"Miss Elena," the maid called softly. "Sir has asked for you."
My stomach tightened instantly.
Of course he had.
Of course he wouldn't wait forever.
"I'll be down in a minute," I called back.
My voice sounded steadier than I felt.
I stood slowly, smoothing my hands over my pants, forcing myself to breathe evenly.
You are not weak.
You are not helpless.
You are just... trapped.
And trapped people survived by learning the rules.
The thought made my chest ache.
I grabbed the folder and walked out into the hallway.
The guards fell into step behind me automatically.
I hated how normal that was starting to feel.
Downstairs, the mansion felt quieter than before. Evening had settled fully now, soft lighting replacing sunlight, turning everything warm and deceptive.
Beautiful cage.
I followed the familiar path toward his office.
The door was already open.
He stood inside, pouring whiskey into a glass, his back to me.
"You took your time," he said without turning.
"I was thinking."
He gave a small, humorless huff. "Dangerous activity."
I stepped inside fully.
"Is it?" I asked. "Or do you just prefer people who don't question you?"
He turned then.
And God help me - he looked even more dangerous at night.
Dark shirt again. Sleeves rolled. Top buttons open slightly, revealing the strong line of his throat.
His eyes slid over me slowly.
Assessing.
Possessive.
"You can question me," he said quietly. "You just may not like the answers."
I held up the folder. "Then answer this. What happens after I sign?"
He set the glass down and walked toward me.
Not rushed.
Never rushed.
"You live here," he said. "You move under my protection. You attend events when required. You follow security protocol."
"And if I don't?"
His gaze darkened slightly.
"Then I enforce it."
My pulse skipped.
"That's not marriage," I said quietly.
"That is survival in my world."
Silence stretched between us.
Then he reached past me and pressed a button on the wall.
A screen lit up.
Security footage.
My breath caught.
The mansion grounds.
The gates.
The perimeter.
"Rule one," he said calmly. "You do not leave the property without telling me."
My chest tightened.
"I'm not a prisoner."
"You are a target."
The words hit hard.
"Rule two," he continued, "you do not speak to anyone about me, my business, or what you saw."
"I wouldn't anyway."
"I know," he said. "But now it's law."
I swallowed.
"Rule three..."
He stepped closer.
So close I could feel his warmth.
"You do not put yourself in danger out of pride."
Anger sparked. "You don't get to lecture me about pride."
"No," he said quietly. "I get to keep you alive."
The words landed heavy.
Too heavy.
I looked away first.
"Are there more rules?" I asked softly.
"Yes."
His hand lifted.
And slowly, deliberately, he tilted my chin back toward him.
"You don't lie to me."
My breath caught.
"I don't like liars."
"I'm not one."
"Good."
His thumb brushed lightly along my jaw.
Heat shot through me - unwanted. Confusing.
Terrifying.
He dropped his hand suddenly, stepping back like he felt it too.
"Dinner is at eight," he said, voice back to controlled calm. "You will sit beside me."
"I don't want to play house."
"You are not playing," he said. "You are establishing position."
My stomach twisted.
"This is insane."
"This is my world."
I laughed softly, bitterly. "And now it's mine too?"
His eyes locked onto mine.
"Yes."
The certainty in his voice made something in my chest crack.
A knock sounded at the office door.
One of the guards stepped in. "Sir. The council call is ready."
His jaw tightened slightly.
"I'll be there."
The guard nodded and left.
He looked back at me.
"You should sign it."
"Why?" I whispered.
"Because," he said quietly, "there are already people asking about you."
Ice flooded my veins.
"What people?"
"Enemies," he said simply.
My hands trembled.
"They know about me?"
"They know someone was there last night."
My stomach dropped.
"And if I don't sign?"
His eyes softened just a fraction.
"I protect you anyway," he said. "But without my name, you are... vulnerable."
The word felt like a death sentence.
I stared at the contract.
Then back at him.
"Why do you care?" I whispered.
The question hung between us.
Heavy.
Dangerous.
Honest.
His jaw flexed.
Then he said quietly-
"Because you are under my protection."
"That's not what I asked."
Silence.
Long.
Thick.
Then he stepped closer again, voice dropping.
"You want the truth?"
My heart slammed.
"Yes."
His eyes burned into mine.
"Because the idea of you being hurt..." he said slowly, "makes me want to burn cities."
My breath left my lungs.
The rawness in his voice shocked me more than anything else.
He stepped back immediately, like he'd said too much.
"Sign it tonight," he said, voice hard again. "Or don't. But either way..."
His gaze held mine.
"You are already part of this world."
He turned and walked out.
Leaving me standing there.
Shaking.
Confused.
Terrified.
And something else I refused to name.
I looked down at the contract in my hands.
And for the first time...
I didn't just see a cage.
I saw armor.
And that scared me more than anything.