CHAPTER ELEV EN: NO LIMITS
The city had never seen Adrian Vale like this.
Not the polished billionaire.
Not the controlled strategist.
Not the man who calculated ten steps ahead with cold precision.
This—
This was something else.
"Again."
The single word echoed through the room.
Cold. Flat. Final.
The man tied to the chair groaned , barely conscious, blood staining the collar of his shirt. He had already talked.
But not enough.
Adrian stood a few feet away, sleeves rolled, expression carved from something merciless. His grey eyes held no hesitation now—only focus.
"You're wasting time," the man rasped. "I told you everything—"
"You told me what you thought would keep you alive," Adrian interrupted.
A pause.
Then quieter—
"I'm not interested in that."
The room went still.
Everyone in it understood something in that moment.
Adrian wasn't negotiating.
He was hunting.
"Say it again," Adrian demanded.
The man swallowed hard. "Docklands… east side… abandoned shipping yard…"
Adrian's gaze didn't waver.
"And?"
Silence.
A flicker of fear.
Then—
"I don't know where inside," the man said quickly. "I swear—Kane moves constantly—he doesn't stay in one place—"
Adrian stepped closer.
Slow.
Deliberate.
The man's breath hitched.
"But you know how to get in," Adrian said.
Not a question.
The man hesitated.
That was his mistake.
Across the city—
Nina refused to break.
Her wrists burned against the restraints, but she had stopped struggling hours ago.
Struggling wasted energy.
Thinking didn't.
Kane watched her from across the room, seated comfortably, as if this were a conversation—not captivity.
"You're adapting," he noted, almost impressed.
Nina said nothing.
Her silence wasn't fear.
It was control.
"You're not asking questions," Kane continued. "Most people do."
Nina finally looked at him.
"And give you the satisfaction?" she said calmly. "No. "
A slow smile curved his lips.
"Interesting."
He stood, walking toward her.
Measured .
Unhurried.
Dangerous.
"You're not what I expected," he admitted.
"And you are exactly what I expected," Nina replied.
His brow lifted slightly.
"Cruel," she continued. "Calculated. Obsessed with control."
Kane chuckled softly. "And yet—you walked straight into my hands."
Nina held his gaze.
"No," she said quietly. "You needed me to."
The smile faded—just slightly.
A hit.
Not enough to hurt.
But enough to register.
Back at the penthouse—
"Car's ready," one of Adrian's men said.
Adrian didn't respond immediately.
He was staring at the map.
Docklands.
East side .
Abandoned shipping yard.
A trap.
Obvious.
Intentional.
He knew it.
Kane knew he knew it.
And it didn't matter.
"You're walking into this," his head of security said carefully.
Adrian finally looked up.
"Yes."
"It could be worse than you think."
"It is worse than I think," Adrian replied calmly.
A pause.
Then—
"That's why I'm going."
The car ride was silent.
But not empty.
Every second stretched tight with purpose.
With violence waiting just beneath the surface.
Meanwhile—
Nina's mind raced.
She had mapped the room twice.
Three exits.
Two guards.
One camera—visible.
Possibly more.
Kane wasn't careless.
Which meant—
There were things she couldn't see.
"You're thinking about escaping," Kane said casually.
Nina didn't react.
"You won't," he added.
"Then why tie me up?" she shot back.
Another small smile.
"Because I enjoy certainty. "
The door burst open.
One of Kane's men rushed in. "He's here."
Kane's expression didn't change.
But something in the air did.
Shifted.
Tightened.
"Of course he is," Kane said softly.
Then his gaze returned to Nina.
"Let's see what you're worth."
Outside—
The docklands stretched into darkness.
Cold air.
Steel containers stacked like a maze.
Silence that felt wrong.
Adrian stepped out of the car, his presence alone enough to shift the atmosphere.
He didn't wait.
Didn't hesitate.
Didn't strategize.
He moved forward.
The first man never saw him coming.
The second barely had time to react.
Adrian moved through them like a force of nature—precise, ruthless, unstoppable .
No wasted motion.
No mercy.
Inside—
Nina heard it.
The shift in sound.
Movement.
Impact.
Her pulse spiked.
Not fear.
Recognition.
He's here.
Kane smiled.
"There it is,"he murmured. "Hope."
Nina's eyes snapped to him.
"That's your mistake," Kane continued. "Hope makes people predictable."
"No," Nina said quietly.
"It makes them dangerous."
The door slammed open.
Adrian stepped inside.
And everything stopped.
For a moment—
No one moved.
No one spoke.
The air itself seemed to hold its breath.
Adrian's gaze found Nina instantly.
Bound.
But unbroken.
Alive.
Something dark and fierce flickered in his eyes.
Relief.
Then—
Rage.
Kane stepped forward slightly, unbothered.
"You came alone," he noted.
"I didn't need anyone else," Adrian replied.
Their voices were calm.
But beneath them—
War.
"You've lost control," Kane said.
"No," Adrian said.
A pause.
Then—
"I let go of it."
Kane's smile sharpened. "For her?"
"Yes."
No he sitation.
No denial.
No strategy.
Just truth.
Nina felt it.
The weight of that answer.
The reality of it.
And something inside her shifted again.
Deeper.
Stronger.
Irreversible.
Kane glanced at her.
Then back at Adrian.
"Interesting," he murmured. "You really would burn everything for her."
Adrian' s voice dropped.
Cold.
Certain.
"I already have."
Silence.
Heavy.
Explosive.
Then Kane moved.
Fast.
Too fast.
A gun appeared—pressed against Nina's head.
The room snapped into motion.
"Stop," Kane said calmly.
Adrian froze.
Not from fear.
From precision.
One wrong move—
And everything ends.
"This," Kane said softly, "is the moment that matters."
His eyes locked onto Adrian's.
"Power… or her."
The question hung in the air.
Deadly.
Final.
Adrian didn't even blink.
"Her."
No hesitation.
No calculation.
No doubt.
Nina's breath caught.
Because that wasn't a strategy.
That wasn't survival.
That was something else entirely.
Kane studied him.
Then—
Slowly—
He smiled.
"Good," he said.
And for the first time—
Something about that smile felt wrong.
Not victory.
Not control.
Something deeper.
Something planned.
And Nina realized—
This wasn't the end of the trap.
It was the beginning of something worse.
