Iris stood alone on the second-floor balcony of the Metropolitan Museum, the November wind piercing through her thin haute couture gown.
Below, the champagne tower blazed with garish light, yet her eyes had already locked onto a shadowed alcove behind a massive marble statue just off the dance floor. Two figures were tangled together. The man's back was turned, but the custom-tailored tuxedo and the glint of a sapphire cufflink were unmistakable.
Angus. Her fiancé.
The woman in his arms laughed, a breathy, theatrical sound that drifted up on a gust of cold air. "You're such a delicious man, Angus. Tell me, do you whisper those same promises to every girl?"
"Never," Angus murmured, dragging her flush against him. His voice dripped with practiced sincerity. "You're the only woman I want."
Iris's stomach twisted-not with heartbreak, but with a wave of cold, clinical disgust. She knew that line. He'd used something embarrassingly similar on her months ago, the first time their families had paraded her before him like a showpiece.
Angus Sullivan liked her face; he'd said so offhandedly, and that single remark had sealed her parents' frantic campaign to claw into high society. They had marketed their daughter relentlessly, and this engagement was nothing but a gilded contract. He didn't love her, and she didn't love him. But that didn't stop the humiliation from churning bile in her throat.
Her phone buzzed in her clutch, rattling against the silence. A text from her mother, Eleanor:
"Finalize the merger terms with Angus tonight. The wedding date will be announced in three days. Do not mess this up, Iris."
The words pressed down on her chest like a physical weight. The arranged marriage was a noose, tightening.
She swiped to call him. Down below, she watched Angus pull his phone from his jacket, glance at the screen, and hold a silencing finger up to the actress before answering. Heavy bass and the clink of glasses spilled through the speaker.
"What is it, Iris? I'm in the middle of something important," Angus's voice was thick with impatience.
A breathy giggle-the actress's-breathed right next to the microphone. Iris's jaw locked.
"My mother is announcing our wedding date in three days," she said, her voice perfectly level. "We need to discuss the details."
A pause. Then Angus let out a low, dismissive chuckle.
"That? Sure. I'll show up, sign whatever you need, play the doting groom for the cameras. Just don't expect me to give up my life, sweetheart." He sounded amused, as if she'd asked him to pencil in a golf date. The actress whispered something in his ear, and he laughed, dark and indulgent.
Iris's fingers clamped around the phone until her knuckles turned white. "Meet me by the champagne tower in ten minutes," she ordered, and ended the call.
She stood frozen. Down below, the actress pulled off her mask, revealing the face of the new Broadway starlet everyone was buzzing about. Angus's hands roamed her waist, possessive and utterly indifferent to the fiancée watching from above. The disrespect made Iris's nails bite into her palm until the skin broke. She closed her eyes, forcing herself to swallow the violent urge to burn the entire farce to the ground.
Then, a scent hit her. Crisp winter cedar and cold tobacco, creeping from behind, silent and predatory, carrying a suffocating physical pressure.
Iris snapped her eyes open and spun around. She crashed straight into a chest as hard as rock. She looked up into a pair of eyes as deep and freezing as a bottomless lake. The man wore a half-face black and gold mask, his features obscured by the balcony's shadows. He was incredibly tall, towering over her, and he leaned forward, letting his gaze drop over her shoulder to the couple below.
A low, mocking scoff vibrated in his chest.
"Is this how the perfect little heiress handles a cheating dog?" His voice was a deep, gravelly baritone, brushing against her ear, laced with dangerous temptation.
Iris stumbled back half a step, her spine hitting a freezing stone pillar.
"Mind your own business," she fired back, cloaking herself in that haughty Ivy League arrogance. Her heart hammered against her ribs.
The man didn't anger. A slow, dark smile curved his lips, and he took a deliberate step forward, his massive frame eclipsing the dim light. He cut off every escape route. He raised a hand, long, calloused fingers brushing the edge of her mask near her cheekbone. The brief, burning contact sent an uncontrollable shiver down her spine.
"Are you just going to swallow this?" he murmured, his voice dropping lower. "Play the perfect porcelain doll for a fake marriage?"
The words struck the rawest wound in her chest. Iris's eyes narrowed, the polite mask shattering. She glared at him like a cornered cat ready to draw blood.
The man pulled his hand back. He reached into his inner jacket pocket, produced a dark silk handkerchief, and slowly wiped his fingers with the patience of a hunter waiting for the trap to snap shut.
"I can offer you a much more... destructive way to get back at him," he suggested softly.
Iris's gaze flicked between the mysterious giant and Angus below. The rebellious urge she had suppressed for years clawed at her throat.
Suddenly, on the first floor, Angus pushed the actress away. He adjusted his collar and tilted his head, his gaze beginning to sweep the second-floor balconies. Iris's pulse quickened, but it was not panic. It was revulsion-pure, cold revulsion at the thought of his eyes finding her, of enduring his smug, condescending smirk while he paraded his infidelity. She would not give him that satisfaction. She needed a shield, someone to conceal her until his attention drifted elsewhere.
Her eyes snapped back to the masked stranger. He was still watching her, that dark, knowing amusement lingering at the corners of his mouth.
"Are you single?" Iris asked, her voice dropping to a low, steady murmur that held no trace of the haughty heiress.
The man's brow lifted fractionally behind his mask. "What?"
"Single," she repeated, stepping closer until the heat of his body seeped through the thin silk of her gown. "No date waiting for you downstairs?"
A slow, predatory smile curved his lips. "No."
Iris tilted her chin up, her fingers brushing deliberately against the lapel of his jacket. In the dim light, her lips curved into the faintest whisper of a smile, poised on the edge of a dare.
"Then you haven't kissed anyone tonight?"
Iris's back met the freezing stone pillar, but she didn't flinch. The impact was deliberate-she had stepped backward herself, pulling the stranger with her by the lapels she still gripped from moments before. The question she had just asked him still hung in the air between them, electric and unresolved.
The man's tall, radiating body pressed flush against hers, completely shielding her from the light of the first floor. She measured her breathing, steady and calculated, her chest rising and falling against his solid chest as she tilted her head, listening.
Down below, the heavy thud of Angus's leather shoes hitting the wooden staircase echoed in the quiet night. He was coming up.
A cold, coiled anticipation thrummed through Iris's veins. Her palms remained dry against the stranger's jacket. She had baited the hook; now she needed to land the catch.
The man looked down at the woman in his arms-except she didn't look trapped. She looked like a general surveying a battlefield. A low, rumbling vibration echoed in his chest, his amusement kindled by the sheer audacity of her.
He tilted his head down. His warm breath brushed against the sensitive shell of her ear. "You didn't finish your question, little doll," he whispered, his tone dripping with provocation. "Were you going to ask if I'd kissed anyone tonight, or were you going to demand I do it?"
The sound of the glass door creaking open cut through the air. Angus stepped onto the balcony, just a few feet away from their hidden corner.
"Yeah, she's boring as hell," Angus complained loudly into his phone. "Always acting like a damn nun. Shame, really-she's got a face that could launch a thousand ships, but absolutely zero fire underneath. I just need to get this merger signed so I can stop pretending I care."
Hearing her fiancé reduce her to a pretty transaction piece, a switch flipped inside Iris's brain. Years of trust-fund gaslighting, years of being paraded as a bargaining chip-it all crystallized into a single, diamond-hard thought: she was done being used.
She raised her head slowly, deliberately, her eyes locking onto the stranger's with a controlled fire. Her fingers, already tangled in his lapels from their earlier exchange, tightened and pulled him down toward her with an authority that made his dark eyes flash with something beyond surprise.
"You asked if I wanted a destructive way to get back at him," she breathed, her voice barely a whisper against his lips. "This is me saying yes."
Eyes wide open, fueled by cold, calculated revenge, she pressed her vintage red lips hard against his thin mouth.
At that exact second, Angus's footsteps stopped. He was looking around the dim balcony.
For a fraction of a second, the man remained still. Then, his large hand moved up to grip the back of her head. His fingers tangled in her hair, and he completely took over the kiss.
It wasn't a fake kiss anymore. It was a brutal invasion.
The heavy, intoxicating scent of cedar and tobacco flooded Iris's senses, stealing all the oxygen from her lungs. She gasped, trying to pull back, but his arm around her waist tightened like an iron band, crushing her against him.
Angus's eyes finally landed on the dark corner. He saw a couple aggressively making out against the pillar. His face twisted in disgust.
Because the corner was pitch black, and Iris's large Venetian mask-combined with the stranger's massive frame completely swallowing her smaller figure-left nothing recognizable. Angus didn't spare a second glance at the woman's identity.
"Get a room," Angus snapped, his voice full of entitled arrogance. "Move. I need to make a private call."
Fury locked every muscle in Iris's body. The man who had just dismissed her as a cold transaction piece was standing three feet away, ordering her around without even knowing it. She pressed closer to the stranger, carving out a space where Angus held no power.
The man felt the shift in her body. His large hand slid down to the back of her neck, squeezing the tense muscles there. It was a silent promise: Let me handle this.
Slowly, the man turned his head.
Through the eyeholes of his black and gold mask, his gaze locked onto Angus. It was the look of a predator staring at a dead carcass. Cold. Empty. Lethal.
Even from a distance, the sheer, terrifying pressure radiating from the man hit Angus like a physical blow. Angus's arrogant sneer vanished. He involuntarily took a step back, his instincts screaming at him to run.
"She's mine," the man stated. His voice was a low, chilling rumble that promised violence. "Get out."
Angus swallowed hard. The voice sounded vaguely familiar, but the crushing aura of the man made his knees weak. He didn't dare say another word. He turned on his heel and practically sprinted back through the glass door.
The heavy door clicked shut.
The silence that followed was deafening. Iris became acutely aware of everything at once-the thundering of her own heart, the lingering burn of the man's mouth on hers, the faint tremor running through her fingers still gripping his lapels. She released him abruptly, as if the fabric had scalded her.
The man straightened, but he didn't step back. He loomed over her, that slow, wicked smirk settling onto his lips.
"Your kissing skills," he said, his gravelly voice rich with amusement, "are absolutely terrible."
Heat shot up Iris's neck and flooded her cheeks. She thanked every god she could name for the Venetian mask covering half her face. "I wasn't trying to impress you," she shot back, her voice sharper than she intended. "I was making a point."
"Oh, you made one." He tilted his head, studying her like a puzzle he was enjoying taking apart. "But I find myself curious. Earlier, you asked me two questions. Whether I was single. Whether I'd kissed anyone tonight." His eyes glinted in the dim light. "It seems only fair I return the favor."
Iris's stomach flipped. "That's hardly necessary-"
"Are you single?" he interrupted smoothly, his gaze dropping deliberately to the engagement ring on her left hand.
She curled her fingers into her palm, hiding the diamond. "I'm engaged. You just witnessed the entire humiliating spectacle. Don't pretend you've forgotten."
"I haven't forgotten anything." He took a half-step closer, and Iris had to fight the urge to retreat. "But that wasn't my second question." His voice dropped, low and intimate, brushing against her ear like a physical touch. "Have you ever been kissed before tonight?"
Iris's throat closed. Her mind raced, scrambling for a deflection, a sharp retort, anything. "That's absolutely none of your business."
The man's smirk deepened into something dangerously knowing. He reached out and caught a strand of her hair between his fingers, examining it with lazy curiosity. "You know, for someone who initiated that kiss with such bravado, you froze the moment I kissed you back. Your lips had no idea what to do. Your hands were shaking." His eyes lifted to meet hers. "That was your first kiss, wasn't it?"
The flush that consumed her face was nothing short of catastrophic. Iris clenched her jaw so hard her teeth ached. "You're delusional," she managed, but her voice came out thready and weak, completely betraying her.
"Am I?" He released her hair and let his fingers trail lightly down her arm, leaving goosebumps in their wake. "You play the part of the worldly heiress quite convincingly. But the evidence is rather... damning."
"I have nothing to prove to a stranger wearing a mask," Iris hissed, grasping desperately for the last shreds of her composure.
"No," he agreed, his tone infuriatingly pleasant. "You don't. But you might want to fix your lipstick before you attempt to convince anyone else of your indifference."
He produced a dark silk handkerchief from his inner pocket-the same one he had used to wipe his fingers earlier. He offered it to her with the casual elegance of a man who was enjoying himself immensely.
Iris snatched it from his hand and turned her back to him, her movements stiff with mortification. She pressed the cool silk to her lips, and her reflection in the dark glass of the balcony door stared back at her-eyes too bright, cheeks too flushed, lipstick smeared across the corner of her mouth. She looked thoroughly, undeniably kissed.
Behind her, the man's voice came again, low and knowing. "There's no need to be embarrassed. Everyone's first kiss is terrible. Though I must say, most people don't choose a masked stranger at a gala for the occasion. Points for ambition."
"I said it wasn't my first kiss," Iris snapped, crumpling the handkerchief in her fist.
"Of course it wasn't." The laughter in his voice was unmistakable. "My mistake."
She spun around, ready to deliver a scathing retort, but the words died on her tongue. He was watching her with an expression she couldn't quite read-amusement, certainly, but beneath it, something sharper. Interest. Real and undiluted.
Iris swallowed. The adrenaline was fading, and in its wake, exhaustion crept in at the edges. She just wanted to escape this balcony, this night, this entire humiliating mess. "I'm leaving."
"If you walk out that door right now, you'll run straight into your fiancé."
She stopped. He was right. Angus was still somewhere on the other side of that glass door, probably pacing and muttering complaints about her into his phone. Walking back into the gala with smeared lipstick and a flushed face would invite questions she had no intention of answering.
The man turned away from her and walked toward a heavy, carved wooden door set into the far wall of the balcony-a door that blended so perfectly with the architecture she hadn't noticed it before. He pulled a sleek black-and-gold keycard from his pocket and swiped it over a hidden scanner.
A soft click echoed in the dark. He pushed the door open to reveal a dimly lit corridor.
He looked over his shoulder, tilting his chin toward the opening. A silent invitation.
Iris hesitated. Every instinct told her not to follow a stranger into a hidden passageway. But the alternative-facing Angus, facing her mother, facing the suffocating weight of her gilded cage-felt infinitely worse.
"Are you always this prepared with secret exits?" she asked, her voice steadier now.
"Only on nights when beautiful heiresses decide to use me for revenge."
She snorted despite herself. "You offered."
"I did." His smile was slow and dark. "And I don't regret it."
Iris gathered the heavy fabric of her gown and walked toward the unknown passage without another word.
As she brushed past him, the man's eyes dropped to the stone floor.
Lying near the pillar was her thick, gold-embossed gala invitation.
The man placed his hand on the small of her back, guiding her into the corridor. As the heavy wooden door slowly closed behind them, shutting out the noise of the Met Gala, he memorized the name printed on the card.
The heavy carved wooden door clicked shut, plunging them into a dimly lit, narrow corridor that smelled of aged stone and faint cigar smoke.
Iris walked slightly ahead of the man, her pulse still hammering from the kiss and his merciless dissection of her inexperience. The sharp clack of her stilettos against the concrete floor echoed loudly in the empty space. She kept her eyes fixed straight ahead, refusing to glance back at him, though she could feel his gaze on her bare shoulders like a physical weight.
A blast of freezing air blew from an overhead vent. The sudden chill hit Iris's bare shoulders, snapping her completely out of the adrenaline-fueled high of her revenge. A cold sweat broke out across her lower back.
What had she just done?
She had not only kissed a total stranger-she had let him steal her first kiss, and then he had seen right through every layer of bravado she had constructed. A man whose mere presence had terrified Angus into running away. And she had practically demanded he kiss her. Her pace began to slow down involuntarily. She hugged her arms, trying to put more distance between herself and the heavy footsteps following right behind her. The heat of embarrassment still lingered on her cheeks, and she was desperately grateful for the dim lighting.
At the end of the corridor was a heavy steel fire door. The man stepped past her and pushed it open with one hand.
They stepped into a private, underground VIP parking garage. A fleet of identical, pitch-black armored Maybachs sat idling in the shadows.
Suddenly, a phone vibrated sharply in the man's suit pocket.
He stopped walking. His dark eyebrows pulled together in a slight frown as he pulled out a sleek, custom smartphone and answered it.
"Speak," he commanded.
It was his executive assistant, Ethan, reporting a sudden fluctuation in a hostile takeover on Wall Street.
The man's attention shifted to the call for a split second. His hand, which had been hovering near the small of Iris's back, dropped to his side.
Iris didn't think. She acted on pure survival instinct.
She ripped her gaze away from him, grabbed handfuls of her heavy gown, and bolted. She sprinted toward the green exit sign glowing at the far end of the garage, her heels slamming against the pavement.
The man heard the frantic clicking of her shoes. He turned his head.
His deep, predatory eyes locked onto her fleeing figure. He didn't take a single step to chase her. He just stood there, watching her run with the calm patience of a hunter who already owned the forest.
"Short their stock," he ordered coldly into the phone, his eyes never leaving the exit door. "Crush them before morning."
He hung up the phone. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the gold-embossed invitation he had picked up from the balcony.
His long, elegant fingers traced the cursive letters printed on the thick cardstock.
Iris Sullivan.
A slow, dark smile spread across his face. It was a smile of absolute certainty.
Iris burst through the exit doors and hit the freezing Manhattan sidewalk. She flagged down a passing yellow cab, threw herself into the backseat, and slammed the door.
"Long Island. Just drive," she gasped out, her chest heaving as she struggled to pull oxygen into her burning lungs.
She twisted around, staring out the back window at the garage exit. The dark street remained empty. The terrifying man hadn't followed her. She slumped back against the cracked leather seat, her entire body trembling with exhaustion.
As the adrenaline ebbed, her mind drifted back to the balcony-the crushing strength of his arm around her waist, the way his lips had claimed hers with such brutal authority. She pressed her fingers to her mouth, then yanked them away as if burned. She had demanded that kiss. And then she had run away like a frightened child. The humiliation was almost worse than the fear.
Thirty minutes later, the cab pulled up to the massive wrought-iron gates of the Sullivan estate in Long Island.
Iris paid the driver in cash. She pulled out a compact mirror, furiously wiping the smeared red lipstick off her face, and smoothed down her hair. The reflection staring back at her looked different somehow-the same polished heiress, but with something wild still flickering behind her eyes.
She didn't go through the grand front entrance. She slipped through the side gate and walked quickly down the gravel garden path, praying she could sneak up to her room unnoticed.
She pushed open the heavy oak side door.
Instantly, the blinding light of the massive Swarovski crystal chandelier stung her eyes.
Her adoptive father, Harris, and her mother, Eleanor, were sitting stiffly on the velvet living room sofas. Angus had called them an hour ago, furious that she had vanished from the gala, forcing them to abandon the event early just to track her down. Their faces were dark with fury, their eyes locked on her as she stood frozen in the doorway.
Harris slammed his heavy crystal whiskey glass down on the glass coffee table. The sharp crack made Iris flinch.
"Where the hell have you been?" Harris roared. "Angus called us in a rage! We had to leave the most important networking event of the year because you disappeared when the Monroe family was taking press photos!"
Iris lowered her eyes, instantly slipping on the mask of the obedient daughter. "I had a sudden, severe migraine," she lied, her voice soft and controlled. "I had to leave."
Eleanor let out a sharp, mocking laugh. She stood up and walked slowly toward Iris.
"A migraine?" Eleanor sneered, stopping inches from Iris's face. "Let me make this very clear for you, Iris. If you ruin this merger with your little tantrums, I will personally see to it that your trust fund is frozen. You will lose your credit cards, your designer clothes, and your Ivy League lifestyle."
Eleanor's words were like ice water poured directly over Iris's head.
Iris's fingernails bit hard into her palms. The pain kept her face perfectly blank. She nodded slowly. "I understand. I'll apologize to Angus tomorrow."
Seeing her total submission, Harris's face relaxed slightly. He waved his hand in disgust. "Go to your room. Think about your responsibilities to this family."
Iris turned and walked toward the grand sweeping staircase.
As she reached the dark landing on the second floor, she stopped. Her expression shifted from obedient to pure, icy contempt.
From the hallway below, she heard the hushed voices of two maids cleaning the parlor.
"Did you see the news?" one maid whispered. "The biggest deal of the night didn't even show up. Camden Kirk skipped the gala entirely."
"Of course he did," the other maid replied, her voice dropping lower. "I heard that car crash messed up his head as much as his legs. They say he's completely paralyzed from the waist down. He's a twisted psycho who hates being around normal people."
Iris's breath hitched.
Camden Kirk. She remembered watching one of his televised keynote speeches months ago, back when her parents had first started dragging her to every high-society function in Manhattan. He had been seated behind a massive mahogany desk, speaking about global market expansion with a quiet, measured eloquence. Exceptionally polished. Almost painfully courteous. The kind of man who seemed utterly removed from anything as vulgar as a masked gala soaked in champagne and decadence. She recalled thinking he looked like someone who had never raised his voice in his life.
And now, according to the maids, he was paralyzed. Confined to a wheelchair. A recluse twisted by trauma.
Iris felt a strange pang of sympathy. She didn't know him, of course. But the image of that poised, articulate man reduced to a bitter hermit was unexpectedly sad. The world of the elite was cruel in ways most people never saw.
She shook off the thought. Camden Kirk's tragic fate had nothing to do with her. Her problem was the man on the balcony-the masked stranger who had kissed her senseless and then dissected her inexperience with surgical precision. Whoever he was, he wasn't a crippled recluse. He was tall, physically overwhelming, and radiated a menace that had sent Angus fleeing.
She hurried into her bedroom and locked the door. She threw her clutch onto the bed.
Her hands shook slightly as she shrugged off her gown, the heavy fabric pooling at her feet. As she reached up to unclasp her necklace, her fingers brushed against something caught in the delicate lace trim of her bodice. Frowning, she carefully worked it free and held it up to the moonlight streaming through her window.
It was a cufflink. But not the sapphire one Angus always wore. This one was entirely different-crafted from blackened silver, set with a single, flawless onyx stone. The metal was cold and weighty in her palm, clearly custom-made. On the backing, a serpent was etched in exquisite detail, coiled around a dagger, its eyes formed by two tiny blood-red rubies.
Her memory flashed back to the balcony. In that frantic moment when she had grabbed the stranger's lapels to pull him into the kiss, her fingers had scrabbled against his cuffs. She must have snagged this without realizing it, the cufflink catching in her lace as his hands tangled in her hair.
She stared at the intricate crest carved into the silver backing. The serpent and dagger-she didn't recognize the insignia, but it radiated a cold, aristocratic menace that made her skin prickle.
Whoever he was, he was dangerous. And she had just kissed him, run from him, and stolen from him.
Iris closed her fist around the onyx cufflink, its edges pressing sharply into her palm. She swore to herself she would find out exactly who that man was-and make sure he never had the chance to use that kiss against her.