The ballroom had grown louder, but my world was narrowed to a single shadow near the glass doors. Nicholas Hale didn't move, didn't gesture he simply watched. I should have turned away, lost myself in conversation with someone safer, someone predictable. But instead, every nerve in me leaned toward him, as though he had claimed some invisible tether between us. I blinked, and he was gone again.
A tremor of irritation cut through the strange pull he had over me. Who was this man? Why did he move like smoke here one moment, vanished the next? I told myself it didn't matter. I had come here to start fresh, not to get entangled with strangers who spoke in riddles.
So I found my way to the bar. A chilled glass of champagne was pressed into my hand before I could even ask, and I let the bubbles steady me. Conversations hummed around me, a blur of politics, investments, and deals whispered behind manicured smiles. I forced myself to join, to nod, to play the game.
And then I felt him again.Not just presence this time. Heat. Nearness.
"You don't belong in these circles." His voice came low, threaded with that same velvet steel, right behind me.
I turned slowly, and there he was Nicholas Hale, closer than he should have been, close enough that I could catch the faint scent of his cologne. Something dark, clean, threaded with spice.
"I think that's my decision," I said, my tone sharper than my pulse allowed.
His gaze flicked over the room, then back to me. "Is it? Because you walk like someone preparing for battle. And trust me these people smell fear faster than blood."
I swallowed. "Do you always study strangers this closely?"
"Only the ones who pretend they're invisible." His mouth curved, but his eyes stayed unreadable. "You fail at that."
Heat crept up my throat, a mix of irritation and something far more dangerous. I wanted to walk away. Instead, I found myself leaning closer. "And what makes you the expert?"
"Because," he said softly, leaning just enough for his words to brush against my ear, "I've spent a lifetime watching people lie to themselves."
His breath grazed my skin, and my glass trembled in my hand. Every instinct screamed that I should put distance between us. But instead, I asked the question that burned on my tongue.
"And what about you, Nicholas?" I hadn't meant to say his name, but it slipped out like a secret. "What do you lie to yourself about?"
For the first time, something shifted in his eyes. Not amusement. Not superiority. Something else. Something I couldn't name.
"That," he said after a long pause, "is not a question you're ready to hear the answer to."
Before I could respond, a commotion broke out across the hall. Someone had raised their voice sharp, angry. Heads turned, laughter cut short. I turned too, grateful for the distraction, but when I looked back, Nicholas was gone again. Only this time, he hadn't vanished into the crowd.
The glass doors stood open, curtains swaying in the cool night breeze. Beyond them, on the terrace, I caught the shadow of him moving away. Without thinking, I set my glass down and followed.
The air outside was cooler, scented with city smoke and night air. The terrace stretched wide, lit only by moonlight and the spill of chandeliers from the ballroom. Nicholas stood near the edge, his back to me, looking out over the skyline as though it belonged to him. "You disappeared again," I said, my voice sharper than I intended.
He didn't turn right away. "Maybe I was giving you a choice."A choice? "To decide if you'd follow."
The words caught me off guard. I should have walked away right then, back into the safety of the glittering ballroom. But something in his tone, in the way he spoke as though he already knew me, kept me rooted to the terrace.
I took a step closer. "And if I did follow?"
This time, he turned. The moonlight carved his face into shadows and angles, sharp and dangerous. His gaze locked with mine, and for a heartbeat, I couldn't breathe.
"Then," Nicholas said quietly, "we both know you've already decided how this ends."
The meaning of his words wrapped around me like silk and smoke, and before I could demand clarity, a voice called my name from inside the ballroom. The sound shattered the moment, pulling me back to reality.
I turned instinctively toward the voice, but when I looked back at Nicholas The terrace was empty.