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Chapter 7 POWER PLAY

​The transition from the raw, rain-soaked isolation of the lodge to the sterile glass of Vance High-Tech's headquarters was jarring. By 2:30 PM, the mud-splattered SUV had been swapped for a sleek black sedan, and the wool hoodie had been replaced by a fresh, razor-sharp midnight suit.

​Elias was back in his element, and the change was terrifying.

​As they ascended in the private elevator, Elias didn't look like the trembling man who had hidden in a hoodie. He looked like an apex predator made of silicon and cold logic. He checked his reflection in the mirrored doors, adjusting his silk tie with steady, nimble fingers.

​"The board is looking for blood," Elias said, his voice clipped and professional. "They think the 'legal complications' surrounding your hiring were a lapse in judgment. They think I'm distracted. You are to stand behind me and look like the threat you are. Do not blink unless I tell you to."

​Jax felt a flare of annoyance. The intimacy of the lodge was being swept under a very expensive rug. "You're back to giving orders, then? The 'thank you' from this morning has an expiration date?"

​The elevator chined. Elias stepped out, but he paused just long enough to look Jax in the eye. "The 'thank you' was for the man in the woods. This is the man in the office. Keep up, Jaxson."

​The boardroom was a theater of power. Twelve men and women sat around a table that cost more than Jax's first house. At the head of the table sat Sterling, a man whose smile didn't reach his eyes-the same man who had tried to grab Elias at the gala.

​"Elias," Sterling said, leaning back. "We were beginning to think the storm had claimed you. And I see you've brought your... new acquisition."

​Jax took his position two paces behind Elias's left shoulder. He felt the eyes of the board on him-weighing him, judging him, dismissing him as a thuggish accessory. He felt a strange, dark thrill at the dismissal. Let them think he was just muscle. It made him more dangerous.

​"Mr. Thorne is a strategic investment," Elias said, taking his seat. He didn't look at Jax, but he leaned back, his head almost brushing Jax's midsection. "One that ensures my personal focus remains on the V-4 project and not on... security lapses."

​The meeting was a bloodbath of high-finance jargon and passive-aggressive thrusts. For two hours, Jax watched Elias dismantle every argument Sterling threw at him. Elias didn't raise his voice; he simply used his intellect like a scalpel, cutting through egos until the room was silent.

​Jax found himself mesmerized. He had always respected strength, but he'd only ever known the physical kind. Watching Elias command a room of sharks with nothing but his mind was intoxicating. He felt a heat rising in his neck-not from anger, but from a burgeoning, heavy admiration.

​"And one more thing," Elias said, closing his sleek laptop with a definitive snap. "I am aware that some of you have concerns about the debt I've absorbed to secure Mr. Thorne. Rest assured, his value is already being proven. He is... remarkably compliant."

​Elias tilted his head back, looking up at Jax. It was a deliberate move. In front of the board, he was marking his territory. He was showing them that this 6'4" mountain of a man belonged to him.

​"Thorne," Elias said, his voice dropping an octave. "My water is cold. Fix it."

​It was a petty command. A power play designed to humiliate Jax in front of the elite. Any other time in Jax's life, he would have walked out or snapped the table in half.

​Instead, Jax felt a jolt of something dark and electric. He looked down into Elias's grey eyes and saw the challenge there-and the secret plea. Elias needed to be the master here. He needed the board to see his dominance.

​Jax bowed his head slightly. "Of course, Mr. Vance."

​He took the glass, his large hand completely enveloping it. As he walked to the sideboard, he could feel the board's eyes on him, and Elias's gaze burning into his back.

​He wasn't just working off a debt. He was playing a part in a high-stakes game. And for the first time, Jax realized that being the "instrument" of a man like Elias Vance felt more like power than being the boss ever had.

​When he returned and set the fresh glass down, his finger intentionally brushed against the coaster, centimeters from Elias's hand. He felt the minute shiver that went through the smaller man.

​The board meeting ended in a landslide victory for Elias. As the room cleared, leaving only the two of them, the silence was heavy.

​Elias stayed seated, his shoulders finally dropping from their rigid posture. He looked at the water glass. "That was... well handled, Jaxson."

​"You like giving orders in front of an audience," Jax said, stepping closer, breaking the three-foot rule by a mere inch.

​Elias didn't pull away. He looked up, his expression unreadable. "I have to be the strongest person in this building. Even if it's a lie."

​"It's not a lie," Jax whispered. "But don't push your luck, Elias. I'm an expensive dog to keep on a leash."

​Elias's breath hitched. "Maybe I like the risk."

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