The morning after the banquet was suffocating.Inside the Mercedes family's estate, the atmosphere was tense enough to snap. The long dining table, usually the site of quiet breakfasts and polite chatter, now resembled a war council. The clink of cutlery was absent; only the low hum of strained breaths and the occasional cough from Harold broke the silence.
At the head of the table, Harold sat in his usual spot, cane resting against his chair. His weathered face betrayed little, but his eyes were sharp, watching and calculating.
Marcus tapped his fingers against the polished wood, impatience radiating off him. Beside him, Vivienne leaned forward, her sharp eyes glinting with disdain as they flicked toward Cole.
Cole sat opposite Andriana, calm and composed. His plate was untouched. He didn't bother lowering his gaze, though he could feel the daggers of hostility from every direction except one,his wife's.
Andriana wasn't eating either. She stared at Cole, searching his face for answers he refused to give.
Finally, Marcus broke the silence.
"So, are we all just going to pretend last night wasn't a complete circus?" His voice dripped with venom. "Are we seriously accepting that a man like him could land Falcon Holdings?"
Vivienne gave a cold laugh. "Please. It's obvious Falcon is just humoring us. A joke contract, nothing more. I wouldn't be surprised if they withdraw within the week once they realize who they've tied themselves to."
Cole's lips twitched, but he said nothing.
Harold's cane rapped lightly against the floor. "Careful, Vivienne. Falcon Holdings themselves confirmed the contract overnight. I received the statement personally. This is no joke."
That silenced the table for a moment.Marcus's jaw tightened. "Then the question is why? Why would Falcon stake its name on a nobody like him?"
Cole finally spoke, his voice calm but laced with quiet steel. "Maybe because I'm not the nobody you think I am."
The words struck the room like a slap.Vivienne scoffed, nearly choking on her tea. Marcus leaned forward, his fists clenched. "What did you just say?"
"I said," Cole repeated, locking eyes with Marcus, "that you know nothing about me."
The air thickened. Andriana's breath caught in her throat.Before Marcus could erupt, Harold's cane slammed against the floor again. The sharp crack silenced everyone.
"Enough," Harold barked. "This bickering solves nothing. Falcon Holdings is now tied to this family, whether you like it or not. Instead of wasting time tearing each other apart, we should be planning how to maximize this partnership."
His voice, though aged, carried weight. Even Marcus dared not argue.
Still, the hatred in his eyes as he glared at Cole was unmistakable.Later that day, Cole walked the streets alone.
The city bustled around him,neon signs flickered, cars honked, businessmen hurried with briefcases, vendors shouted from corners. Yet beneath the surface hum of life, Cole felt the tension like a current in the air. The banquet had shifted something.
People were whispering his name. The once-mocked son-in-law, the "useless" man of the Mercedes family, was now linked to Falcon Holdings.
He could feel the eyes on him, some filled with curiosity, others with envy, most with disbelief.
Cole slipped his hands into his pockets, calm on the outside. Inside, his instincts were sharp as blades. He knew men like Damien Kross didn't wait. They struck first, hard, to establish dominance.
And sure enough, the city seemed too quiet behind him.At the same moment, across town, Marcus sat in his office, speaking into a burner phone.
"Yes," he hissed. "Today. I don't care how you do it. I want him humiliated. Broken. Make sure everyone sees. Do you understand?"
A rough voice on the other end chuckled. "Don't worry. My boys will handle it. By tonight, your brother-in-law will be crawling."
Marcus hung up, satisfaction curving his lips. "Let's see you hide behind your secrets now, Cole."
Back on the street, Cole turned into a narrow alley, shortcutting toward the villa.That's when they struck.
Three black vans screeched to a halt, blocking both ends of the alley. The sliding doors slammed open, and more than a dozen men spilled out, armed with metal pipes, chains, and knives. Their faces were hidden under masks, their movements sharp, rehearsed.
The leader, a thick-necked brute with tattoos crawling up his arms, grinned. "Cole Ambers, right? The legendary son-in-law?" His voice was mocking, cruel. "We heard you've been making waves. Thought we'd give you a reality check."
Cole stopped walking. His expression remained calm, though his eyes darkened.
"I don't have time for insects," he said flatly.
The men laughed. The leader twirled his chain. "Oh, you'll make time. Boys, teach him a lesson he won't forget."
They surged forward, a wave of violence.
Cole exhaled once, his body loosening, his stance shifting. In an instant, the calm, mocked son-in-law was gone. In his place stood something sharper and colder, a man who had survived wars no one in this alley could imagine.
The first thug swung his pipe. Cole sidestepped, snatched the weapon mid-swing, and drove his elbow into the man's jaw. Bone cracked. The thug dropped like a stone.
Another lunged with a knife. Cole twisted, slammed the man's wrist against the wall, and the blade clattered to the ground. A precise kick to the chest sent him sprawling.
It took less than ten seconds for three men to hit the pavement, groaning, broken.The others hesitated, their confidence shaken.
Cole's eyes swept over them, cold and merciless. "Leave now, and maybe you'll keep walking tomorrow."
But pride and fear of their boss pushed them forward again.Cole didn't hesitate.The alley rang with the clatter of chains, the grunt of men, and the dull thud of bodies hitting pavement.Cole moved like a shadow unbound, fast, precise and merciless.
A thug swung a chain at his head. Cole ducked, caught the chain mid-air, yanked the man forward, and slammed his forehead into the thug's nose. Blood sprayed, and the man crumpled, clutching his face.
Another came from behind with a pipe. Cole spun, the pipe whistling past his ear, and drove his knee into the thug's gut. As the man doubled over, Cole grabbed his collar and hurled him into two others. They collapsed in a tangled heap. The alley was filled with curses and groans.
The tattooed leader snarled, eyes widening as he realized this wasn't going according to plan. "What the hell are you idiots doing? He's one man!"
But his men were faltering. Each swing, each strike was met with ruthless counters. Cole's every movement spoke of training,not the sloppy brawls of street fighters, but the lethal precision of someone who had seen real war.
Cole sidestepped another attacker, disarmed him with a twist, and brought the stolen knife to the man's throat in a heartbeat. He froze, eyes wide with terror.
Cole's voice was low, cold. "You picked the wrong man."
He shoved the thug away, sending him scrambling backward on hands and knees.The others hesitated now, circling but unwilling to commit. Their bravado had shattered, replaced by a creeping fear they couldn't shake.
The tattooed leader cursed again and pulled a switchblade from his pocket. He pointed it at Cole, masking his own unease with bravado. "You're dead, Ambers. You hear me? Dead! Damien Kross doesn't forgive. This city belongs to him!"
The name struck like a gunshot.Cole's eyes narrowed. For a heartbeat, the air itself seemed to still.
Damien Kross.
The men didn't notice the subtle shift in Cole's stance, but the leader did. He saw the flicker in Cole's gaze, the coiled tension beneath his calm exterior, and it made him falter.
Cole advanced slowly, deliberately.
"You're one of Kross's dogs?" he asked, voice quiet but edged like a blade.
The leader tried to smirk, though sweat beaded on his brow. "Damn right. And he wants you to remember this message."
He lunged with the blade.But Cole was already moving.
He sidestepped, caught the leader's wrist, twisted until bone cracked, and drove his elbow into the man's chest. The knife clattered to the ground. Cole shoved him hard against the wall, pinning him there with one hand at his throat.
The other thugs froze. None dared intervene.
Cole's face was inches from the leader's. His voice was low, deadly calm. "Tell Damien Kross this. If he wants me, he can come himself. Sending trash like you only insults me."
The leader choked, struggling. Cole tightened his grip just enough to make him gasp for air. Then he let go, letting the man collapse to the ground in a coughing heap.
The others rushed to help their boss, dragging him away. None of them looked back.When the last van screeched off into the night, the alley was silent again, littered with groaning men, discarded weapons, and the stink of fear.
Cole stood alone, breathing steady, his expression unreadable.From a shadowed rooftop nearby, a figure lowered a pair of binoculars.
It was Mason. He had been watching the entire fight, ready to intervene if necessary but he hadn't needed to. Cole had handled it all with terrifying efficiency.
Mason allowed himself a thin smile. "The dragon hasn't lost his edge."
He pulled out his phone and dialed.
"Report," Cole's voice came, calm as ever.
"You were right," Mason said. "It was Kross. He's moving faster than expected."
A pause. Then Cole's voice, steel wrapped in quiet restraint: "Good. Let him. The more desperate his moves, the sooner he'll expose himself."
"Do you want me to tail him?"
"No. Let him think he has the upper hand. For now."
Mason hesitated. "Andriana doesn't know, does she?"
Cole's silence was answer enough.
Hours later, back at the Mercedes villa, Andriana waited by the window. She had been pacing for nearly an hour, her nerves frayed. When the sound of Cole's footsteps finally reached her ears, she spun, relief flooding her features.
But when he stepped inside, she froze.His shirt was torn, smeared with dirt, a faint streak of blood on his sleeve. His eyes carried a fire she had never seen before, cold, sharp and unyielding.
"Cole…" Her voice trembled. "What happened? Where were you?"
He paused, meeting her gaze. For a moment, he considered telling her everything about Damien, about the shadows he had walked, about the blood debt that was now resurfacing.
But instead, he forced the fire back into the cage. He couldn't drag her into this storm. Not yet.
"Just a misunderstanding," he said softly. "Nothing you need to worry about."
Her brows furrowed. She stepped closer, touching his arm gently. "This isn't nothing. I can see it in your eyes. You're hiding something from me, Cole. And if you keep doing that… how am I supposed to stand by you?"
The weight of her words pressed against him.Cole lowered his gaze, his jaw tightening. For now, silence was his shield.
Andriana's hand lingered on his sleeve, her voice breaking. "I want to believe in you. But don't make me regret it."
Marcus lounged in his office chair, sipping brandy, a self-satisfied smirk plastered across his face.
The thought of Cole bleeding in some filthy alley brought him immense joy. He had been humiliated at the banquet, his prestige overshadowed by that useless brother-in-law, and now balance was finally being restored.
Vivienne entered, sharp heels clicking against the floor. "Well?" she asked, raising a perfectly arched brow.Marcus swirled the amber liquid in his glass. "By now, our dear Cole Ambers is probably begging for mercy. I told Damien's men to make it public. The whole city will be laughing by tomorrow."
Vivienne smirked. "Good. He deserves it. Father may be blinded by that Falcon deal, but once everyone sees Cole for what he is, that contract will crumble. Falcon doesn't partner with weaklings."
They clinked glasses, drinking to Cole's supposed downfall.
Neither noticed the shadow lingering just outside the door, a servant who had overheard enough to know treachery was at play. His hands trembled as he hurried away, unsure of what to do with the dangerous knowledge.
At that same moment, across the city, Damien Kross sat in his private penthouse suite overlooking the skyline.
Unlike Marcus, he wasn't drinking to celebrate. He was seething.
A half-dozen of his men knelt before him, battered, bloodied, ashamed. The leader with the broken wrist dared not raise his head.Damien's stare was like a blade pressed against their throats.
"One man," he said quietly. "One man… and you all crawl back to me like dogs with your tails between your legs."
The leader stammered. "Boss, he….he wasn't normal. He fought like…like a….."
"Like a ghost?" Damien snapped. He rose to his feet, his voice thunderous now. "Of course he did! That's no ordinary man. That's Cole Ambers."
The men flinched.
Damien paced, rage rolling off him in waves. "Do you idiots even know who he is? Do you understand the blood that runs in his veins? No, of course you don't. You see a Mercedes son-in-law, a laughingstock, and you think he's easy prey. But that man…" He slammed a fist onto the glass table, cracking it. "That man is a dragon chained."
Silence fell.
Damien leaned closer to the leader, his voice dropping to a deadly whisper. "And dragons… don't stay chained forever."
The man swallowed hard, sweat dripping down his temple.
Damien straightened, his fury channeled into cold resolve. "This changes nothing. If anything, it makes the game more interesting. If Cole thinks he can rise, I'll drag him down harder. If he wants to play king, I'll remind him who controls the board."
He turned to his lieutenant. "Spread the word. The city is mine. Anyone who sides with Cole Ambers will be crushed."
"Yes, Boss."
Damien's lips curled into a predatory smile. "And as for Cole… we'll start with his wife. Let's see how strong the dragon is when his precious queen is threatened."
Back at the Mercedes villa, Andriana sat at her vanity, brushing her hair, her thoughts clouded.Cole's torn clothes, the fire in his eyes, the way he'd brushed off her questions, it all replayed in her mind. She knew he was hiding something. Something dangerous.
The knock on her door startled her.
"Andriana?" It was Cole's voice, calm, steady.
"Come in."
He entered quietly, his expression unreadable. For a moment, they just looked at each other, words caught in the silence.
Finally, she set the brush down. "Cole… I can't keep pretending nothing's happening. You came home hurt, looking like a man I don't recognize. And when I asked, you lied to me. Don't tell me it was nothing."
Cole exhaled slowly, stepping closer. He placed a hand on her shoulder, his touch gentle but firm. "You're right. I can't tell you it's nothing. But I also can't drag you into this. Not yet."
Her brows knit together. "Into what?"
His eyes darkened, memories flickering like shadows. "A war that started long before you met me."
Her heart skipped a beat. She searched his face, trying to read the truth he wasn't saying. "Cole… who are you really?"
He didn't answer. Instead, he leaned down and kissed her forehead. "All you need to know is that I will protect you. No matter what comes."
Her chest ached at the conviction in his voice, but fear coiled in her stomach. Protect her from what?
Later that night, while the villa slept, a black car idled across the street. Inside, Damien's men sat watching, cameras and radios at the ready.
The leader, wrist in a cast, sneered. "Orders are clear. Keep her in sight. If the boss says move, we move."
Their lenses zoomed in on Andriana's bedroom window, her silhouette faint against the curtains.Cole, in his study, sat at his desk, eyes closed but senses sharp. He felt it,the weight of eyes on the house, the prickling awareness of predators circling.
He opened his phone, typed a single message to Mason:
[They're watching the villa. Protect her at all costs.]
The night was heavy with silence.The Mercedes villa slept, but Cole remained awake, seated in the darkened study. The faint glow of a single desk lamp cast long shadows across the walls. His ears tuned to every creak of the house, every shift of the wind outside.
They were here,watching and waiting.
Cole's instincts had been honed in darker places than this, and he felt the enemy presence as surely as if they had announced themselves with a trumpet.
Across the street, Damien's men grew restless in their black car.
The leader with the broken wrist checked his watch, sweat glistening on his temple. "Orders were clear," he muttered. "We spook her. Let Ambers know she's not safe. That'll break him faster than any blade."
Another man chuckled, loading a suppressed pistol. "Or we could just take her now. Deliver her to the boss gift-wrapped."
The leader hesitated, then sneered. "Do it. Just don't kill her. Boss wants her alive."
The doors opened quietly. Four shadows slipped across the street, moving like wolves toward the villa.
Inside, Andriana stirred in her sleep, the faint sound of footsteps outside her window dragging her toward wakefulness. Her brows furrowed, her lips parted.
The window lock clicked. A shadow moved across the glass.Andriana sat bolt upright, heart hammering.
Before she could scream, her door burst open.
Cole was there.He didn't look like the quiet, ridiculed son-in-law now. His eyes were hard steel, his presence radiating raw danger.
"Stay behind me," he ordered, his voice calm but cold.
The window shattered. Masked men poured in, weapons raised.Andriana gasped, clutching the sheets.
Cole moved.
He was a blur, his body cutting through the intruders like a blade through paper. One man lunged with a knife,Cole caught his wrist, twisted until bone snapped, and used the blade against him, sending him crashing into the dresser.
Another swung a pipe. Cole ducked, drove a fist into his ribs, and the crack of breaking bone echoed in the room. The man collapsed, wheezing.
The third raised a gun. Cole's eyes sharpened. He snatched the fallen pipe, hurled it with lethal accuracy, and the weapon smashed into the thug's wrist. The gun fired wildly, the bullet burying itself in the ceiling.
Cole closed the distance in a heartbeat, slamming the man into the wall, hand crushing his throat.
The last intruder froze. His courage evaporated under Cole's gaze. He dropped his weapon, hands trembling.
"Don't…don't kill me," he stammered. "We were just following orders."
Cole's grip on the pinned thug tightened. His voice was low, dangerous. "Whose orders?"
The man swallowed hard. "D-Damien Kross. He said… he said you'd understand the message."
Cole's jaw clenched. His eyes burned with fury restrained only by sheer will.
He let the thug go,only to grab the last intruder by the collar and drag him toward the shattered window. Cole shoved him halfway through, dangling him over the garden below.
"Listen carefully," Cole hissed. Tell Damien this, If he ever dares touch what's mine again, I won't just burn his empire. I'll bury him with it."
The thug's eyes widened in terror. Cole shoved him backward, sending him tumbling onto the lawn.
The others scrambled after him, dragging their broken comrades, desperate to escape.
Silence returned, broken only by Andriana's ragged breathing.She sat frozen on the bed, staring at her husband. Cole stood tall amid the wreckage, his chest rising and falling steadily, his expression unreadable.
This wasn't the man she thought she knew. This wasn't the quiet, passive Cole Ambers mocked by her family.
This was someone else. Someone dangerous.
"Cole…" her voice cracked, fear and awe mingling. "What… what are you?"
For a moment, his mask slipped. His eyes softened as he looked at her, but he couldn't give her the truth, not yet.
Instead, he stepped closer, gently brushing a stray lock of hair from her face. "I'm your husband. And no one will ever harm you as long as I breathe."
Her chest ached at his words, torn between trust and fear.Across town, Damien Kross received the report.The thug, still shaking, repeated Cole's words.
Damien listened, silent, his jaw tightening with each syllable.Then, slowly, a smile spread across his scarred face.
"Good," he murmured. "The dragon finally bares his fangs."
He raised a glass of whiskey, toasting the skyline. "This war will be glorious."