He didn't look up as she pulled out the heavy velvet chair opposite him.
"Sit," he commanded, his voice echoing in the hollow room.
Elena sat. Between them lay a feast that looked like a Renaissance painting. Roast duck, figs glazed in honey, artisanal bread, and a decanter of deep red liquid. It was a jarring contrast to the instant noodles she had eaten for dinner just two nights ago at the JustDirect warehouse.
"Rule Number Four," Alexander said, finally lifting his gaze. His silver-gray eyes locked onto hers. "You do not speak unless spoken to."
"I am not a dog, Alexander," Elena said, her voice shaking but defiant. "And I don't care about your rules. You said you burned my business to 'liberate' me. But look at this place. This isn't liberation. It's a mausoleum."
Alexander set his fork down. The metallic clang was deafening in the silence. He leaned forward, his elbows resting on the table. "You think you were free out there? Working eighteen hours a day to pay off debts for a supply chain that was rigged against you from the start? You were a slave to a system that was going to swallow you whole. Here, you are a queen. You just have to accept the crown."
"A crown made of glass and blood," Elena countered.
Alexander stared at her for a long moment, a muscle working in his jaw. Then, unexpectedly, a dark smirk tugged at the corner of his lips. "You have a spine, Elena. Most people in this city melt when I look at them. I forgot how much I missed that about you."
He poured the red liquid into two crystal glasses. He pushed one toward her. "Drink. It is an iron-fortified tonic. You will need it for tomorrow's draw."
Elena looked at the glass. It smelled of iron and blackberries. She didn't touch it. "Tell me about Malta. You said you were paying a debt. If you wanted to help me, you could have just sent a check. You didn't have to burn my warehouse down."
Alexander took a slow sip from his own glass. "If I sent you a check, you would have used it to expand your hub. You would have stayed in that city. You would have stayed within reach of the people who were trying to kill you."
Elena's heart skipped. "What are you talking about? Who was trying to kill me?"
"The fire wasn't just my doing, Elena," Alexander said softly, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "I merely accelerated it. Your 'investors' the men who lent you the capital to start JustDirect were using your trucks to move illicit cargo. When you started auditing the logs last week, you signed your own death warrant. They were going to burn the building down with you inside it. I just got there first."
Elena's blood ran cold. She remembered the strange discrepancies in the mileage logs. She remembered the way her foreman had looked at her when she asked about the midnight deliveries. She had thought it was just bad management. Not a cartel.
"You... you saved me?" she breathed.
"I acquired you," Alexander corrected coldly. "There is a difference."
He stood up and walked around the long table. He stopped behind her chair. Elena gripped the armrests, her knuckles turning white. She could feel the heat radiating from his body. When he leaned down, his chest brushed against her bare shoulders. The contrast of his warm skin against the cold silk of her dress sent a shiver straight down her spine.
He reached out, his long fingers brushing her hair to one side, exposing the pale skin of her neck. He traced the line of her collarbone, his touch agonizingly slow.
"You are safe here, Elena. From the cartel, from the world, from everyone... except me."
Elena's breath hitched. She hated how much her body was reacting to him. He was her captor, a ruthless billionaire who had destroyed her life, yet his touch was an anchor in a world that had just been pulled out from under her feet.
"Why do you care so much about my safety?" she whispered, breaking the silence rule again.
Alexander leaned in, his lips brushing against her earlobe. "Because you are the only good thing I have ever found in the dark. And I am a very selfish man."
He straightened up abruptly, the warmth leaving her as quickly as it had come. He walked toward the archway leading to the East Wing.
"Finish your dinner," he said over his shoulder. "Silas will escort you to your room. Tomorrow, the real work begins."
Elena watched him disappear into the shadows of the forbidden wing. She looked down at her glass of red tonic. She picked it up and drank it in one gulp. It was bitter, but it gave her a strange, hot energy.
She stood up to leave, but as she pushed her chair back, her eyes drifted to the obsidian floor.
Reflected in the black stone was Alexander's retreating figure. But in the reflection, he wasn't alone. Walking beside him was the violet-eyed woman from the mirror. She was holding his hand, and as she walked, she turned her head toward Elena and winked.
Elena gripped the edge of the table to keep from falling.