Morning arrived too quietly.
The storm had passed, leaving Manhatt an washed clean, its glass towers gleaming under pale sunlight. But the calm felt wrong—like the eerie stillness before something catastrophic.
Nina stood in Adrian's kitchen, fingers wrapped around a mug of coffee she hadn't touched. Her reflection stared back at her from the polished marble counter—eyes tired, thoughts restless.
She hadn't slept.
Not after the photograph.
Not after what Adrian had said.
We make him believe it's real.
The words lingered, wrapping around her thoughts in a way she couldn't escape.
Behind her, she felt Adrian before she heard him.
"You're thinking too loudly."
His voice was low, roughened by lack of sleep. When she turned, she found him leaning against the doorway, tie undone, the top buttons of his shirt open. He looked less like the untouchable billionaire now and more like a man standing on the edge of something dangerous.
"Can you blame me?" she replied quietly.
His gaze softened—just slightly. "No."
The single word held more weight than anything else he could have said.
The first attack came at 9:17a.m.
Adrian's phone rang.
He answered immediately, his posture shifting, every muscle tightening as he listened. Nina watched his ex pression change—not dramatically, but enough. His jaw locked. His eyes darkened.
"What happened?" she asked the moment he ended the call.
"Warehouse fire," he said. " Brooklyn port. One of our primary distribution hubs."
Her stomach dropped. "Accident?"
Adrian met her eyes.
"No."
The air near the port was thick with smoke and sirens.
Nina stepped out of the car, heat hitting her instantly despite the distance. Flames had already been contained, but the damage was devastating—charred steel, collapsed structures, the smell of something burned far beyond repair.
Emergency crews moved quickly, shouting orders, securing the area.
" This wasn't random," Nina said, scanning the scene.
Adrian stood beside her, hands in his pockets, his expression carved from stone. "No. It was precise."
She frowned . "How can you tell?"
"They didn' t destroy everything," he said. "Just enough."
Her eyes followed his gaze.
He was right.
Entire sections of the warehouse were untouched.
Selective destruction.
A message.
"Mr. Vale. "
A fire chief approached, removing his helmet. "You're going to want to see this."
Adrian nodded once, and Nina followed as they were led through the wreckage.
The deeper they went, the quieter it became.
Until they reached it.
A single steel beam, blackened but still standing.
And carved into it—
A symbol.
Sharp. Deliberate.
A wolf's head.
Nina's breath caught. "What is that?"
Adrian didn't answer immediately.
When he did, his voice was colder than the ashes around them.
"Kane."
They returned to the penthouse in silence.
The city moved on as if nothing had happened, but Nina felt the shift. This wasn't hidden anymore. This wasn't manipulation in the shadows.
This was war.
The moment they stepped inside, Adrian's security team was already in motion—voices low, urgent, screens filled with data and surveillance feeds.
"Lock down all external access points," Adrian ordered. "No one gets in without clearance."
"Yes, sir."
Nina watched him, the way he moved, the way control seemed to wrap around him like armor.
And yet—
Something was different.
This wasn't just business anymore.
This was personal.
By evening, exhaustion had settled deep into Nina's bones.
She stood on the balcony despite everything, the cool air brushing against her skin . The city lights stretched endlessly, beautiful and indifferent.
"You're doing it again."
Adrian's voice came from behind her.
She didn't turn. "Standing where I'm not supposed to?"
"Yes."
A pause.
Then—closer now—"And thinking too much."
She exhaled softly. "We're being watched. Followed. Attacked. I think I've earned the right to think too much."
A faint shift of air told her he was right behind her now.
"Fear makes you predictable," he said quietly.
"And what does control make you?" she shot back.
Silence.
Then—
"Dangerous."
Her breath caught slightly.
She turned.
Too close.
He was right there.
Closer than he'd ever been before without the pretense of cameras or contracts.
The city lights reflected in his eyes, softening the cold gray into something deeper, something almost human.
"You shouldn't be out here," he said, but his voice had changed.
Lower.
Quieter.
Not an order.
A concern.
"Then why are you?" she asked.
His gaze dropped briefly to her lips before returning to her eyes.
"Because you are."
The words lingered between them.
Something shifted.
Not strategy.
Not survival.
Something real.
Nina's heart pounded, loud enough she was sure he could hear it.
"Adrian…" she started, but the words faded.
Because in that moment—
His phone rang.
The tension shattered instantly.
He stepped back, the distance returning like a wall slamming into place. He answered the call, his expression hardening again.
"Yes."
A pause.
Then—
"Say that again."
Nina's stomach tightened.
"What is it? " she asked when he ended the call.
Adrian looked at her, and this time—
There was no control.
Only fury.
"They hacked into your records," he said. "Your personal files. Your past."
Her blood ran cold. "What?"
"They leaked it," he continued. "Online. Everywhere."
Her mind spun. "That's not possible—there's nothing—"
"Not everything needs to be true to destroy you," he cut in.
The words hit harder than anything else.
Because she knew he was right.
Within minutes, her phone exploded with notifications.
Messages.
Mentions.
Accusations.
She opened one article.
Her breath stopped.
"Nina Carter: The Journalist Who Built Her Career on Lies?"
Another.
"Hidden Past of Vale's Wife Exposed. "
And then—
A photo.
Old.
Grainy.
Taken years ago.
A moment she had buried.
A mistake she had survived.
Now dragged into the light.
Her hands trembled.
"This is…" she whispered. " This is twisted."
Adrian stepped closer, his presence steady, grounding.
"This is Kane," he said. "He's not attacking the company anymore."
His eyes locked onto hers.
"He's attacking you."
Silence filled the room.
Heavy.
Unavoidable.
Nina swallowed hard, forcing herself to breathe through the rising panic.
"Why me?" she asked.
Adrian didn't hesitate.
" Because you matter to me."
The words hung in the air.
Unfiltered.
Unplanned.
Real.
Nina's heart stuttered.
And for the first time since this began—
The danger didn't feel like the most terrifying thing in the room.
Outside, the city lights flickered.
Inside, the lines between truth, strategy, and emotion blurred beyond recognition.
Because Kane had made his move.
And this time—
He wasn't just trying to destroy Adrian Vale.
He was trying to break Nina Carter.
