Alexander's jaw tightened. Harrison Grey wasn't the kind of man who called for small talk. When his father summoned, it meant business and usually the kind that came chained with obligations and expectations.
He swirled the bourbon, drained the glass, then dressed in a black suit, no tie, the look of a man who owned every room he walked into but didn't care to impress.
THE GREY'S ESTATE
By noon, he was standing inside his father's study at the Grey estate, a room that smelled of cigars, leather, and legacy. Dark shelves towered with law books and financial tomes, but it was Harrison's presence that weighed heavier than the oak desk.
"Sit," Harrison said without looking up from a document. His voice was calm, but calm with Harrison always meant a storm underneath.
Alexander didn't sit. He leaned against the desk, folding his arms. "You dragged me out here. Speak."
Harrison finally lifted his eyes, steel gray like his son's, but colder. "You carry the Grey name. That means more than power. It means legacy. Responsibility. Everything I've built, everything this family stands on, it falls to you."
Alexander smirked, though his chest tightened. "Legacy sounds a lot like a leash."
"You confuse freedom with recklessness," Harrison said sharply. "You want your inheritance, don't you? The empire, the billions, the authority to run Grey Group? Then you start acting like a man worthy of it."
"I've been closing deals you wouldn't touch. Expanding in markets you never considered," Alexander fired back. "If that's not worthy, what is?"
"Discipline, stability and sacrifice." Harrison rose from his chair, moving closer, his presence filling the room like smoke. "You think this life is about indulgence and women warming your bed? No. It's about control. About alliances. About securing the Grey legacy beyond your lifetime."
Alexander's hands flexed at his sides. He hated how his father's words clawed at him, hated how much truth they carried. He wanted the inheritance. He wanted Grey Group. But not at the cost of being a pawn in Harrison's endless games.
"Tonight," Harrison said, lowering his voice, "you will attend dinner here at the estate. I expect your best behavior. No defiance. No theatrics."
"What's the occasion?"
"You'll see," Harrison replied, already dismissing him. "Don't be late."
Alexander's jaw locked. He didn't like surprises. But his father's tone left no room for questions. He left the study with a heaviness in his chest, a storm brewing he couldn't yet name.
He left Grey estate for without another word, slamming the door behind him and sliding into his car. The city blurred by as he drove back to his penthouse, rage boiling low in his chest.
**********
By the time he stepped through his own front door, he forced his face into calm. Luna didn't deserve to see his fury, it wasn't hers to carry.
She was curled up on the couch, hair falling in dark waves around her shoulders, wearing one of his shirts. The sight of her so effortlessly a part of his space should have softened him, but it only made his resolve harder.
"Alex?" Her voice was tentative. "You're late."
He crossed to her, pressing a kiss to her forehead before sinking beside her. She searched his face the way she always did, trying to read what the world had written across him that day.
"You went to see him," she said finally.
Alexander's jaw ticked. He nodded once.
Her eyes darkened with the same fear that had haunted them ever since Harrison had made his disdain clear. "And?"
"And nothing you need to worry about." His hand cupped her cheek, forcing her gaze to stay locked on his. "Listen to me, Luna. My father doesn't get to decide my life. He doesn't get to decide us."
She shook her head slightly. "You know he'll never accept me. You've heard the way he talks about me. About where I come from. I'll never be enough in his eyes."
Anger burned through him again, but he kept it leashed. "To hell with his eyes. You're enough in mine. That's all that matters."
She tried to pull away, but he held her still, thumb stroking the line of her jaw. "Don't do that," he said, voice rough. "Don't let him win by making you doubt yourself. I don't care how much money, power, or influence he throws around, none of it touches what I feel for you. Understand me?"
Her breath hitched, and finally her hands slid to his chest, clutching him like he was the only steady thing in her world. He held her tighter, his promise lingering in the silence between them.
For a while, neither spoke. The city lights spilled through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting them in a glow that felt both fragile and unbreakable at once.
When she finally pulled back, her eyes glistened. "Don't lose yourself for me, Alex."
His laugh was low, bitter. "Maybe losing myself to you is the only thing keeping me sane."
She kissed him softly then, nothing heated, just a seal of trust and desperation. And though he let her rest her head against his shoulder, Alexander's mind was already a storm. He couldn't tell her what his father had implied that inheritance, that legacy because it would break her heart. Not yet. Not until he figured out how to bend fate itself.
THE GREY'S ESTATE
Evening draped itself over the Grey estate in velvet darkness, broken only by the glittering chandeliers that lit the grand dining hall. Long polished mahogany table. Crystal glasses. Silver cutlery arranged with military precision. Staff moved silently, placing final touches on the flawless setting.
Alexander arrived fashionably late, as always, stride confident, black suit tailored to perfection. He took his seat at his father's right, nodding at his mother who offered him a thin, polite smile. He could feel it in the air that something was coming. Something different.
Moments later, the heavy double doors opened.
"Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, welcome. And Miss Thompson."
Alexander's head turned and froze.
Walking in was Reginald Thompson, tall and commanding, his salt-and-pepper hair styled with authority. His wife, Catherine, glided beside him in an emerald gown, her eyes sharp as cut glass. But it was their daughter who drew the room into silence.
Avery Thompson.
She moved with poise that didn't belong to her years, chin high, every step echoing grace and quiet defiance. Midnight-dark hair fell in loose waves, framing a face too striking to ignore high cheekbones, full lips painted a deep red, eyes that carried both fire and calculation. Her dress was elegant, ivory silk that whispered money, but her aura screamed independence.
Alexander's gaze locked with hers across the hall. For a second, it felt like the ground shifted. Not softness. Not romance. No it was recognition, like two predators seeing each other for the first time in the wild.
Harrison rose to greet them with a warmth Alexander hadn't seen in years. He ushered them to the table, seating Reginald opposite him, Catherine beside, and Avery directly across from Alexander.
Dinner began civil. Small talk about markets, about philanthropic galas, about pharmaceutical innovations from Thompson Industries. Reginald spoke with the pride of a man who owned half the world. Catherine's laughter was practiced, cultured, too perfect. Avery, however, barely touched her wine. Her eyes drifted back to Alexander with unnerving consistency, as though studying him, dissecting him.
Finally, Harrison cleared his throat, voice carrying authority that stilled the table.
"There is no need to waste words," he began. "Tonight is about legacy. About the future of our families." He lifted his glass. "Alexander will marry Avery Thompson. Together, Grey Group and Thompson Pharmaceuticals will create an empire unmatched in this country."
The words landed like gunfire.
Alexander stiffened. His glass stopped halfway to his lips. He turned slowly to face his father, disbelief flashing into fury.
"You arranged this without telling me?" His voice was ice.
"It is not an arrangement," Harrison replied smoothly. "It is destiny. The Greys and the Thompsons together are untouchable. It secures your inheritance, your future. Everything you claim to want."
"I don't recall agreeing to sell my soul for a business merger," Alexander snapped.
"Careful," Harrison warned, steel slicing through his tone. "This is not a negotiation. It is decided."
Across the table, Avery finally spoke, her voice clear and steady. "With respect, Mr. Grey, I'm not a bargaining chip either. If this marriage is to happen, it won't be because your son was forced into it."
Her words caught Alexander off guard. He met her gaze again sharp, unyielding, fearless. Damn. She wasn't what he expected.
But fury burned hotter than intrigue.
He shoved his chair back, the screech of wood on marble shattering the room's fragile calm. "You want to dictate my future? My bed? My life?" His eyes cut to Harrison, then to the Thompsons. "I won't marry Avery. Not tonight, not ever."
The table froze. Catherine's painted smile faltered. Reginald's brows shot up, outrage simmering. Harrison's jaw hardened, his hand tightening around his glass. Avery, though she didn't flinch. She sat there, composed, her lips curving into the faintest smirk, as if she'd expected his rebellion all along.
The silence was suffocating. Alexander's pulse thundered in his ears, but he refused to back down. He wanted them all to see it, to feel it that he was not a man to be controlled.
Finally, Harrison spoke, voice low but lethal. "Sit down, Alexander. This conversation is not over."
Alexander held his father's stare for one dangerous beat longer, then turned and strode out of the hall, shoulders rigid, rage carving through his chest. Behind him, the murmurs of insult, disapproval, and shock filled the air, but he didn't care.
Outside, the night wrapped around him, cool and merciless. He lit a cigarette, drawing in smoke to calm the storm, but his thoughts were chaos.
Avery Thompson. The heiress. The bargaining chip. The woman his father demanded he marry.
And the woman whose eyes had met his like she could see straight through him.
This was war.