The night should have ended in relief.
Instead, it felt like the calm before something violent.
The press conference had shaken the narrative—just enough to create doubt, just enough to slow the storm. But Nina knew better than to believe it was over.
Kane didn't retreat.
He escalated.
The car ride back to the penthouse was quiet.
Too quiet.
Nina sat beside Adrian in the back seat, her fingers loosely clasped in her lap. The city lights flickered past the tinted windows, stretching into streaks of gold and white.
She could still feel the echo of the cameras.
Still hear the questions.
Still feel the weight of Adrian's words—
My wife.
Her chest tightened.
She turned slightly, studying him. His gaze was fixed ahead, expression unreadable, jaw tight. One hand rested against his knee, the other loosely clenched.
Controlled.
But barely.
"You're angry," she said softly.
"I'm calculating," he replied.
She almost smiled. "That's your version of angry."
A pause.
Then, quieter—
"Yes."
The car slowed.
Nina frowned slightly, glancing toward the window.
"This isn't the route," she said.
Adrian's head turned instantly. "What?"
The driver stiffened. "There's traffic ahead, sir. Taking a faster—"
"Stop the car."
The command snapped like a gunshot.
The driver hesitated.
"Now."
The car jerked to a halt.
And that's when Nina saw it.
Another vehicle.
Too close.
Too fast.
Coming straight for them.
"Get down!" Adrian's voice roared.
Everything happened at once.
The crash.
Metal screamed against metal as the impact hit the front of their car. The world lurched violently, glass shattering, the sound deafening.
Nina barely had time to react before Adrian's arm wrapped around her, pulling her down, shielding her completely.
Her head spun.
Her ears rang.
Smoke filled the air.
"A drian— " she gasped .
"I'm here," he said immediately, his voice tight but steady. "Stay down."
Her heart slammed wildly against her ribs.
Through the broken window, she saw movement.
Men.
Not random.
Not panicked.
Purposeful.
"They're coming," she whispered.
Adrian's expression changed instantly.
Cold.
Deadly.
The car door was yanked open.
Before the man could reach inside—
Adrian moved.
Fast. Precise.
He struck without hesitation, his movements sharp and controlled, years of discipline and power behind every action. The man barely had time to react before he was down.
Another approach.
Adrian didn't wait.
Nina watched, breathless, as the calm, controlled billionaire disappeared—replaced by something far more dangerous.
This wasn't business.
This wasn't a strategy.
This was survival.
"Stay in the car!" Adrian ordered.
But Nina wasn't frozen anymore.
Fear still pulsed through her—but beneath it was something stronger.
She grabbed the emergency tool from the side compartment, her fingers tightening around it.
Another man reached for Adrian from behind—
"Adrian!"
He turned just in time—but not fast enough.
Without thinking, Nina swung.
The metal connected with a sharp crack.
The man staggered back, collapsing.
Silence followed.
Heavy.
Broken only by Nina's ragged breathing.
For a moment, everything stood still.
Then Adrian turned to her.
Really looked at her.
"You could've been hurt," he said, his voice low—but not calm.
Not controlled.
Angry.
Not at her.
At the situation.
At the danger.
At the fact that she had been in it.
"You would've been," she shot back, her voice shaking but firm.
Their eyes locked.
Something intense.
Raw.
Unfiltered.
Sirens sounded in the distance.
The attackers retreated just as quickly as they came, disappearing into the night like shadows.
But the message was clear.
This wasn't intimidation anymore.
This was war.
Later, inside the penthouse—
Everything felt different.
Nina stood near the center of the room, her body still humming with adrenaline. Her hands trembled slightly, though she tried to hide it.
Adrian wasn't hiding anything.
He was pacing.
Tension radiating from him like heat.
"They got too close," he muttered. "Too close."
" I'm fine," Nina said.
"That's not the point, " he snapped.
Silence.
Then quieter—but more dangerous—
"You were in danger."
"I know."
" And you still—" he stopped himself , running a hand through his hair, frustration breaking through his usual control.
"I wasn't going to sit there and watch," she said.
His gaze snapped to hers.
"And I wasn't going to let anything happen to you."
The words hit harder than expected.
Because this time—
They weren't strategic.
They weren't calculated.
They were real.
The distance between them is closed without either of them noticing.
"You can't protect me from everything," Nina said softly.
"I can try."
"That's not the same."
"No," he said, his voice dropping. "It's not."
Silence stretched between them.
Thick.
Heavy.
Then—
"You matter to me," Adrian said.
No hesitation.
No control.
Just truth.
Nina's breath caught.
"Adrian…"
But she didn't finish.
Because something shifted.
Again.
But this time—
It didn't stop.
He stepped closer.
Close enough that she could feel the warmth of him, the tension, the restraint bar barely holding.
"You shouldn't," she whispered, though she didn't step back.
"Probably not," he replied.
But he didn't move away either.
Her heart pounded.
Loud.
Unsteady.
"Then why are you?" she asked.
His gaze dropped briefly to her lips before returning to her eyes.
"Because I can't seem to stop ."
That was it.
The last line.
The last barrier.
Nina closed the distance.
And this time—
He didn't stop her.
The kiss wasn't soft.
It wasn't hesitant.
It was everything they had been holding back—weeks of tension, danger, frustration, and something deeper neither of them had wanted to name.
His hand moved to her waist, pulling her closer, grounding her, claiming the space between them.
Her fingers curled into his shirt, holding on as if letting go wasn't an option anymore.
The world outside—
The danger.
The threats.
Kane.
Everything—
Faded.
When they finally pulled apart, the air felt different.
Heavier.
Changed.
Irreversible.
Nina looked at him, her breath uneven.
"That wasn't part of the plan," she said softly.
Adrian's gaze didn't waver.
"No, " he said.
"It wasn't."
And that was the truth.
There was no going back now.
Not to the contract.
Not to the distance.
Not to pretending.
Because whatever this was—
It was real.
And Kane had just turned it into their greatest weakness.
