The rain came down like punishment from the heavens, soaking through Alora Monroe's thin dress as she stood frozen on the marble steps outside the Langford Hotel. Her heels wobbled under her, not just from the slick pavement-but from the sheer disbelief anchoring her in place.
Inside, behind those towering glass doors, her life had just shattered into a thousand unfixable pieces.
She gripped the velvet box still clenched in her hand. The custom-engraved ring she had planned to give Daniel for their one-year anniversary now felt like a cruel joke-a glittering symbol of love that never existed.
Alora's chest heaved, eyes wide and unfocused. Her breath fogged in the cold air, mixing with the heat of betrayal crawling up her throat like bile.
She had caught him.
Daniel. Her fiancé. The man who promised her forever.
In bed.
With her boss.
Her goddamn boss.
Two bodies tangled in sheets that weren't theirs. Moans that should've belonged to her. Eyes that once adored her now vacant with lust for another. Alora had opened the door to his hotel suite with shaking hands, ready to surprise him.
Instead, she had walked in on her own devastation.
"Stupid," she muttered bitterly to herself, her voice cracking.
How could she have been so blind?
The wind whipped her wet hair across her face, mixing tears with rain as the sky poured without mercy. She could barely see past the parking lights flickering in the lot, but she knew she couldn't stay here. Not a second longer.
Dragging her limbs forward, she stepped down onto the slick pavement, shoes slipping as she staggered toward the street. Her phone buzzed in her clutch, but she didn't answer. She didn't have the strength.
Not for Daniel.
Not for apologies.
Not for lies.
She walked blindly into the night, tears hot despite the cold, her heels clicking against the sidewalk until she reached the curb and finally stopped-staring blankly at the rushing lights of Manhattan traffic.
Cars passed. Horns blared. People laughed in distant corners of the city. But Alora felt utterly invisible, like the world had swallowed her whole and spat her out with a cruel smile.
A deep voice suddenly sliced through the air beside her.
"You shouldn't be out here alone."
She flinched, eyes whipping to the side. A sleek black car had pulled up, and the tinted window lowered just enough to reveal a man inside. His gaze locked on hers, intense and unreadable.
She instinctively took a step back. "I'm fine."
"You're drenched. Shivering. Standing in the middle of Manhattan at midnight." His tone was calm, firm. "You're not fine."
Alora swallowed, trying to regain composure. "Look, I don't need-"
The passenger door clicked open.
"I didn't ask if you needed help," the man said. "I'm offering it."
She hesitated. Every instinct screamed to walk away. To run. But her legs trembled from the cold and the emotional wreckage that had broken her spirit. And the man... there was something strange about him. Not dangerous. Not entirely. Just... certain. Like he knew exactly who he was, and what she was going through.
Against all logic, her body moved before her mind did. Alora slid into the car, the warmth engulfing her like a trap she didn't yet recognize.
The door shut. The car began to move.
Silence fell thick between them.
She risked a glance at him.
He was dangerously handsome-sharp jawline, dark hair swept back, charcoal suit molded to his tall frame like power had been tailored for him. But it was his eyes that unnerved her: piercing, ice-gray, as if they could see straight through her soul.
"You don't know me," she whispered.
"I don't have to."
"Then why are you helping me?"
His gaze didn't shift from the road ahead. "Because I know what broken looks like. And you, sweetheart, look like you're about to shatter."
Her throat tightened.
"What's your name?" he asked quietly.
She hesitated. "Alora."
He nodded once, slowly. "Liam."
Liam.
The name felt like a chill across her spine-powerful, grounded, unmistakably dominant.
He leaned forward slightly, speaking to the driver through a built-in intercom. "Take us to West 57th. Penthouse level."
Alora's head turned fast. "Wait-where are we going?"
"To someplace safe."
She narrowed her eyes. "I didn't agree to that."
Liam turned to her, calm and unreadable. "Do you have somewhere better to be tonight, Alora? Someone waiting for you?"
Her lips parted, but no words came.
No one was waiting.