The library was the only room in the house that felt alive. While the rest of the Vance estate was chrome and cold glass, this room was floor-to-ceiling walnut, filled with the scent of leather bindings, woodsmoke, and the heavy, expensive bourbon Jax had poured for himself.
Jax sat in a wingback chair, his legs stretched out, his shirt unbuttoned halfway down his chest. He wasn't just decompressing; he was vibrating with a restless, predatory energy he couldn't shake. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw Julian Mercer's hand on Elias's skin.
He heard the door creak. He didn't turn. He knew the footfalls-light, hesitant, rhythmic.
"You're hiding," Elias said.
Jax took a slow, deliberate sip of the bourbon. "I'm brooding, Elias. There's a difference."
Elias walked into the circle of firelight. He had stripped off his dinner clothes, now wearing only a soft, oversized cashmere sweater and silk pajama bottoms. The sweater was charcoal, making his skin look like cream and his silver hair like moonlight. He stopped near the fireplace, but instead of sitting, he leaned against the mantle, watching Jax.
"Miller called," Elias said, his voice dropping to a low, velvet register. "He's worried about a lawsuit. He says you were... 'excessively physical' with a guest."
Jax looked up then, his eyes dark and hungry in the flickering light. "I was exactly as physical as I needed to be. I wanted to break his wrist for touching what wasn't his."
The air in the room thickened. Elias shivered, but he didn't look away. He stepped closer, entering the three-foot zone without a hint of his usual hesitation. "And what makes you think I'm yours, Jaxson?"
Jax set the glass down with a heavy clack. He stood up, his 6'4" frame casting a massive, looming shadow over Elias. He didn't stop until he was inches away, close enough to feel the heat radiating off Elias's slight body.
"I'm the one who sleeps ten feet from your door," Jax growled, his voice a rough vibration that seemed to settle in Elias's chest. "I'm the one who knows how you take your coffee, how you hold your breath when you're nervous, and exactly where the pulse jumps in your neck when I get too close."
Elias's breath hitched. He reached out, his fingers trembling as he brushed them against the pulse point at Jax's wrist. "You're breaking the rules. Again."
"The rules were made for a man who didn't know you," Jax whispered. He reached out, his large, calloused hand cupping the back of Elias's neck. His thumb traced the sensitive skin just behind Elias's ear, and the smaller man let out a soft, broken moan that nearly shattered Jax's restraint.
"Julian... he said you'd leave," Elias breathed, his eyes fluttering shut as he leaned into Jax's touch. "He said you were just waiting for the debt to clear."
"Julian is a fool," Jax rasped. He stepped even closer, his thighs brushing against Elias's. He could feel the frantic beat of Elias's heart, the sheer vulnerability of him. "I stayed for the money in the beginning. But forty-two million dollars doesn't buy the way I feel when I look at you. It doesn't buy the way I want to take apart anyone who looks at you the wrong way."
Elias looked up, his grey eyes blown wide with desire. He reached up, his hands tangling in the front of Jax's unbuttoned shirt, pulling him down. "Then show me. Show me it's not about the contract."
Jax didn't need another invitation. He dipped his head, his nose brushing against Elias's, their breaths mingling in the quiet space between them. "I'm going to ruin you for anyone else, Elias. You know that, don't you?"
"Please," Elias whispered against his lips.
Jax's hand slid from Elias's neck down his back, bunching the soft cashmere, pulling him flush against the hard, unyielding line of his body. The contrast was staggering-Elias's softness against Jax's muscle, the billionaire's elegance against the guard's raw power.
Jax didn't kiss him yet. He let his lips graze the corner of Elias's mouth, then his jawline, down to the hollow of his throat. He felt Elias's hands tighten in his shirt, heard the jagged, desperate sound of his breathing.
"You're mine," Jax murmured against his skin, a possessive, territorial claim. "Not the board's. Not Mercer's. Mine."
Elias arched his neck, a soft sound of surrender escaping him. "Yes. Yours."
The fire crackled, a log shifting and sending a spray of sparks up the chimney, but neither of them noticed. The library was no longer a room for books; it was a sanctuary of heat and friction, where the lines between boss and employee were finally, irrevocably beginning to burn away.