavier.ā€™ ā€ ā€œI sense a but at the end of that sentence.ā€ ā€œBut you were too aggressive at the start of the second theme. Itā€™s supposed to be lighter, more understated.ā€ It wasnā€™t an insult; it was an objective appraisal. Isabella cocked an eyebrow. ā€œYou think you can do better?ā€ My pulse spiked, and a familiar flame kindled in my chest. Her tone straddled the line between playful and challenging, but that was enough to throw the gates of my competitiveness wide open. ā€œMay I?ā€ I nodded at the bench. She slid off her seat. I took her vacated spot, adjusted the bench height and touched the keys again, thoughtfully this time. I only played the second movement, but Iā€™d been practicing the ā€œHammerklavierā€ since I was a child, when Iā€™d insisted my piano teacher skip the easy pieces and teach me the most difficult compositions instead. It was harder to get into it without the first movement as a prelude, but muscle memory carried me through. The sonata finished with a grand flourish, and I smiled, satisfied. ā€œHmm.ā€ Isabella sounded unimpressed. ā€œMine was better.ā€ My head snapped up. ā€œPardon me?ā€ ā€œSorry.ā€ She shrugged. ā€œYouā€™re a good piano player, but youā€™re lacking something.ā€ The sentiment was so unfamiliar and unexpected I could only stare, my reply lost somewhere between astonishment and indignation. ā€œIā€™m lacking something,ā€ I echoed, too dumbfounded to dredge up an original response. Iā€™d graduated top of my class from Oxford and Cambridge, lettered in tennis and polo, and spoke seven languages fluently. Iā€™d founded a charity for funding the arts in underserved areas when I was eighteen, and I was on the fast track to becoming one of the worldā€™s youngest Fortune 500 CEOs. In my thirty-two years on earth, no one had ever told me I was lacking something. The worst part was, upon examination, she was right. Yes, my technique surpassed hers. Iā€™d hit every note with precision, but the piece had inspiredā€¦nothing. The ebbs and tides of emotion thatā€™d characterized her rendition had vanished, leaving a sterile beauty in their wake. Iā€™d never noticed when playing by myself, but following her performance, the difference was obvious. My jaw tightened. I was used to being the best, and the realization that I wasnā€™t, at least not at this particular song, rankled. ā€œWhat, exactly, do you think Iā€™m lacking?ā€ I asked, my tone even despite the swarm of thoughts invading my brain. Mental note: Substitute tennis with Dominic for piano practice until I fix this problem. Iā€™d never done anything less than perfectly, and this would not be my exception. Isabellaā€™s cheeks dimpled. She appeared to take immense delight in my disgruntlement, which shouldā€™ve infuriated me more. Instead, her teasing grin almost pulled an answering smile out of me before I caught myself. ā€œThe fact you donā€™t know is part of the problem.ā€ She stepped toward the door. ā€œYouā€™ll figure it out.ā€ ā€œWait.ā€ I stood and grabbed her arm without thinking. We froze in unison, our eyes locked on where my hand encircled her wrist. Her skin was soft to the touch, and the flutter of her pulse matched the sudden escalation in my heartbeat. A heavy, tension-laced silence mushroomed around us. I was a proponent of science; I didnā€™t believe in anything that defied the laws of physics, but I couldā€™ve sworn time physically slowed, like each second was encased in molasses. Isabella visibly swallowed. A tiny movement, but it was enough for the laws to snap back into place and for reason to intervene. Time sped to its usual pace, and I dropped her arm as abruptly as Iā€™d grasped it. ā€œApologies,ā€ I said, my voice stiff. I tried my best to ignore the tingle on my palm. ā€œItā€™s fine.ā€ Isabella touched her wrist, her expression distracted. ā€œHas anyone told you that you talk like an extra from Downton Abbey?ā€ The question came from so far out of left field it took a moment to sink in. ā€œIā€¦a what?ā€ ā€œAn extra from Downton Abbey. You know, that show about the British aristocracy during the early twentieth century?ā€ ā€œI know the show.ā€ I didnā€™t live under a rock. ā€œOh, good. Just thought Iā€™d let you know in case you didnā€™t.ā€ Isabella flashed another bright smile. ā€œYou should try to loosen up a bit. It might help with your piano playing.ā€ For the second time that night, words deserted me. I was still standing there, trying to figure out how my evening had gone so off the rails, when the door closed behind her. It wasnā€™t until I was on my way home that I realized I hadnā€™t thought about the CEO vote or its timing once since I heard Isabella in the piano room. CHAPTER 4 Isabella ā€œMom asked about you the other day,ā€ Gabriel said. ā€œYou only come home once a year, and sheā€™s concerned about what youā€™re doing in Manhattanā€¦ā€ I frowned at the half-empty page in front of me while my brother rambled on. I already regretted answering his call. It was only six a.m. in California, but he sounded alert and put together, as always. He was probably on his office treadmill, reading the news, replying to emails, and drinking one of his hideous antioxidant smoothies. Meanwhile, I was proud of myself for rolling out of bed before nine. Sleep proved elusive after last nightā€™s encounter with Kai, but Iā€™d thought that maybe, just maybe, the strange experience would be enough to jar a few sentences loose for my manuscript. It wasnā€™t. My erotic thriller about the deadly relationship between a wealthy attorney and a naive waitress turned mistress formed vague shapes in my head. I had the plot, I had the characters, but dammit, I didnā€™t have the words. To make matters worse, my brother was still talking. ā€œAre you listening to me?ā€ His voice was laced with equal parts exasperation and disapproval. The heat from my laptop seeped through my pants and into my skin, but I barely noticed. I was too busy devising ways to fill all that white space without writing more words. ā€œYes.ā€ I selected all the text and cranked the font size up to thirty-six. Much better. The page didnā€™t look so empty now. ā€œYou said you finally consulted a doctor about a sense of humor implant. Itā€™s experimental technology, but the situation is dire.ā€ ā€œHilarious.ā€ My oldest brother had never found a single thing hilarious in his life, hence the need for a sense of humor implant. ā€œIā€™m serious, Isa. Weā€™re worried about you. You moved to New York years ago, yet youā€™re still living in a rat-infested apartment and slinging drinks at some barā€”ā€ ā€œThe Valhalla Club isnā€™t some bar,ā€ I protested. Iā€™d endured six rounds of interviews before landing a bartending gig there; Iā€™d be damned if I let Gabriel diminish that accomplishment. ā€œAnd my apartment is not rat- infested. I have a pet snake, remember?ā€ I cast a protective glance at Montyā€™s vivarium, where he was curled up and fast asleep. Of course he slept well; he didnā€™t have to worry about annoying siblings or failing at life. Gabriel continued like I hadnā€™t spoken. ā€œWhile working on the same book youā€™ve been stuck on forever. Look, we know you think you want to be an author, but maybe itā€™s time to reevaluate. Move home, figure out an alternate plan. We could always use your help in the office.ā€ Move home? Work in the office? Over my dead body. Bitterness crawled up my throat at the thought of wasting my days away in some cubicle. I wasnā€™t making much progress on my manuscript, but caving to Gabrielā€™s ā€œsolutionā€ meant throwing away my dreams for good. I got the idea for the book two years ago while people watching in Washington Square Park. Iā€™d overheard a heated argument between a man and someone who obviously wasnā€™t his wife, and my imagination took their fight and ran with it. The story had been so detailed and fleshed out in my mind that Iā€™d confidently told everyone I knew about my plans to write and publish a thriller. The day after I witnessed the argument, I bought a brand-new laptop and let the words pour out of me. Except what came out at the end wasnā€™t the shimmering diamond masterpiece Iā€™d envisioned. What showed up were ugly lumps of coal, so I deleted them. And the pages remained blank. ā€œI donā€™t think I want to be an author; I do want to be an author,ā€ I said. ā€œIā€™m just exploring the story.ā€ Despite my current frustrations with writing, there was something so special about creating and getting lost in new worlds. Books have been my escape for years, and I will publish one eventually. I wasnā€™t giving up that dream so I could become an office automaton. ā€œThe same way you wanted to be a dancer, a travel agent, and a daytime talk show host?ā€ The disapproval edged out Gabrielā€™s exasperation. ā€œYouā€™re not a fresh college grad anymore. Youā€™re twenty-eight. You need direction.ā€ The bitterness thickened into a dry, sour sludge. You need direction. That was easy for Gabriel to say. Heā€™d known what he wanted since high school. All my brothers had. I was the only Valencia bobbing aimlessly in the post-school waters while the rest of my family settled into their respective careers. The businessman, the artist, the professor, the engineer, and me, the flake. I was sick of being the failure, and I was especially sick of Gabriel being right. ā€œI have direction. In factā€¦ā€ Donā€™t say it. Donā€™t say it. Donā€™tā€”ā€œIā€™m almost done with the book.ā€ The lie darted out before I could snatch it back. ā€œReally?ā€ Only he could soak a word with so much skepticism it morphed into something else. Are you lying? The real, unspoken question snaked over the line, poking and prodding for holes in my declaration. There were plenty of them, of course. The entire freaking thing was one giant hole because I was closer to setting up a colony on Mars than finishing my book. But it was too late. Iā€™d backed myself into a corner, and the only way out was through. ā€œYes.ā€ I cleared my throat. ā€œI had a big breakthrough at Vivianā€™s wedding. Itā€™s the Italian air. It was so, um, inspiring.ā€ The only things itā€™d inspired were too many glasses of champagne and a massive hangover, but I kept that to myself. ā€œWonderful,ā€ Gabriel said. ā€œIn that case, weā€™d love to read it. Momā€™s birthday is in four months. Why donā€™t you bring it when youā€™re home for the party?ā€ Rocks pitched off the side of a cliff and plummeted into my stomach. ā€œAbsolutely not. Iā€™m writing an erotic thriller, Gabe. As in, thereā€™s sex in it.ā€ ā€œIā€™m aware of what erotic thrillers entail. Weā€™re your family. We want to support you.ā€ ā€œBut itā€™sā€”ā€ ā€œIsabella.ā€ Gabriel adopted the same tone heā€™d used to boss me around when we were younger. ā€œI insist.ā€ I squeezed my phone so hard it cracked in protest. This was a test. He knew it, I knew it, and neither of us was willing to back down. ā€œFine.ā€ I injected a dose of false pep into my voice. ā€œDonā€™t blame me if youā€™re so traumatized you canā€™t look me in the eye for at least the next five years.ā€ ā€œIā€™ll chance it.ā€ A warning note slid into his voice. ā€œBut if, for some reason, youā€™re unable to produce the book by then, weā€™re going to sit down and have a serious chat.ā€ After our father died, Gabriel assumed unofficial head of household status next to our mother. He took care of my brothers and me while she workedā€”picking us up from school, making our doctorā€™s appointments, cooking us dinner. We were all adults now, but his bossy tendencies were getting worse as our mother entrusted more and more of the family responsibilities to him. I gritted my teeth. ā€œYou canā€™tā€”ā€ ā€œI have to go or Iā€™ll be late for my meeting. Weā€™ll talk soon. See you in February.ā€ He hung up, leaving the echo of his thinly veiled threat behind. Panic twisted my chest into a tight knot. I tossed my phone to the side and tried to breathe through the ballooning pressure. Damn Gabriel. Knowing him, he was telling our entire family about the book right that second. If I showed up empty-handed, Iā€™d have to face their collective displeasure. My momā€™s dismay, my lolaā€™s disapproval and, worst of all, Gabrielā€™s smug, know-it-all attitude. I knew you couldnā€™t do it. You need direction. When are you going to get it together, Isabella? Youā€™re twenty-eight. If the rest of us can do it, why canā€™t you? The phantom accusations tumbled into my throat, blocking the flow of oxygen. Four months. I had four months to finish my book while working full- time and battling a nasty case of writerā€™s block, or my family would know I was exactly the wishy-washy failure Gabriel thought I was. I already hated going home every year with nothing to show for my time in New York; I couldnā€™t bear the thought of seeing the same disappointment reflected on my familyā€™s faces. Itā€™s fine. Youā€™ll be fine. Eighty thousand words by early February. Totally doable, right? For a moment, I let myself hope and believe the new me could do this. Then I groaned and pressed the heels of my palms against my eyes. Even with them closed, all I could see were blank pages. ā€œI am so fucked.ā€ CHAPTER 5 Kai I leveled a cool stare at the man sitting across from me. After yesterdayā€™s CEO bombshell and my unsettling interaction with Isabella, Iā€™d hoped for a smooth day at work, but those hopes spiraled down the drain the minute Tobias Foster showed up unannounced. He wore a shiny new Zegna suit, an even shinier Rolex, and a smug smirk as he inspected his surroundings. ā€œNice office,ā€ he said. ā€œVery fitting for a Young.ā€ He didnā€™t say it, but I could read between the lines. I earned my office; you were born into yours. Which was complete bull. I may be a Young, but Iā€™d worked my way up from the bottom like every other employee. ā€œIā€™m sure yours is equally nice.ā€ I gave him a cordial smile and glanced at my watch. Heā€™d catch the movement; hopefully, he would take a hint as well. ā€œWhat can I do for you, Tobias?ā€ He was the head of the Young Corporationā€™s Europe division and my biggest competition for CEO, so Iā€™d made an exception to my no- unscheduled-meetings rule and invited him into my office. I already regretted it. Tobias was the worst sort of employeeā€”good at his job but so crass and irritating I wished he werenā€™t so we could fire him. I appreciated his competence, but he was one step away from sticking his foot so far down his mouth even the worldā€™s most talented surgeon couldnā€™t retrieve it. ā€œI just wanted to drop by and say hi. Pay my respects.ā€ Tobias fiddled with the crystal paperweight on my desk. ā€œIā€™m in town for a bunch of meetings. Iā€™m sure you know about them. The Europe division is expanding so fast, and Richard invited me to dinner at Peter Luger.ā€ His laugh grated through the air. Richard Chu was the Young Corporationā€™s longest-serving board member and a dinosaur when it came to innovation. Weā€™d butted heads multiple times over the future of the company, but no matter how much power he thought he wielded, he was only one vote out of many. ā€œIā€™m not surprised. Richard does enjoy a certain type of company.ā€ The type thatā€™ll kiss his ass like itā€™s made of gold. Tobiasā€™s smile slipped. ā€œPerhaps you should get going. Traffic can be quite brutal at this time of day. Would you like me to call a car for you?ā€ My hand hovered over the phone in a clear dismissal. ā€œNo need.ā€ He released the paperweight and pinned with me a hard stare, all traces of fake deference gone. ā€œIā€™m used to doing things for myself. But life must be a lot easier for you, huh? All you have to do is not fuck up for the next four months and the CEO role is yours.ā€ I didnā€™t take the bait. Tobias could talk shit all he wanted, but I was damn good at my job and we both knew it. ā€œI havenā€™t fucked up in over thirty years,ā€ I said pleasantly. ā€œI donā€™t plan on starting now.ā€ His phony affability slid back into place like a curtain falling over a window. ā€œTrue, but thereā€™s a first time for everything.ā€ He stood, his smile oilier than a fast-food kitchen. ā€œSee you at the exec retreat in a few weeks. And Kai? May the best man win.ā€ I returned his smile with an indifferent one of my own. Lucky for me, I always won. After Tobias left, I reviewed the last quarterā€™s financial reports for the second time. Print revenue down eleven percent, online revenue up nine point two percent. Not great, but it was better than the other divisions, and it wouldā€™ve been worse had I not doubled down on the shift to digital despite the boardā€™s protests. A sharp ring tore my attention away from the reports. I groaned when I saw the caller ID. My mother only interrupted my office hours to share urgent or unpleasant news. ā€œI have excellent news.ā€ As usual, she cut straight to the chase when I picked up. ā€œClarissa is moving to New York.ā€ I flipped through my mental Rolodex. ā€œClarissaā€¦ā€ ā€œTeo.ā€ The clack of heels against marble emphasized her impatience. ā€œYou grew up with her. How could you forget?ā€ Clarissa Teo. A vague impression of pink tulle and braces passed in front of my mindā€™s eye. I suppressed another groan. ā€œSheā€™s five years younger than me, Mother. Growing up with her isnā€™t quite accurate.ā€ The Teos owned one of the biggest retail chains in the UK. My mother was best friends with Philippa Teo, and our family mansions stood side by side in Londonā€™s posh Kensington Palace Gardens. ā€œYou were neighbors and attended the same social functions,ā€ my mother said. ā€œIt counts in my book. Regardless, arenā€™t you thrilled sheā€™s moving to Manhattan?ā€ ā€œHmm.ā€ My noncommittal answer contained all the enthusiasm of a defendant sitting trial. Despite our familiesā€™ closeness, I barely knew Clarissa. I hadnā€™t been interested in hanging out with a girl five years my junior as a kid, and an ocean separated us when we were both adultsā€”Iā€™d studied at Cambridge for my masterā€™s while sheā€™d attended Harvard. By the time she returned to London, Iā€™d already moved to New York. We certainly werenā€™t close enough for me to feel any type of way over her comings and goings. ā€œShe doesnā€™t know many people in New York,ā€ my mother said with the subtlety of a thousand neon sparklers spelling ask her out at night. ā€œYou should show her around. The Valhalla Clubā€™s fall gala is coming up. She would make a lovely date.ā€ A sigh traveled up my throat to the tip of my tongue before I swallowed it. ā€œIā€™m happy to take her out to lunch one day, but I havenā€™t decided whether Iā€™m bringing a date to the gala yet.ā€ ā€œYou are a Young.ā€ My motherā€™s voice grew stern. ā€œNot only that, you could become CEO of the worldā€™s biggest media company in four months. Iā€™ve let you have your fun, but you need to settle down soon. The board does not look favorably on people with unsettled home lives.ā€ ā€œDidnā€™t one of the board members find his wife in bed with the gardener? A married home life sounds more unsettled than an unmarried one.ā€ ā€œKai.ā€ I rubbed a hand over my mouth, wondering how my smooth, easy day had devolved into this. First Tobias, now my mother. It was like the universe was conspiring against me. ā€œIā€™m not asking you to propose, though it certainly wouldnā€™t hurt,ā€ my mother said. ā€œClarissa is beautiful, well-educated, well-mannered, and cultured. She would make a wonderful wife.ā€ ā€œThis isnā€™t a dating app. You donā€™t need to list her qualities,ā€ I said dryly. ā€œLike I said, I promise Iā€™ll meet up with her at least once.ā€ After a few more reassurances, I hung up. A headache throbbed behind my temple. My mother gave me the illusion of choice, but she expected me to marry Clarissa one day. Everyone did. If not Clarissa, then someone exactly like her with the proper lineage, education, and upbringing. Iā€™d dated multiple women like that. They were pleasant enough, but there was always something missing. Another image flashed through my mind, this time of purple-black hair and sparkling eyes and a husky, irrepressible laugh. My shoulders tightened. I pushed the image out of my mind and tried to refocus on work, but glints of purple kept resurfacing until I slammed my folder shut and stood. Perhaps my mother was right. I should take Clarissa to the fall gala. Just because my previous girlfriends hadnā€™t worked out didnā€™t mean a similar relationship wouldnā€™t work out in the future. I was destined to marry someone like Clarissa Teo. Not anyone else. ā€œWho the hell pissed you off today?ā€ Dante rubbed his jaw. ā€œYou were throwing punches at me like I was Victor fucking Black.ā€ ā€œCanā€™t handle it?ā€ I quipped, sidestepping his question. I ignored the mention of a rival media groupā€™s smarmy CEO. ā€œIf marriage made you soft, let me know, and Iā€™ll find a new partner.ā€ His glare couldā€™ve melted the marble columns lining the hallway. I suppressed a smile. Riling him up was even more therapeutic than our weekly boxing matches. I just wish he didnā€™t make it so easy. One semi- critical mention of his wife or marriage and he reverted right back to his scowling, pre-Vivian self. We typically boxed on Thursdays, but Iā€™d convinced him to move our standing appointment up given yesterdayā€™s CEO vote bombshell. ā€œBe my guest. Iā€™d much rather spend my evenings with Viv anyway.ā€ A short pause. ā€œAnd Iā€™m not fucking soft. We ended in a tie.ā€ We usually did. It galled my competitive side to no end, but it was also why I enjoyed sparring with Dante so much. It was a challenge in a world filled with easy wins. ā€œHoneymoon stage is still going strong then?ā€ I asked. Dante and Vivian had recently returned from their actual honeymoon in Greece. The Dante Iā€™d known for the better part of a decade wouldā€™ve never taken two weeks off from work, but his wife had accomplished the impossible. Sheā€™d transformed him into an actual human being with a life outside the office. His face softened. ā€œDonā€™t think itā€™ll ever end,ā€ he said with surprising frankness. ā€œSpeaking of which, what are you going to do about Clarissa?ā€ Iā€™d told him about the CEO vote and my motherā€™s call earlier. As expected, Dante had displayed the sympathy of a chipped boulder, but he never missed an opportunity to hound me about my motherā€™s determination to marry me off. ā€œTake her out like I promised. Who knows?ā€ I stopped at the entrance to the bar. ā€œShe could be the one. This time next month, we could be double dating and wearing matching couplesā€™ outfits in Times Square.ā€ Dante grimaced. ā€œIā€™d rather cut off my arm and feed it through a grinder.ā€ I swallowed my laughter. ā€œIf you say so.ā€ If I convinced Vivian, she could get him to yodel naked on the corner of Broadway and Forty-Second Street. Luckily for him, I also found the idea of couplesā€™ outfits and visiting Times Square abhorrent. We usually grabbed a drink together after our boxing matches, but he excused himself tonight for a date with his wife, so I entered the bar alone. I wove through the room, instinctively searching for a glimpse of dimples and violet, but I only saw Isabellaā€™s blond friend and another bartender with red curls. I settled at an empty stool and ordered my usual scotch, neat, from the blond. Teresa? Teagan? Tessa. That was her name. ā€œHere you go!ā€ she chirped, setting the drink in front of me. ā€œThank you.ā€ I took a casual sip. ā€œBusy night. Is anyone else working today?ā€ ā€œNope. We never have more than two people working the same shift.ā€ Tessaā€™s brows rose. ā€œAre you looking for someone in particular?ā€ I shook my head. ā€œJust asking.ā€ Luckily, another customer soon diverted her attention, and she didnā€™t press further. I finished my scotch and spent the next half hour engaging in the obligatory networking and information gatheringā€”there was nothing like a little alcohol to loosen peopleā€™s tongues, which was why I had a strict three- drink limit in publicā€”but I couldnā€™t focus. My thoughts kept straying to a certain room on the second floor. Not because of Isabella, obviously. I was simply bothered by how sheā€™d outperformed me, and I couldnā€™t rest until Iā€™d perfected the piece. I lasted another ten minutes in the bar before I couldnā€™t take it anymore. I excused myself from a conversation with the CEO of a private equity firm, slipped out the side entrance, and took the stairs to the second floor. Unlike yesterday, no music leaked into the hall. A brush of what felt perilously close to disappointment skimmed my skin until I shook it off. I reached for the door right as it swung open. Somethingā€”someoneā€”small and soft slammed into me, and I instinctively reached an arm around her waist to steady her. I looked down, the scent of rose and vanilla clouding my senses before my brain registered who was in my arms. Silky dark hair. Tanned skin. Huge brown eyes that melded to mine with surprise and something else that sent an alarming rush of heat through my blood. Isabella. CHAPTER 6 Isabella Kai wrapped an arm around my waist, anchoring me against his torso. It was like being enveloped in an inferno. Heat seeped through my shirt and into my veins; a flush rose to the surface of my skin, which tingled beneath the sudden, heavy weight of my uniform. I should do somethingā€”apologize for running into him (even though it hadnā€™t been my fault), step back, run the hell awayā€”but my mind had glitched. All I could focus on was the solid strength of his body and the rapid thud, thud, thud of my heart. Kai tipped his chin down, his eyes finding mine. For once, he wasnā€™t wearing a tie and jacket. Instead, he wore a white button-down with the sleeves rolled up and the top button undone. The shirt was so soft, and he smelled so nice, that I got the inane urge to press my face into his chest. Or, worse, to press my mouth to the hollow of his throat and see if he tasted as good as he smelled. My breath escaped through parted lips. The tingling intensified; everything felt warm and heavy, like Iā€™d been dipped in sun-kissed honey. Kaiā€™s expression remained indifferent, but his throat flexed with a telltale swallow. I wasnā€™t the only one who felt the electric link between us. The realization was enough to snap me out of my trance. What was I doing? This was Kai, for Christā€™s sake. He was one hundred (okay, ninety) percent not my type and two hundred percent off-limits. I wasnā€™t going to make the same mistake as my predecessor, whoā€™d gotten fired after my supervisor caught her giving a club member a blow job. Sheā€™d been reckless, and now she was blacklisted from working at every bar within a forty-mile radius. Valhalla took its rulesā€”and consequencesā€”seriously. Plusā€¦ Remember what happened the last time you got involved with someone who was off-limits? My stomach lurched, and the fog finally receded enough for me to break free from his embrace. Despite the heater humming in the background, stepping out of Kaiā€™s arms was like leaving a cozy, fire-lit cabin to traverse the mountains in the dead of winter. Goose bumps scattered over my arms, but I played it off with a casual lilt. ā€œAre you stalking me?ā€ Running into him here once couldā€™ve been coincidence, but twice was suspicious. Especially on consecutive nights. I expected him to brush me off with his usual dry amusement. Instead, the tiniest hint of pink colored his cheekbones. ā€œWe discussed this last time. Iā€™m a member of the club, and Iā€™m simply availing myself of its amenities,ā€ he said, the words stilted and formal. ā€œYouā€™ve never used the piano room before this week.ā€ A faint lift of his brow. ā€œHow do you know?ā€ Instinct. If Kai made regular appearances here, Iā€™d feel it. He altered the shape of every space he entered. ā€œJust a hunch,ā€ I said. ā€œBut Iā€™m glad youā€™re coming more often. You could use the practice.ā€ I tamped down a smile at the way his eyes sparked. ā€œMaybe one day, youā€™ll catch up to me.ā€ To my disappointment, he didnā€™t take the bait. ā€œOne can only hope. Of courseā€¦ā€ The earlier spark turned thoughtful. Assessing. ā€œLast night couldā€™ve been a fluke. You talk a big game, but can you duplicate the same level of performance?ā€ Now he was the one dangling the bait, his words gleaming like a minnow hooked to a jig head. I shouldnā€™t fall for it. I had to get more words inā€”I was woefully behind on my daily word count goal of three thousand wordsā€”and Iā€™d only snuck in here after my shift because Iā€™d hoped it would jump-start my creativity. I didnā€™t have time to indulge in Kaiā€™s veiled challenges. The practical side of me insisted I return home that minute to write; another, more convincing side glowed with pride. Kai wouldnā€™t have challenged me if he werenā€™t rattled, and there were so few things I was truly talented at that I couldnā€™t resist the urge to show off. Just a little. I released a confident smile. ā€œLetā€™s put it to the test, shall we? Your choice.ā€ The weight of his gaze followed me to the bench. I opened the fallboard and tried to focus on the smooth, familiar keys instead of the man behind me. ā€œWhat did you have in mind?ā€ I asked. ā€œ ā€˜Winter Wind.ā€™ ā€ Kaiā€™s presence brushed my back. A shiver of pleasure, followed by the slow drip of warmth down my spine. ā€œChopin.ā€ It was one of the composerā€™s most difficult Ć©tudes, but it was doable. I glanced at Kai, who leaned against the side of the piano and assessed me with the detached interest of a professor grading a student. Moonlight spilled over his relaxed form, sculpting his cheekbones with silver and etching shadows beneath those inscrutable eyes. The air turned hazy with anticipation. I sank into it, wrenching my gaze back to the piano, closing my eyes, and letting the electric currents carry me through the piece. I didnā€™t play Chopin often, so it started rusty, but just as I hit my stride, a soft rustle interrupted my focus. My eyes flew open. Kai had moved from his previous spot. He was now seated on the bench, his body scant inches from mine. I hit the wrong key. The discordant note jarred my bones, and though I quickly corrected myself, I couldnā€™t lose myself in the music anymore. I was too busy drowning in awareness, in the scent of the woods after a rainstorm and the way Kaiā€™s gaze burned a hole in my cheek. Yesterday, Iā€™d played like no one was watching. Today, I played like the whole world was watching, except it wasnā€™t the whole world. It was one man. I finished the Ć©tude, frustration chafing beneath my skin. Kai watched me without a word, his expression unreadable save for a tiny pinch between his brows. ā€œYou distracted me,ā€ I said before he could state the obvious. The pinch loosened, revealing a glimmer of amusement. ā€œHow so?ā€ ā€œYou know how.ā€ The amusement deepened. ā€œI was merely sitting. I didnā€™t say or do a single thing.ā€ ā€œYouā€™re sitting too close.ā€ I cast a pointed glance at the sliver of black leather seating between us. ā€œItā€™s an obvious intimidation tactic.ā€ ā€œAh, yes. The secret art of sitting too closely. I should contact the CIA and inform them of this groundbreaking tactic.ā€ ā€œHa ha,ā€ I grumbled, my ego too bruised to make way for humor. ā€œDonā€™t you have somewhere else to be instead of bothering an innocent bystander?ā€ ā€œI have many other places to be.ā€ A brief light illuminated the shadows in his eyes. ā€œBut I chose to be here.ā€ His words sank into my bones, dousing the flames of my disgruntlement. The light flared, then died, submerged once again beneath pools of darkness. ā€œHow did you learn to play so well?ā€ Kai switched topics so abruptly my brain scrambled to catch up. ā€œMost obligatory childhood lessons donā€™t cover such difficult pieces.ā€ Pieces of memories spilled into my consciousness. A golden afternoon here, an evening performance there. I kept them locked in a box whenever I could, but Kaiā€™s question pried it open with distressingly low effort. ā€œMy father was a music teacher. He could play everything. The violin, the cello, the flute.ā€ A familiar ache crept into my throat. ā€œBut the piano was his first love, and he taught us from a young age. My mom wasnā€™t a music person, and I think he wanted someone else in the family who could connect with it the way he did.ā€ Vignettes from my childhood floated to the surface. My dadā€™s deep, patient voice guiding me through the scales. My mom taking me shopping for a new dress and my family crowding in the living room for my first ā€œrecital.ā€ Iā€™d stumbled a few times, but everyone pretended I hadnā€™t. Afterward, my father swept me up in a huge hug, whispered how proud he was of me, and took all of us out for ice cream sundaes. Heā€™d bought me a special triple scoop of chocolate fudge brownie, and I remembered thinking life couldnā€™t possibly get any better than that moment. I blinked back a telltale sting in my eyes. I hadnā€™t cried in public since my dadā€™s funeral, and I refused to start again now. ā€œ ā€˜Us.ā€™ You and your siblings?ā€ Kai prompted gently. I didnā€™t know why he was so interested in my background, but once I started talking, I couldnā€™t stop. ā€œYes.ā€ I swallowed the swell of memories and marshaled my emotions into some semblance of order. ā€œI have four older brothers. They went along with the piano lessons to make our dad happy, but I was the only one who truly enjoyed them. That was why he let them off the hook after they learned the basics but continued teaching me.ā€ I didnā€™t want to be a professional pianist. Never had, never will. There was a special magic in loving something without capitalizing on it, and I was comforted by the idea that there was at least one thing in my life I could turn to with no expectations, pressures, or guilt. ā€œWhat about you?ā€ I lightened my tone. ā€œDo you have any siblings?ā€ I knew little about Kai despite his familyā€™s notoriety. For people whoā€™d built their fortune on dissecting the lives of others, they were notoriously private themselves. ā€œI have a younger sister, Abigail. She lives in London.ā€ ā€œRight.ā€ An image of a female version of Kaiā€”cool, elegant, and decked out head to toe in tasteful designer clothingā€”flashed through my mind. ā€œLet me guess. You both also took piano lessons growing up, along with violin, French, tennis, and Mandarin.ā€ Kaiā€™s lips curved. ā€œAre we that predictable?ā€ ā€œMost rich people are.ā€ I shrugged. ā€œNo offense.ā€ ā€œNone taken,ā€ he said wryly. ā€œThereā€™s nothing more flattering than being called predictable.ā€ He shifted in his seat, and our knees brushed. Lightly, so lightly it barely counted as a touch, but every cell in my body tensed like Iā€™d been electrocuted. Kai stilled. He didnā€™t move his knee, and I didnā€™t breathe, and we were tossed back to the beginning of the night, when the latch of his arms around my waist conjured all sorts of inappropriate thoughts and fantasies. Tangling tongues. Sweat-slicked skin. Dark groans and breathy pleas. The point of contact between us burned, taking our easy banter and condensing it into something heavier. More dangerous. A blanket of static settled over my skin. I was suddenly, intensely aware of how we would look to anyone walking in. Two people crowded on the same bench, so close our breaths merged into one. A deceptively intimate portrait of rules broken and propriety discarded. That was how it felt. In reality, we werenā€™t doing anything wrong, but I was more exposed in that moment than if I were standing naked in the middle of Fifth Avenue. Kaiā€™s eyes darkened at the edges. Neither of us had moved, but I had the uncanny sense we were barreling down an invisible track headed off a cliff. Get it together, Isa. Youā€™re conversing in a piano room, for Godā€™s sake, not bungee jumping off the Macau Tower. I dragged my attention back to the conversation at hand. ā€œSo I was right about all the lessons. Predictable.ā€ The words came out more breathless than Iā€™d intended, but I masked it with a bright smile. ā€œUnless you also have some exciting hobby I donā€™t know about. Do you tame wild horses in your free time? BASE jump off the top of that tower in Dubai? Host orgies in your private library?ā€ Embers smoldered, then cooled. ā€œIā€™m afraid not.ā€ Kaiā€™s voice couldā€™ve melted butter. ā€œI donā€™t like sharing.ā€ The ground shifted, throwing me off-balance. I was scrambling for a response, any response, when a loud laugh sliced through the room like a guillotine. The electric link sizzled into oblivion. Our heads swiveled toward the door, and I instinctively jerked my leg away from his. Luckily, whoever was in the hall didnā€™t enter the room. The murmur of voices eventually faded, leaving silence in their wake. But the spell had shattered, and there was no gluing the pieces back together. Not tonight. ā€œI have to go.ā€ I stood so abruptly my knee banged against the underside of the piano. I ignored the pain ricocheting up and down my leg and summoned a flippant smile. ā€œAs entertaining as this has been, I have to, um, feed my snake.ā€ Ball pythons only needed to be fed every week or two, and Iā€™d already fed Monty yesterday, but Kai didnā€™t need to know that. He didnā€™t show a visible reaction to my words. He just inclined his head and replied with a simple, ā€œGood night.ā€ I waited until I was out of the room and down the hall before I allowed myself to relax. What the hell was I thinking? My night had been a spectacular series of bad decisions. First, going to the piano room instead of heading home to work on my manuscript (in my defense, I usually wrote better after a piano session), then staying and semi-flirting with Kai. My run-in with him mustā€™ve knocked my good sense loose. I made it halfway down the stairs when I ran into Parker, the bar manager. ā€œIsabella.ā€ Surprise lit her eyes. With her lean frame and platinum pixie cut, she bore a striking resemblance to the model Agyness Deyn. ā€œI didnā€™t expect to still see you here.ā€ My shift had ended two hours ago. ā€œI was in the piano room,ā€ I said, electing to tell the truth. Some Valhalla managers got testy about employees using the facilities even in accordance with the rules, but Parker knew about my hobby and encouraged it. ā€œOf course. I shouldā€™ve known.ā€ Her eyes twinkled. Parker was a gem, as far as managers went. A thousand times better than Creepy Charlie or Handsy Harry from my previous places of employment. Besides my friends Vivian and Sloane, she was also one of the few people in New York who knewā€”and keptā€”my secret. For that, I would always be grateful. ā€œI didnā€™t get a chance to tell you earlier, but congratulations on your upcoming work anniversary.ā€ A smile warmed her face. ā€œIā€™m glad I have you on my team.ā€ Warmth sloshed in my stomach, eroding some of my earlier guilt. ā€œThank you.ā€ Take that, Gabriel. He might not have faith in me, but my manager said I was one of her ā€œbest employees.ā€ Parkerā€™s words followed me all the way across town to my apartment, where Monty snoozed in his vivarium and my manuscript sat, seventy-nine thousand words short of its eighty-thousand word target. Bartending paid the bills, but like with piano, I wasnā€™t interested in it as a career. Still, it felt good to be good at something. Parker had worked at Valhalla for years; sheā€™d seen plenty of people come and go, and she was impressed by me. I couldnā€™t let her down. That meant keeping my nose clean, staying focused, and staying far, far away from a certain British billionaire. But when I climbed into bed that night and fell into a fitful sleep, my dreams had nothing to do with work and everything to do with dark hair and stolen touches. CHAPTER 7 Isabella ā€œRomantic comedies are overrated and unrealistic.ā€ Sloane frowned at the montage of cute dates and passionate kisses flickering across her TV screen. ā€œTheyā€™re setting people up for failure with false hopes of happily ever afters and cheesy grand gestures when the average man canā€™t even remember their partnerā€™s birthday.ā€ ā€œUh-huh.ā€ I grabbed another handful of extra buttered popcorn from the bowl between us. ā€œBut theyā€™re fun, and you still watch them.ā€ ā€œI donā€™t watch them. Iā€”ā€ ā€œHate-watch them,ā€ Vivian and I finished in unison. We were curled up in Sloaneā€™s living room, gorging on junk food and half paying attention to the cheesy Christmas rom-com weā€™d picked for the night. Some people might say it was too early for Christmas movies, but those people would be wrong. It was October, which meant it was practically December. ā€œThatā€™s what you say every time.ā€ I popped a fluffy kernel into my mouth, taking care not to drop any crumbs on my laptop. ā€œYouā€™re not entirely wrong, but there are real-life exceptions. Look at Viv and Dante. Theyā€™re proof lovestruck men and cheesy grand gestures exist in real life too.ā€ ā€œHey!ā€ Vivian protested. ā€œHis gestures werenā€™t cheesy. They were romantic.ā€ My brow arched in challenge. ā€œBuying you dumplings from the thirty-six best restaurants in New York so you can choose which one you like best? Iā€™d say itā€™s both. Donā€™t worry.ā€ I patted her with my free, non-popcorn- filled hand. ā€œI didnā€™t mean it in a bad way.ā€ If anyone deserved extra love and cheesiness in their life, it was Vivian. On the outside, her life seemed perfect. She was beautiful and smart and owned a successful luxury event planning company. She was also heiress to the Lau Jewels fortune, but the money came with a priceā€”sheā€™d had to grow up with Francis and Cecelia Lau, who were, for lack of a better word, total assholes. Her mother constantly criticized her (though less so than before) and her father disowned her after she stood up to him. Francis was the main reason Vivian and Danteā€™s relationship had had such a rocky start, but luckily, theyā€™d moved past it and were now so sickeningly sweet together my teeth hurt every time I was in their vicinity. Freaking dumplings. It was so cute and depressing at the same time. Iā€™d never dated anyone who cared enough to remember my favorite food (pasta), much less buy me multiples of it. If I werenā€™t terrified of inadvertently summoning the devil (thanks to my lola, who took great pains to instill the fear of God in her grandchildren), Iā€™d make voodoo dolls of my worst exes. Then againā€¦I eyed my laptop. I had something better than voodoo dolls. I had my words. ā€œYou know what? Maybeā€¦ā€ I straightened, my fingers already moving before my brain had the chance to catch up. ā€œI can incorporate Dante and Vivā€™s date in my book somehow.ā€ This was the part I loved about writing. The lightbulb moments that unraveled new sections of the story, bringing it closer to completion. Excitement, motion, progress. Itā€™d been a week since Gabrielā€™s call. Iā€™d yet to hit my daily word counts, but I was getting closer. That morning, I wrote a whopping eighteen hundred words, and if I squeezed in a thousand or so more before movie night ended, Iā€™d meet my target. Sloaneā€™s brows dipped in a frown. ā€œDumplings in an erotic thriller?ā€ ā€œJust because it hasnā€™t been done doesnā€™t mean it canā€™t be done.ā€ My February deadline loomed ever closer, and I was willing to try anything at this point. ā€œPerhaps one of the characters can choke on one,ā€ Vivian suggested, seemingly unfazed by my morbid take on her husbandā€™s romantic gesture. ā€œOr they can lace the dumplings with arsenic and feed them to an unsuspecting rival, then dissolve the body with sulfuric acid to hide the evidence.ā€ Sloane and I gaped at her. Out of the three of us, Vivian was the least likely to hatch such diabolical ideas. ā€œSorry.ā€ Her cheeks pinked. ā€œIā€™ve been watching a lot of crime shows with Dante. Weā€™re trying to find a normal hobby for him that doesnā€™t involve work, sex, or beating people up.ā€ ā€œI thought he outsourced that last part,ā€ I half joked, tapping out an obligatory sentence about arsenic. Dante was the CEO of the Russo Group, a luxury goods conglomerate. He was also notorious for his questionable methods of dealing with people who pissed him off. Urban legend said his team beat a would-be burglar to the point where the man was still in a coma years later. Iā€™d be more concerned about the rumors if he didnā€™t love Vivian so much. One only had to look at him to know heā€™d rather throw himself off the Empire State Building than hurt her. Vivian wrinkled her nose. ā€œFunny, but I meant his boxing matches with Kai.ā€ My typing slowed at the mention of Kaiā€™s name. ā€œI didnā€™t know they boxed.ā€ He was so neat and proper all the time, but what happened when he stripped away the civility? An unbidden image flashed through my mind of his torso, naked and gleaming with sweat. Of dark eyes and rough hands and muscles honed through hours in the ring. Glasses off, tie loosened, mouth crushed against mine with heady carnality. My body sang with sudden heat. I shifted, thighs burning from both my laptop and the fantasies clawing their way through my brain. ā€œEvery week,ā€ Vivian confirmed. ā€œSpeaking of Dante, heā€™s picking me up soon for dinner at Monarch later. Do you guys want to join us? Heā€™s friends with the owner, so we can easily update the reservation.ā€ ā€œWhat?ā€ I asked, too disoriented by the sharp left turn in my thoughts to catch up to the new topic. ā€œMonarch,ā€ Vivian repeated. ā€œDo you want to come? I know youā€™ve been dying to eat there.ā€ Right. Monarch (named after the butterfly, not the royals) was one of the most exclusive restaurants in New York. The wait-list for a table was months longā€”unless, of course, you were a Russo. Sloane shook her head. ā€œI have to pick up my new client tonight. He lands in a few hours.ā€ She ran a boutique public relations firm with a roster of high-powered clients, but she usually outsourced her errands. Whoever it was must be really important if she was picking them up herself, though she looked distinctly unhappy about the task. I pushed my laptop off my thighs and lifted my hair off my neck. A welcome breeze swept over my skin, cooling my lust. ā€œCount me in,ā€ I said. ā€œI donā€™t have work tonight.ā€ I didnā€™t love playing third wheel, but Iā€™d be an idiot to turn down a meal at Monarch. Itā€™d been on my restaurant bucket list forever, and it would be a good distraction from my unsettling Kai fantasies. I couldnā€™t wait to tell Romeroā€”about dinner, not Kai. Besides engineering, my brotherā€™s greatest joy in life was food, and he was going to die whenā€” Wait. Romero. ā€œOh my God, I totally forgot!ā€ The adrenaline of remembering a forgotten task surged through me, erasing any lingering thoughts about a certain pesky billionaire. I reached forward and pulled my backpack onto my lap. ā€œI promised Rom Iā€™d give this to you guys to try.ā€ After some rummaging, I triumphantly fished out a high-tech, beautifully ribbed, bright pink dildo. Two brand-new packaged toys sat at the bottom of my bag, but I liked to show off the goods first, so to speak. Romero was a senior design engineer at Belladonna, a leading adult toy manufacturer, which was a fancy way of saying he made vibrators and dildos for a living. They relied on testers for early feedback, and somehow, heā€™d roped me into recruiting my friends for the task. It wasnā€™t as weird as it sounded on paper. Romero was a total science geek; if you placed a naked supermodel and the newest design software in front of him, his priority would be mastering the software. To him, there was nothing sexual about the toys. They were simply products that needed perfecting before they hit the market. That being said, I didnā€™t test out his designs. Even Romero agreed that would be too creepy, but my friends and acquaintances were fair game. ā€œNo.ā€ Sloane pressed her lips together. ā€œI donā€™t need another dildo. I have a whole cabinet of those things, and they take up valuable space.ā€ Like her office, clothing, and pretty much everything else in her life, Sloaneā€™s apartment was an exercise in stark minimalism. Besides the television and, well, us, the only sign of life in her white-on-white living room was the oblivious goldfish swimming in the corner. The previous tenant had left it behind, and Sloane had been threatening to flush the Fish (yes, that was its name) down the toilet for the past two years. ā€œBut this is state of the art,ā€ I argued, shaking the dildo. ā€œYouā€™re one of Romeroā€™s most trusted reviewers!ā€ Unlike Vivian, who softened her feedback with encouraging words, Sloane specialized in scathing evaluations that dissected each product down to the bone. This was the same woman who wrote multipage critiques of every romantic comedy she watched; her capacity for preempting strangersā€™ hurt feelings hovered somewhere in the negative thirties. On the flip side, if she said she liked something, you knew she wasnā€™t bullshitting you. After more cajoling, threatening, and bribing in the form of a promise to watch every new Hallmark rom-com with her, I convinced Sloane to continue her reign as Belladonnaā€™s most feared and revered tester. I was still coming down from the high of winning an argument with her when the doorbell rang. ā€œIā€™ll get it.ā€ Vivian was in the bathroom and Sloane was busy scribbling in her notebookā€”based on how aggressively she was writing, the poor movie was getting evisceratedā€”so I scrambled off the couch and made my way to the front door. Thick dark hair, broad shoulders, olive skin. A quick twist of the doorknob revealed Vivianā€™s husband, looking every inch the billionaire CEO in a midnight-black Hugo Boss shirt and pants. ā€œHi!ā€ I said brightly. ā€œYouā€™re early, but thatā€™s okay because the movie just finished. You know, the male lead kind of reminds me of you. Super grumpy with daddy issues and a perpetual frownā€”until he finds the love of his life, of course.ā€ Actually, the male lead had been a cinnamon roll, but I liked to poke fun at Dante whenever possible. He was so serious all the time, though his disposition had improved dramatically since he married Vivian. A flush crawled across his sculpted cheekbones and over the bridge of his nose. At first, I thought Iā€™d annoyed him so much he was having a heart attack right there in the hallway, but then I noticed two things in rapid succession. One, Danteā€™s gaze was fixed on my right hand, which still held the prototype toy from Belladonna. Two, he wasnā€™t alone. Kai stood behind him, tie straight and suit neatly pressed, his appearance so perfect it was hard to believe he engaged in a sport as brutal as boxing. My eyes dropped to his hands, searching for bruised knuckles and bloody cuts, but I only saw crisp white cuffs and the glint of an expensive watch. Not a single wrinkle or piece of lint. Would he exert the same level of fastidious control in the bedroom, or would he abandon it for something more uninhibited? Both possibilities sent a heady rush through my veins. My grip instinctively tightened around the toy, and I lifted my gaze in time to see Kaiā€™s attention drift from my face to the fuchsia dildo with the agonizing speed of a slow-motion car crash. Silence engulfed the hall. Perhaps it was my imagination, but I couldā€™ve sworn the dildo vibrated a little despite not being plugged in, like it couldnā€™t contain its excitement from all the attention. While Dante looked like heā€™d swallowed a wasp, Kaiā€™s expression didnā€™t flicker. I might as well have been holding a piece of fruit or something equally innocuous. Still, heat scorched my cheeks and the back of my neck, making my skin prickle. ā€œWe were testing this,ā€ I said. The guysā€™ eyes widened, prompting a hasty clarification. ā€œNot on each other. Justā€¦in general. To see how many speeds it has.ā€ Dante shook his head and rubbed a hand over his face. Meanwhile, the corner of Kaiā€™s mouth twitched, as if he were constraining a smile. A bubble of laughter cascaded over my shoulder. I dropped my free hand from the doorknob, turned, and glared at Vivian, whoā€™d returned from the bathroom and was watching me flounder with far too much amusement for a supposed best friend. ā€œI canā€™t believe you didnā€™t tell me I was still holding this,ā€ I said, waving the dildo in the air. Dante let out a choked noise that landed somewhere between a sputtering car engine and a dying cat. ā€œFriends donā€™t let friends answer the door with phallic accessories. Donā€™t come running to me if your husband keels over from cardiac shock.ā€ ā€œHow is it my fault?ā€ Vivian protested between laughs. She appeared wholly unconcerned by her husbandā€™s imminent demise. ā€œI was in the bathroom. Blame Sloane for not warning you.ā€ I glanced at my other traitorous friend. Sheā€™d moved on from her film critique and was glaring at her phone like itā€™d personally produced, directed, and starred in her most hated rom-coms. Interrupting Sloane when she was in a foul mood was like tossing a hapless gazelle in front of an enraged lion. No, thank you. I liked my head right where it was. ā€œKai, are you joining us for dinner?ā€ Vivian asked, drawing my attention back to the hall. Her laughter had finally subsided. She moved next to her husband, who wrapped a protective arm around her waist and dropped a soft kiss on the top of her head. A pang of envy wormed its way into my gut before I banished it. ā€œLike I told the girls, we can easily change the reservation.ā€ ā€œMaybe another night. Dante and I had a meeting nearby, and I just came up to say hi.ā€ Kaiā€™s gaze flicked toward me for a split second. An answering thrill rippled beneath my skin. ā€œI donā€™t want to crash your date.ā€ ā€œNonsense. You wonā€™t be crashing at all,ā€ Vivian said. ā€œIsaā€™s joining us, so itā€™d actually be perfect. Seating four is easier than seating three.ā€ My shoulders stiffened. The last thing I wanted was to sit through an entire meal with Kai. Iā€™d done it before, at a dinner party Dante and Vivian hosted right after they returned from their honeymoon, but that was different. That had been before the piano room. Before dangerous fantasies and accidental touches that tilted my world off its axis. Kaiā€™s eyes rested on mine again. An invisible steel door slammed down around us, shutting out the rest of the world and cocooning us in a bubble of whisper-light breaths and colliding heartbeats. Goose bumps rose on my skin. But whereas I struggled to maintain a semblance of calm, he regarded me the way a scholar would examine an old but thoroughly forgettable text. A hint of interest, tempered by a sea of indifference. ā€œIn that case,ā€ he said, the words like velvet in his cultured voice, ā€œIā€™m happy to help.ā€ An unwelcome surge of anticipation leaked into my veins, but it was dampened by unease. Dante and Vivian always got lost in their own world, which meant I was facing at least two hours of Kaiā€™s uninterrupted company. ā€œExcellent.ā€ Vivian beamed, looking happy over something as simple as a group dinner. I opened my mouth, then closed it. My desire to experience Monarch warred with trepidation over a night with Kai. On one hand, I refused to let him ruin a bucket list item for me. On the otherā€¦ ā€œGuys, I have to go.ā€ Sloane came up beside me, so quiet I hadnā€™t heard her approach. Sometime in the past five minutes, sheā€™d tossed a camel Max Mara coat over her blouse and pants and swapped her slippers for a pair of sleek leather boots. ā€œMy client landed early.ā€ She nodded a curt greeting at the men and handed me and Vivian our bags, effectively dismissing us. We were too used to her work emergencies to be offended by her abrupt announcement. Sloane wasnā€™t the warm and fuzzy type, and her face should be stamped next to the dictionary entry for workaholic, but if things went to shit, I knew I could count on her. She was fiercely protective of her friends. ā€œWho is it anyway?ā€ I asked, discreetly dropping the dildo back into my backpack while she locked the door. ā€œAnyone we know?ā€ Most of her clients were business and society types, but she took on the occasional celebrity like British soccer star Asher Donovan and the fashion model Ayana (one name only, Ć  la Iman). ā€œI doubt it,ā€ Sloane said as we walked to the elevator. ā€œUnless you follow the lazy playboys section of the society pages closely.ā€ Her voice seeped with cold disdain. Okay then. Whoever the client was, he was clearly a sore subject. Vivian and I fell into step with her while the guys brought up the rear. Normally, Iā€™d pester her for more information, but I was too distracted by the soft footfalls behind me. The clean, woodsy scent of Kaiā€™s cologne drifted over me in a warm rush of air. I swallowed, tingles of awareness scattering over my back. It took every ounce of willpower not to turn around. No one spoke again until we reached the elevator. The oak-paneled car was built for four at most, and in our jostling to squeeze into the tight space, my hand grazed Kaiā€™s. A golden streak of heat shot through me, electrifying every nerve ending like live wires in the rain. I pulled away, but the phantom thrills remained. Beside me, Kai stared straight ahead, his face carved from stone. I almost believed he hadnā€™t felt the touch until his hand, the one Iā€™d inadvertently brushed, flexed. It was a small movement, so quick I wouldā€™ve missed it had I blinked, but it grabbed hold of my lungs and twisted. The air compressed from my chest. I quickly tore my eyes away and faced forward like a teen whoā€™d been caught watching something inappropriate. The hammering of my heart reached deafening decibels, drowning out Dante, Vivian, and Sloaneā€™s chatter. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Kaiā€™s jaw tense. The two of us stood there, unmoving and unspeaking, until the doors pinged open and our friends spilled out into the lobby. Kai and I hesitated in unison before he nodded at the exit in a universal after you sign. I held my breath as I brushed past him, but somehow, his scent still infiltrated my senses. It muddled my thoughts so much I almost walked into a potted fern on our way out, earning myself strange looks from Vivian and Sloane. I suppressed a groan, the next two hours stretching in front of me like an endless marathon. This is going to be a long night. CHAPTER 8 Kai I hadnā€™t planned on tagging along with Dante after our meeting, but when he mentioned the Monarch reservation, Iā€™d been curious. My job included checking out the most buzz-worthy places in the city, and Iā€™d been putting Monarch off for too long. Certainly, my decision to abandon a relaxing night in for the somewhat tedious fine dining scene had nothing to do with Danteā€™s casual comment about picking Vivian up from girlsā€™ night with her friends. Sloane had departed for the airport, leaving me and Isabella in the back seat of Danteā€™s car while the newlyweds cozied up in front. Of all the nights, Dante had to choose tonight to drive instead of relying on his chauffeur. Silence suffocated the air as we inched through Manhattan traffic, interrupted only by the soft patter of rain against glass. Isabella and I sat as far apart as humanly possible, but it wouldnā€™t matter if the Atlantic Ocean itself separated us. My senses were imprinted with the smell and feel of herā€”the lush sensuality of roses mixed with the rich warmth of vanilla; the brief, tantalizing glide of her hand against mine; the static charge that clung to my skin every time she was near. It was maddening. I answered an email about the DigiStream deal and slid my phone into my pocket. Iā€™d been working on acquiring the video streaming app for over a year. It was so close I could taste it, but for once, my thoughts were consumed with something other than business. I glanced at Isabella. She stared out the window, her fingers drumming an absentminded rhythm against her thigh, her face soft with introspection. Her backpack sat between us like a concrete wall, dividing my runaway thoughts from her unusual quiet. ā€œHow many speeds does it have?ā€ The drumming stopped. Isabella turned, confusion stamped

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