The Gordonis boardroom was silent, save for the low hum of the air conditioner. Floor-to-ceiling windows revealed the glittering New Orleans skyline, but inside, the tension was thick enough to choke on. At the head of the long obsidian table sat Tom Gordonis, rigid in his seat. Around him, the board members exchanged nervous glances. Angela White stood to one side, her arms folded, watching.
The glass doors opened without fanfare. Don Alaric entered, flanked by two silent aides. His footsteps were measured, echoing softly on the polished marble floor. He wore the same dark suit. The scars on his face caught the light, a stark reminder that he was as dangerous as he was wealthy.
Tom rose, forcing a polite smile he could not sustain. “Mr. Alaric, thank you for coming.”
Don Alaric inclined his head once. “Let’s dispense with pleasantries, shall we?” His voice was smooth, each word precise. “I have reviewed the company’s books. The numbers paint a clear picture: Gordonis Corp is bleeding.”
A hush fell. Tom’s heart thudded. He had hoped, feared, but still dreaded this moment of reckoning.
Don Alaric continued without pause. “My rescue investment is generous. Very generous. But it comes with conditions. Conditions you must accept without alteration.”
Tom swallowed. “Of course. I’m ready to hear them.”
Don Alaric scanned the board, his gaze cold. “First: I will have full operational control over all Gordonis assets. This includes overseas holdings, the shipping division, the real estate portfolio…. everything.”
Murmurs rippled through the room. One board member coughed. Tom’s pulse quickened. He had expected oversight, maybe even a board seat, but not outright surrender.
“Second,” Don Alaric said, raising a finger, “I require veto power. On any decision, at any level. This veto extends to you, Mr. Gordonis. If I oppose a plan, it will not proceed.”
Tom’s mouth went dry. He jerked his head toward Angela, who watched impassively. She said nothing.
“Third,” Don Alaric continued, “I will appoint Ms. Hermosa Rodriguez as my personal liaison…. my eyes and ears within this company. She will report directly to me on every matter. I expect full cooperation.”
Silence fell like a guillotine blade. Hermosa’s face drained of color. She stared at Don Alaric as if he had just torn her world in two.
Tom rose to protest, his voice tight. “But this—this amount of power….”
Don Alaric’s gaze cut him off. He leaned forward; hands flat on the table. “Mr. Gordonis,” he said icily, “let me remind you of your position. You are not in a place to negotiate. You need me more than I need you.”
Tom closed his mouth. His shoulders sank. The board members shifted uncomfortably. Angela’s lips curved into a faint, knowing smile.
Don Alaric straightened and retrieved a contract folder from an aide. He slid it across the table. “Sign here,” he said, tapping the signature line. “And we begin saving this company. Refuse, and you return to insolvency.”
Tom stared at the papers. His dreams of power and prestige, unceremoniously handed to a stranger. His chest tightened. He picked up the pen with trembling fingers and signed. The echo of the pen’s scratch on paper rang loud in the silent room.
Don Alaric’s mouth curved in the slightest of smiles. He closed the folder, stood, and collected his aides. “Pleasure doing business,” he said, voice low and dead.
Tom did not rise. He sat, the gravity of his capitulation settling around him like dust.
---
Late that evening, Hermosa found herself standing outside Tom’s office. The hallway lights stretched her shadow across the polished floor. She had watched the boardroom confrontation from a glass-walled conference room, a prisoner behind invisible bars.
Her heart pounded. She had rehearsed no words, no questions. Now, nothing felt prepared enough.
She knocked softly. “Tom?”
He looked up from behind his desk, the man who had saved her father’s life… and used that debt to claim her loyalty.
“Come in,” he said, voice flat.
She entered, closing the door behind her. The room was empty, save for Tom’s desk and two leather chairs. He gestured to one, then remained standing.
Hermosa drew in a breath. “I… I want to be reassigned.”
Tom’s eyes flicked to her. He crossed his arms. “Excuse me?”
“I can’t—this… this arrangement with Don Alaric… I can’t do it,” she said, voice trembling. “He’s harsh, demanding…. he terrifies me.”
Tom sighed. He ran a hand through his hair. “Hermosa, you knew this would be tough when you accepted the liaison role.”
“I didn’t know it would mean giving him free rein over the company. Over you!” Her voice rose. “Over everything!”
Tom leaned against the desk. “Don Alaric has all the power now, not me. He sets the rules. If you refuse, the whole deal falls apart.”
She pressed her hands to her temples. “But I can’t work under him. I’m not strong enough.”
Tom’s gaze hardened. “You owe me.”
Hermosa jerked. He didn’t need to elaborate. She saw the unspoken threat in his eyes. He had saved her father’s life, paid off debts, perhaps even covered up details she didn’t want to know. She was trapped in that unbreakable bond.
“You owe me for saving your father,” Tom said softly. “And you owe this company, your family name. You will do this job, or you’ll answer to me.”
Hermosa’s shoulders slumped. She realized her options had closed like trap doors. She nodded, voice barely a whisper. “I understand.”
Tom let her see his satisfaction, then hardened his face. “Good. Get back to it.”
She left his office, feeling the walls close in tighter.
---
The next morning, Hermosa arrived at her desk to find an envelope sealed with a silver crest she recognized immediately: Don Alaric’s personal monogram. She tore it open with shaking fingers.
Inside was a terse note:
> Ms. Rodriguez,
Pack a bag. We depart at 9:00 AM tomorrow for a week-long business trip to Zurich. Just the two of us. Prepare your presentation materials and travel documents.
— D.A.
Hermosa’s breath caught. One week. Abroad. Alone with him.
Her heart thundered in her chest. The boardroom conditions, Tom’s threats, and now this. She was caught in a vise of obligation from two ruthless men.
She pressed her palm to the cool wood of her desk and closed her eyes.
The conditions of control were clear, and there would be no escape.

Latest Chapter
Chapter 21 – Shifting Shadows
Hermosa sat at the edge of her bed, still dressed in yesterday’s clothes, her phone clenched in her hand like a lifeline she didn’t know how to cut.A soft knock tapped against the door before Bella stepped in, arms crossed, a knowing look in her eyes.“You called him last night,” Bella said plainly, walking over and sitting beside her. “I saw your call log when I picked up your phone to turn off your alarm.”Hermosa stiffened, her jaw tightening. “So, you’re checking my call logs now?”Bella raised her hands innocently. “I wasn’t snooping. I just saw it.”Hermosa looked away. “It’s not a big deal.”Bella gave a small laugh and pulled Hermosa into a side hug. “It is. And it’s okay. I know why you called him.”Hermosa didn’t respond, her eyes fixed on the floor.Bella continued gently, “He reminds you of Andre.”Hermosa flinched but didn’t deny it.“But they’re not the same,” Bella said, tightening her grip around her friend. “You need to get that into your head. Andre’s gone. You have
Chapter 20 – Night Watch
The soft glow from Bella’s laptop cast shifting shadows across the walls of the control room. Hermosa leaned in toward the CCTV monitors, her heart racing as the grainy images flickered. “There,” she whispered, pointing at a dark silhouette just beyond the iron gate.On screen, a figure stood still, head tilted as if listening. Then the person started gliding sideways, pacing slowly back and forth. Rain earlier that evening had dampened the driveway, puddles glistened in the low lamplight.Hermosa’s chest tightened. “Who is that?” she murmured.Bella closed the laptop but kept her eyes fixed on the screen. “Calm down. It’s a guard shift, someone checking the perimeter. Probably late.”Hermosa shook her head, frowning. “It’s too one-pointed. Someone staying in one spot, watching the gate.”Bella's phone buzzed. She checked the time. “Okay. I’ll go check the back. You go upstairs. Stay with your father.”Hermosa reached for her phone on the table. Heat tingled through her fingers. She h
Chapter 19 – Shadows of Truth
The late afternoon sun filtered through the tall windows of Don Alaric’s study, casting golden streaks across the polished mahogany floor. The scent of cigars lingered in the air, faint but unmistakable. Valerie stood by the bar cart, pouring herself a glass of sparkling water, while Don Alaric sat behind his desk, a contemplative look etched onto his face.She glanced at him as she took a sip. “You didn’t eat much at lunch,” she said. “That’s rare for you.”“I wasn’t hungry,” he replied flatly, his eyes focused on a small photograph on his desk, a weathered image of a young woman holding a baby. Hermosa and Andre Jr., from years ago.Valerie set her glass down. “She’s getting to you, isn’t she?”Alaric didn’t respond. Instead, he leaned back in his chair and exhaled slowly. “She asked him to take off the mask.”Valerie raised a brow. “You knew she would. She was bound to get curious.”There was a knock at the door.“Come in,” Alaric called.The door creaked open, and the man who had
Chapter 18 – Shadows and Suspicions
Bella stepped out of her car, her eyes scanning the quiet estate. The early morning sun cast long shadows across the driveway, and the air was still, almost too still. She clutched her handbag tightly as she made her way to the front door, her heels clicking softly against the stones.Hermosa opened the door before Bella could even knock. Her face was pale, her eyes guarded, and there was a tension in her shoulders that immediately set Bella on edge.“You look like hell,” Bella said gently, stepping inside.“I feel worse,” Hermosa replied. “Come in.”They moved into the sitting room. Hermosa offered tea, but Bella declined, settling on the velvet couch instead.“I came early because I couldn’t sleep,” Bella admitted. “Too much racing through my mind. I haven’t stopped thinking about our last conversation... about Andre. About the evidence. Everything is finally beginning to make sense. I feel like we’re this close.” She pinched two fingers together.Hermosa didn’t respond immediately.
Chapter 17 — Strings and Threats
Hermosa’s heels clicked furiously against the marble floors as she stepped into her house, slamming the front door behind her. The early evening glow filtered through the tall windows, casting long shadows across the living room, shadows that deepened the moment her eyes landed on Tom.He stood near the stairway, speaking lowly to one of the housemaids. His hand was resting against the wall above her head, posture casual, but Hermosa could see the tension in the maid’s shoulders and the unease in her shifting feet.“What the hell is going on here?” Hermosa’s voice cut sharply across the room like a whip.The maid turned abruptly, startled, eyes wide with panic.Hermosa narrowed her eyes. “Go. Now.” The maid hesitated, looking between Hermosa and Tom.“I said leave!” Hermosa screamed at her, her knuckles turning white.The maid didn’t need to be told twice. She scurried away like a mouse avoiding a trap, practically disappearing up the back stairs.Tom turned toward her slowly, an infu
Chapter 16 — Beneath the Mask
The restaurant was elegant, wrapped in soft golden light and the low hum of classical music. Hermosa sat in a private booth tucked into a corner, her posture tense and unreadable, her fingers tightening around the wine glass she hadn’t touched.Across from her sat Don Alaric, composed, charming, and unreadable beneath that damned mask. His presence made her stomach flutter, not in romance, but in the kind of unsettling way a puzzle made you uneasy when you knew you were missing a vital piece.He leaned forward, resting his arms casually on the table, and his voice came gently. “You’re quiet tonight, Hermosa,” he said, his lips curling into an easy smile. “But I understand. You have questions… don’t you?”Hermosa didn’t answer at first. Her eyes were fixed on his hands, strong, graceful, as they tapped lightly on the mahogany table. But it wasn’t the gesture that caught her attention.It was the tattoo.There, stretching over his right hand, was a raven.She knew that tattoo. She knew
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