POV: Alexandra Vaughn
I've always believed emotions are like evidence, useful when controlled, disastrous when they control you.
But lately, control has started to feel like a lie I keep telling myself.
It had been two weeks since Lydia's engagement party, and in that time, my days had been a blur of trials, strategy meetings, and late nights at chambers. My assistant Noah said I was working like someone trying to outrun something.
He wasn't wrong.
I'd been running from a thought. A face. A voice that still lingered in my head long after that night ended. Damian Cross.
It should've been easy to forget him, after all, I'd built a life on compartmentalizing. But every time I glanced at a news headline, there he was again. CROSSTECH ANNOUNCES NEW MERGER. DAMIAN CROSS EXPANDS INTO BIOMETRICS.
And every time I saw his name, my stomach tightened like a warning I refused to hear.
It was a Thursday morning when Lydia called.
"Alex, please tell me you're not in court right now."
"Just finished," I said, stepping out of the Old Bailey. "Why?"
"Lunch. Damian wants to meet you again. Something about legal insight for his company. He said you'd be the perfect person to ask."
I froze mid-step. "He said that?"
"Yes! Isn't that amazing? I told him you're brilliant and you are. Come on, say yes."
There was no reason to refuse. Professional interest, I told myself. A conversation between a CEO and a barrister, perfectly harmless.
But somewhere deep down, I already knew I was lying.
"Fine," I said. "Text me the address."
The restaurant was discreet, the kind of place power brokers used when they didn't want to be photographed. Damian was already there when I arrived, seated at a corner table, half a glass of whiskey untouched before him.
He stood when he saw me, buttoning his jacket. "Ms. Vaughn."
"Mr. Cross," I said, taking the seat opposite him.
He studied me for a moment, as though measuring which version of me had arrived, the barrister or the woman. I wasn't sure myself.
"I appreciate you making the time," he said finally. "I wanted to discuss something regarding a potential acquisition."
His tone was professional, his words crisp, but there was an undercurrent, a quiet awareness neither of us acknowledged.
"Of course," I said, flipping open my tablet. "Which company?"
He outlined the details, precise and efficient. But I couldn't help noticing the way he watched me, not like a man admiring a woman, but like a strategist studying an equal. Every question I asked, he countered. Every point I made, he built on.
It wasn't flirting. It was intellectual sparring, the kind I lived for.
And yet… It felt intimate.
At one point, our hands brushed when he passed me a document. The contact was brief, accidental, but my pulse betrayed me.
He noticed. His gaze lingered just a second too long before he looked away.
The air between us shifted.
"This merger," he said after a pause, "could either change everything or destroy everything. I need someone who knows when to fight and when to walk away."
I met his eyes. "You don't strike me as a man who walks away."
His mouth twitched. "You don't strike me as a woman who surrenders."
Silence stretched between us: taut, fragile, dangerous.
Then he said softly, "Lydia tells me you don't believe in love."
I stiffened. "I don't discuss personal matters with clients."
"I'm not your client."
"Then it's even less your business."
He smiled faintly, not mocking, just… knowing. "You're fascinating, Alexandra Vaughn."
I forced my voice steady. "And you're engaged."
He leaned back, eyes dark and unreadable. "That I am."
The reminder landed like a slap: sharp, grounding, necessary. I gathered my notes, breaking the spell.
"Well," I said, rising, "if that's all, I'll have my chambers send a proposal."
He stood too. "Thank you for your time."
But when our hands met again in parting, neither of us pulled away quickly enough.
"Be careful, Ms. Vaughn," he said quietly. "You look like someone who forgets how close the edge is."
I left before I could ask what he meant. That night, Lydia called again.
"Wasn't Damian charming?" she asked, her voice glowing with happiness. "He said he's never met anyone who challenges him like you do. You two would make an incredible team."
I hesitated. "He said that?"
"Of course! He admires you, Alex. I think that's why he likes you so much."
My throat went dry. "Lydia… he's lucky to have you."
She laughed. "I know. But still, promise me you'll help him with the legal stuff? He trusts you already."
"I'll think about it," I murmured.
After we hung up, I sat in the dark, the city pulsing outside my window.
He trusts you already.
Those words echoed louder than they should have.
Somewhere, beneath all my practiced logic, something dangerous was taking root, something I couldn't label or justify.
It wasn't admiration, it wasn't curiosity.
It was the beginning of a storm.
And deep down, I knew if I didn't stop it now, it would consume everything
