Isabelle Wells leaned against the cool, damask-covered wall of the hotel corridor, the world tilting slightly. In her hand, she clutched a plastic keycard and her phone, the screen glowing with a message from her best friend, Justice Wall.
"The gift is in the presidential suite, top floor. Enjoy."
A gift. Isabelle let out a sound that was half a laugh, half a sob. The burn of tequila was still sharp in her throat. A gift to celebrate the end of her ten-year marriage. A gift to wash away the image of her husband, Bradford Spencer, with her other best friend, Cinda Preston.
She pushed herself off the wall, her movements clumsy. Justice's joke, fueled by three too many shots of Patrón, suddenly seemed like the only logical course of action. She found the presidential suite, the grand, dark wood door looking impossibly imposing. With a shaky hand, she swiped the card. The lock clicked open with an electronic chirp that sounded deafening in the silent hallway.
The room was dark, lit only by the sprawling galaxy of New York City lights through a floor-to-ceiling window. A tall silhouette of a man stood with his back to her, looking out at the view. He wore a silk robe that draped elegantly over his broad shoulders.
Isabelle stumbled forward, the plush carpet swallowing the sound of her heels. She mistook his stillness for professionalism. This was the "gift." A man paid to help her forget. A surge of bitter, reckless power went to her head.
"You know," she began, her voice thick and slurring slightly, "I gave him ten years. The best ten years of my life."
The man didn't move. He was a perfect statue, a paid confessor.
"And what did I get? A public statement from his mother calling me an 'unfortunate distraction.' And him... him with her." The words caught in her throat, sharp as glass. She recounted Bradford's betrayal, the lies, the stolen moments she now saw with horrifying clarity. The pain was a physical thing, a knot of nausea in her stomach.
She swiped angrily at a tear tracking through her makeup. "I'm done," she announced to the silent room, her voice rising. "From this day on, Isabelle Wells is done being sad for anyone!"
The man remained silent, his back a formidable wall. Beside him, another, smaller figure moved in the shadows. The assistant, Gavin Young, took a half-step forward, intending to intervene. A sharp, almost imperceptible glance from the man in the robe froze him in place. The look was a command, cold and absolute. It also held a confirmation: Yes. This is the one I've been waiting for.
Isabelle didn't notice the exchange. She wobbled toward the tall figure, patting his shoulder with a familiarity born of alcohol and despair. "Hey, the listening service is a nice touch. Good service."
She circled around to face him, the moonlight catching the hard, perfect lines of his jaw, the straight bridge of his nose, the thin, unsmiling lips. She let out a low whistle. "Justice has excellent taste."
His eyes, deep-set and dark as the night sky outside, finally met hers. He still said nothing, but there was an intensity in his gaze that should have sobered her up. It didn't. He simply allowed her to look, tilting his head slightly as if offering a better angle.
Behind them, Gavin Young gave a silent, deferential bow and retreated from the room, pulling the heavy door closed behind him. The soft click of the lock echoed in the vast suite.
The sound sealed them in. The air, suddenly thick with unspoken things, became charged, dangerous.
Isabelle, oblivious, stood on her tiptoes. Her fingers, clumsy and cold, found the tie of his silk robe. She looked up at him through a haze of tears and tequila.
"So," she whispered, her voice husky. "Do we start? Are you by the hour, or... is there a flat rate for the whole night?"
The column of his throat moved as he swallowed. His voice, when it finally came, was a low, gravelly rumble that seemed to vibrate through the floor. It was the first thing he'd said.
"Are you sure?"
The sound was vaguely familiar, a deep chord that plucked at a distant memory, but her mind was too clouded to place it. She just blinked at his question.
"What? Getting cold feet?" A bitter laugh escaped her. "Or are you disgusted? I get it. A freshly divorced woman." The words tasted like ash in her mouth. "A fool who got cheated on by her husband and her best friend."
Suddenly, her bravado crumbled, replaced by a raw, desperate anger. "But it wasn't my fault!" she cried out, her voice cracking. "I didn't do anything wrong!"
Her tough exterior, so carefully constructed over the past few weeks, shattered completely. All the hurt, all the humiliation, poured out. She was just a woman whose world had been ripped apart.
She reached out, her hand landing flat against the hard muscle of his chest, right over his heart. His skin was hot, a stark contrast to her icy fingertips. The jolt of it surprised them both.
He didn't flinch or pull away. He simply stood there, absorbing her touch, his dark eyes never leaving her face. She thought she was the one in control, the one buying a service. She had no idea she had just walked into the predator's den and offered herself up on a silver platter.
"I just... I just want to forget everything," she mumbled, more to herself than to him.
He heard the word. Forget. It was exactly what he needed. A chance for her to sever the past.
"Water," she muttered, her throat dry.
He turned without a word, his movements fluid and economical. He poured a glass of water from a crystal pitcher on the bar and handed it to her. As she took it, her fingers brushed against his. The heat was still there, intense and unsettling.
She drank the water in one long gulp, some of it spilling down her chin, tracing a path down her neck and disappearing into the collar of her dress.
His eyes followed the single drop of water, and his gaze darkened to something possessive, something hungry.
---
Isabelle woke to the feeling of a heavy arm draped over her waist, pinning her to the mattress. Sunlight, sharp and unwelcome, sliced through a gap in the heavy curtains. She tried to shift, and a dull ache spread through her entire body, a testament to a night she could only recall in blistering, fragmented images.
Her cheeks burned.
Being lifted, her legs wrapped around his waist as he carried her from the living room. The dizzying sensation of falling into the softest bed she'd ever known. His forehead pressed against hers for a single, charged moment, his breath hot and ragged, as if he were making a final, irrevocable decision. Her own hand, acting on some self-destructive impulse, tangling in his hair and pulling his mouth down to hers, erasing his hesitation.
After that, it was a blur of skin and heat and a raw, desperate passion that had eclipsed anything she had ever known. It wasn't the detached service she had expected. It was a claiming. A conquest. At the peak of it all, she remembered a voice, rough and guttural in her ear, whispering, "Isabelle... you're mine now."
She'd dismissed it as the meaningless words of a man in the throes of passion.
Now, with the morning sun beating down, she sat bolt upright. The movement sent a spike of pain through her temples. The hangover was brutal, but the reality of her actions was worse. Avoidance hadn't worked. She hadn't forgotten her pain; she had just piled a mountain of shame on top of it.
She looked down at her body. The faint, purplish marks scattered across her skin were like a map of her recklessness. A cold gasp escaped her lips.
The other side of the bed was empty. The man was gone.
A wave of profound relief washed over her. She wouldn't have to face him. She wouldn't have to endure the morning-after awkwardness with a man whose name she didn't even know. A ridiculous thought surfaced through the haze of her regret: the "escort" had been... exceptional. Professional, tireless, and devastatingly handsome. She violently shook her head, trying to dislodge the dangerous thought.
She had to get out. Now.
Tiptoeing out of bed, she gathered her crumpled dress from the floor. She had to be gone before he returned, to pretend this night had never happened. On the nightstand, next to a sleek, modern lamp, she spotted her purse. Driven by a frantic need to re-establish the transactional nature of the night, she pulled out her wallet, took out three one-hundred-dollar bills, and placed them neatly on the polished wood. Payment rendered. Case closed.
Her heart hammered against her ribs as she crept to the suite's main door. Her hand was just inches from the handle when a voice, cold and laced with a familiar resonance, cut through the silence from behind her.
"Going somewhere, Mrs. Wells?"
Isabelle froze, every muscle in her body locking up. Slowly, she turned.
Leaning against the living room wall, as if he'd been waiting there all along, was the man from last night. But he wasn't in a silk robe anymore. He was dressed in a perfectly tailored Armani suit, holding a cup of coffee, and watching her with an expression of cold amusement. His eyes flickered to the money she'd left on the nightstand, and the corner of his mouth curved into a faint, mocking smile.
The floor dropped out from under her. The worst-case scenario had just come to life.
She forced her voice to remain steady. "I... I should go. Last night... thank you for your 'service.' I left the money on the table." She tried to sound casual, dismissive, to put them back in the neat boxes of client and provider.
He pushed himself off the wall and began to walk toward her, each step deliberate and silent on the thick carpet. The sheer force of his presence was overwhelming, a physical pressure that made her instinctively back away until her shoulders hit the hard wood of the door.
He placed a hand on the door next to her head, trapping her. "Service?" He let out a low chuckle, a sound devoid of any real humor. "I'm afraid our relationship is not that simple."
His gaze was sharp, predatory, stripping away her flimsy defenses. Something was terribly wrong. The way he carried himself, the expensive suit, the palpable aura of power-this was not a man who worked for an escort service.
For the first time, in the clear light of day, she truly looked at his face. The face she'd seen on the cover of Forbes, in the society pages of The New York Times, at galas she'd attended with Bradford. A horrifying, impossible realization began to dawn in her mind, sending a deep, arctic chill through her veins.
"You... You are..." Her voice trembled, the words dying on her lips.
He leaned in closer, his lips brushing against her ear. He spoke in a low whisper, a secret just for the two of them.
"Grayson Lloyd. And Bradford... he has to call me uncle."
The words hit her like a physical blow. Isabelle's eyes widened in horror, the blood draining from her face. She had slept with her ex-husband's uncle. The Grayson Lloyd. The ruthless, enigmatic head of the Lloyd Holdings empire, a man whispered about in terrified, reverent tones in the circles she had just been cast out of.
Shame, terror, and utter disbelief crashed over her in a suffocating wave. This wasn't a sordid, one-night mistake she could pay for and forget. This was a trap. A catastrophic, life-destroying trap, and she had walked right into it.
Her hand fumbled behind her, desperately searching for the doorknob. She had to escape. She had to get away from this devil.
---
"Lloyd... Grayson Lloyd..." Isabelle whispered the name, the syllables feeling foreign and sharp on her tongue. Her mind was a maelstrom of white noise.
A fuzzy memory surfaced: their wedding. Bradford's wedding. She had seen him from across a crowded ballroom, a formidable figure surrounded by other powerful men. He had an gravitational pull, a center of gravity so intense she hadn't dared to approach.
And now... she had spent the night with him. The one person in Bradford's family more dangerous, more untouchable than any other. This man could ruin her. With a single phone call, he could ensure she never worked in this city, or any other, ever again.
The horrifying thought that this wasn't an accident, that it was a calculation, began to take root. Fear, cold and suffocating, wrapped around her heart.
She immediately shifted her posture, her defiance melting into desperate humility. "Mr. Lloyd, I am so sorry," she said, her voice shaking. "Last night was a complete and utter mistake. I was drunk, I wasn't thinking, I..." She was trying to frame it as an accident, to paint herself as a blameless fool. "I'll do anything to compensate you, if you can just pretend this never happened."
Grayson didn't respond. Instead, he turned slightly, allowing the lapel of his suit jacket to fall open. He shrugged the jacket off one shoulder, letting the silk of his shirt pull taut against his back. There, stark against his tanned skin, were three long, red scratches-her scratches. From the night before. From a moment when she had lost all control.
"A mistake?" he asked, his voice dangerously soft. The question hung in the air, heavy with implication. "From where I'm standing, it looks like I was the one who was assaulted."
He had just reframed the entire night. He wasn't a participant; he was a victim. And she was the aggressor.
The sight of the marks left her speechless. "But you... you didn't say no!" she argued, her voice weak. She had to make him see he was just as involved as she was. "We're both responsible. Let's just call it even."
"My not refusing does not absolve you of your actions," Grayson said, calmly shrugging his jacket back into place. He buttoned it with a slow, deliberate motion. "And the Lloyds, Ms. Wells, we do not suffer losses. Ever."
He looked directly into her terrified eyes, his own gaze as hard and unyielding as granite. "So, to compensate me for my... damages," he said, each word a carefully placed stone, "you will marry me."
"What?" The word was a strangled gasp. She thought she must have misheard. She stared at him, searching his face for any sign of a joke, but found only chilling seriousness.
"You're insane! I can't marry you!" she cried, her voice escalating into a near-scream. The sheer absurdity of it pushed her fear aside, replacing it with white-hot anger. "This is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard! Marriage for a few scratches?"
"And Bradford-I was his wife!" she added, her voice trembling with indignation. "I'm your nephew's wife. You can't just ignore the family connection!"
This wasn't just absurd; it was a profound insult, a violation of her newfound, fragile freedom.
"Ex-wife," Grayson corrected her coldly, dismissing the familial bond as irrelevant. "Which means your connection to him is terminated. As for your feelings on the matter, they are not my concern."
He took a step closer, his shadow falling over her. "I am concerned with solving problems. And you, Isabelle, have created a problem for me."
His tone was final. This wasn't a negotiation. It was a verdict.
Isabelle's fear and anger curdled into a bitter, defiant laugh. "A problem? You seemed to be enjoying the 'problem' just fine last night." She threw his own participation back in his face, trying to shatter his veneer of detached victimhood. "Don't stand there and act like you didn't want it just as much as I did!"
Grayson's eyes darkened for a fraction of a second. "My pleasure was my own. Your responsibility is the price you must pay." He twisted her words, repositioning her actions as the cause and his response as a deserved effect. He had seized complete control of the narrative.
A wave of helplessness washed over her. Arguing with this man was like arguing with a tidal wave. He bent reality to his will. She was utterly, completely at his mercy, and every word she spoke only seemed to tighten the net around her.
He moved in again, his large frame completely boxing her in against the door. The clean, sharp scent of his cologne-bergamot and something woodsy-filled her senses, an invasive, masculine scent that was both intoxicating and terrifying.
Under the immense pressure of his proximity and his impossible demand, her defenses began to crumble.
"I won't marry you," she bit out, her jaw tight with the last vestiges of her defiance. "I absolutely will not."
---