She stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows of the library, watching the gray mist roll over the manicured lawn. Behind her, the house was silent, but it was a heavy, suffocating silence. Her father was locked in his study, and for the last forty-eight hours, the only sounds had been the frantic scratching of a pen and the low, terrified murmurs of his voice through the door.
Then, the sound she had been dreading finally cut through the fog: the crunch of gravel.
A sleek, black sedan-a vehicle that looked less like a car and more like a predatory shadow-slid into the circular driveway. It didn't have a license plate. It didn't need one. Everyone in the tri-state area knew the fleet of Adam Thorne.
Abigail's heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage of bone. She smoothed the skirt of her silk dress-an expensive piece that suddenly felt like a costume for a life she no longer owned. She wasn't a girl anymore; she was a variable in a mathematical equation that had gone horribly wrong.
The front door didn't just open; it was bypassed. Two men in charcoal suits stepped into the foyer with the clinical efficiency of a cleanup crew. They didn't look at the art or the architecture. They looked at their tablets.
"Abigail Sterling?" one of them asked. His voice was as flat as a dial tone.
"I'm Abigail," she said, her voice steadier than she felt. "If you're here for my father, he's-"
"We aren't here for your father, Miss Sterling," the man interrupted, finally looking up. His eyes were cold. "The debt has been moved. We are here for the collateral."
The word hit her like a physical blow. Collateral. It was a word for a house, a boat, or a stack of stocks. It wasn't a word for a human being.
"My father is working on a repayment plan," Abigail said, stepping forward, her chin lifted. "He just needs time. The Sterling name has always-"
"The Sterling name is currently worth three cents on the dollar," a new voice rang out, vibrating through the hallway with the authority of a judge's gavel.
Abigail froze.
Standing in the doorway was Adam Thorne. He was taller than the photographs suggested, a mountain of tailored wool and dark intent. His hair was black, swept back from a face that looked like it had been carved from obsidian. But it was his eyes that stopped her breath-a piercing, predatory blue that seemed to calculate her value in real-time.
Adam stepped into the foyer, his polished oxfords clicking rhythmically on the marble. He didn't look around the room with curiosity; he looked at it with ownership. He stopped exactly three feet from her, entering her personal space with a deliberate, suffocating weight.
"Your father didn't just lose money, Abigail," Adam said, his voice a low, gravelly silk. "He stole it. He reached into the Thorne Equity fund and tried to bury his failures in my capital. That isn't a debt. That's a declaration of war."
"He'll pay it back," she whispered, her lungs feeling tight.
"With what?" Adam leaned in slightly, the scent of expensive sandalwood and cold rain clinging to him. "The house is leveraged. The accounts are frozen. The Sterling legacy is a hollow shell." He reached out, his thumb and forefinger catching a strand of her dark hair, tugging it just enough to force her to look up at him. "Fortunately for him, I have a taste for rare assets. And you, Abigail, are the only thing left in this house that isn't tarnished."
"I am not an asset," she snapped, pulling away, though the heat from his touch lingered on her skin like a brand.
"The contract in my car says otherwise," Adam replied, his expression unchanging. He didn't seem angry; he seemed bored by her defiance. "You have two choices. Choice one: I call the federal authorities. Your father spends the rest of his life in a six-by-nine cell, and you spend yours in a public courtroom, watching the Sterling name dragged through the dirt until there's nothing left but a stain."
Abigail felt the blood drain from her face. She looked toward her father's study door. It remained closed. He wasn't coming to save her. He was waiting for her to save him.
"And choice two?" she asked, her voice trembling.
Adam's lips didn't curve into a smile, but his eyes darkened with a predatory hunger. "Choice two is the Indemnity. You sign a contract of private collateral. You leave this house tonight in my car. You live under my roof, by my rules, and under my specific... instructions. You become a living payment toward a debt that is currently sitting at nine figures."
"You want a slave," she breathed, horror dawning on her.
"I want what is owed to me," Adam corrected. "I am a billionaire, Abigail. I don't buy things; I acquire them. Tonight, I am acquiring you."
He turned on his heel, heading back toward the open front door where the rainy night waited. He didn't look back to see if she was following. He didn't have to. He knew the math. He knew that for Abigail Sterling, there was no other door to walk through.
Abigail looked at the silent house one last time. She looked at the shadows of the life she used to have. Then, with a shuddering breath, she stepped out into the rain, following the man who had just bought her soul.
As the car door clicks shut, Abigail realizes there are no handles on the inside. She is trapped in the dark with Adam Thorne, and the first thing he hands her isn't a comfort-it's the first ten pages of a contract that dictates exactly how he intends to use her.