The ballroom glitters like a diamond I can't afford. Chandeliers drip with crystals, champagne flows like liquid gold, and the air hums with the smug laughter of people who know they'll never have to check the price tag before buying. And me? I'm the imposter in a borrowed dress and secondhand confidence.
I smooth the satin over my hips and force myself to keep my chin high, reminding myself I belong here. Not because of my last name, or because I was born into this endless parade of wealth, but because ambition has teeth and mine bites harder than anyone else's. I repeat it like a mantra: I'm not here for pleasure. I'm here for the opportunity.
Still, my gaze flickers around the ballroom like a thief casing a mark. Glittering gowns. Cufflinks are worth more than my rent. A string quartet tucked neatly in the corner, bowing out an elegant waltz that feels like it belongs in a movie instead of real life. I grab a glass of champagne from a passing waiter to have something to do with my hands. The bubbles sting my nose. One sip, and I already regret it. Too sweet, too sharp. Like everything else in this room, it doesn't belong to me. "Relax," I murmur to myself. "Smile, network, leave. That's the plan." Easier said than done. I step toward the bar, weaving between glittering couples, and that's when it happens.
One second, I'm avoiding eye contact with a man in a tuxedo who looks like he eats assistants for breakfast. Next, my shoulder slams into something solid. My glass wobbles. A splash of champagne leaps over the rim and hits my wrist. "Oh God...sorry, I wasn't...." I stop. Because the man I've just crashed into isn't someone. He's an entire storm wrapped in a perfectly tailored black suit. Broad shoulders. Sharp jawline. Dark hair brushed carelessly off a forehead that seems made for furrowed frowns and sinful thoughts. And his eyes !! Dear God, his eyes are the kind of dangerous blue that makes you want to confess secrets you've never told anyone. He steadies me with a hand on my elbow. Large, warm, firm. My pulse trips like it's forgotten how to beat. "Careful," he says, voice low and smooth, like whiskey poured neat. "These floors are slippery when you're not watching where you're going."
Heat floods my cheeks. Embarrassment. Irritation. Something else I don't want to name. "I said I'm sorry," I snap, pulling my arm free. "But maybe if you didn't stand in the middle of the walkway like a statue, people wouldn't." My words die when his mouth curves. Not quite a smile. More like the devil considering a deal. "Feisty," he says softly. "I like that." I blink, caught between outrage and a very inconvenient flutter low in my stomach. Who is this man? Around us, the party hums on, oblivious. But in this little pocket of space, it feels like the air has thickened, turned electric. I glance away, desperate to reset my brain. I planned to stay invisible tonight. Not to lock eyes with a stranger who looks like he could ruin women for sport. But before I can move, he leans closer, just enough that I catch the faintest whiff of something dark and clean cedarwood and expensive cologne.
"You don't belong here, do you?" he asks. The words hit me like a slap. My spine stiffens. "Excuse me?" His gaze lingers on me like he's reading a file no one else has access to. "You're not like them," he murmurs, chin tipping toward the cluster of glittering guests nearby. "You don't care about being seen. You're watching. Calculating. You'd rather be anywhere else."
The champagne glass trembles in my hand. He's too close to the truth, and I hate it.
"I don't know what you're talking about," I say, sharper than I mean to.
"Don't you?"
I meet his gaze again, and my chest squeezes.
Damn him. Damn his confidence. Damn the way my body leans an inch too close even as my brain screams danger.
"Who are you?" I whisper before I can stop myself.
His grin sharpens. "Adrian Blackwood."
The name lands like thunder in my chest. Of course, I've heard it. Everyone in the city has. The billionaire CEO. The ruthless dealmaker. The man who built an empire from shadows and steel.
And now he's standing in front of me, looking at me like I'm not just another nameless guest in a borrowed dress.
He tips his head, studying me. "And you are?"
I open my mouth. But before I can speak, a passing photographer snaps a photo. The flash blinds me.
By the time my vision clears, Adrian Blackwood is still watching me. Intense. Curious.
Like a predator deciding whether to pounce.
I swallow hard, acutely aware of his stare, like it's peeling me open layer by layer.
"Amelia," I manage finally, my voice steady even though my insides aren't. "Amelia Cole."
He repeats my name slowly, like he's tasting it. "Amelia."
It's ridiculous, how intimate it sounds coming from him. I've heard my name a million times, but on his tongue, it's something else entirely.
"Nice to meet you, but if you'll excuse me," I turn toward the bar, praying my knees don't betray how unsteady they feel.
"Running already?" His voice follows, smooth as silk and sharp as glass. "I haven't even scared you yet."
I spin back, glaring. "You don't scare me."
The way his grin curves tells me he doesn't believe me. Worse, a treacherous part of me doesn't believe me either.
I push past him and slide onto a barstool, setting down my half-empty champagne flute with a little more force than necessary. The bartender approaches, and I order water just to give myself a reason to look away.
But I can feel him. I don't even need to check. Adrian Blackwood takes the seat beside me like he owns it, like he owns the entire damn room.
He doesn't say anything at first. Just sits there, elbow propped on the bar, watching me in that unnerving way.
Finally, I snap. "Do you have a habit of bothering strangers?"
His lips twitch. "Only the interesting ones."
I roll my eyes, but heat flares in my chest anyway. "Well, congratulations. You've had your fun. Now you can go… I don't know, brood in a corner and let me enjoy my night in peace."
"Enjoy?" His gaze sweeps me slowly, deliberately. "You look like you'd rather be anywhere but here."
He's not wrong, which only irritates me more. "You're very observant."
"It's a talent," he says smoothly. "I can tell you don't like champagne, either."
I blink. "How....??"
"You wrinkled your nose when you drank it."
Damn him. He notices too much.
"I don't see how that's any of your business," I mutter.
"Everything about you is my business right now."
The audacity. My breath catches, caught somewhere between outrage and an entirely different kind of heat.
I open my mouth to deliver a cutting remark, but he leans in just slightly, his voice dropping low enough that I feel it more than I hear it.
"Tell me, Amel, what are you really doing here?"
For a moment, the noise of the party fades. The string quartet. The clinking glasses. The polite laughter. All of it becomes background static under the weight of his question.
I should lie. I should tell him I'm just here for fun, or because a friend dragged me, or anything that doesn't reveal how badly I want to climb the ladder, how much I need connections like this gala offers.
But the way he's looking at me makes my throat dry. Like he'd know if I lied. Like he'd enjoy catching me in it.
So I go for the safest version of the truth. "Networking," I say flatly.
Adrian studies me. "You don't strike me as someone who settles for scraps of attention."
Scraps? I bristle. "Not everyone gets to waltz into a room and own it, Mr. Blackwood."
He smiles faintly. "Call me Adrian."
"No, thanks."
He chuckles, low and rich. "Stubborn, too. You're full of surprises."
"Maybe you should stop looking for them."
I grab my water and take a long sip, but it doesn't cool the heat building under my skin.
Adrian doesn't push, not directly. Instead, he signals to the bartender and orders something dark and amber, neat. His movements are fluid, practiced, confident, like he was born in this world of wealth and glass and power.
I tell myself to ignore him. To focus on my real purpose here. Find someone useful to talk to, make an impression, and leave before midnight.
But then he shifts closer, and my body betrays m,e every nerve suddenly aware of his proximity.
"You're not like them," he says again, softly, like it's a secret between us.
I turn to snap back, but he's already watching me with that intense, unreadable gaze. Blue eyes like storms over deep water.
My pulse skips. My throat tightens.
This is insane. I don't even know him. He's a stranger, a billionaire with a reputation sharper than a blade.
And yet, sitting here, it feels like he sees me. Really sees me.
I tear my gaze away, desperate for distance. "You should probably find someone else to charm, Adrian. I'm not interested."
His laugh is soft, almost disbelieving. "That's a lie."
I jerk my head back to glare at him. "Excuse me?"
He leans in, close enough that I catch the faint scent of his cologne again. "You feel it, too. That pull. I can see it in your eyes."
My breath catches. Anger flares, sharp and blinding, but underneath it, dammit, there's truth. A magnetic, undeniable pull I don't want to admit.
I shove back my chair, heart racing. "You're arrogant."
"And you're tempted," he counters easily, not moving an inch.
Our gazes clash, and for a long, dangerous moment, neither of us looks away.
The noise of the party swirls back around us, but it's meaningless. All I can hear is the pounding of my pulse, all I can see is him.
Adrian Blackwood. The man everyone whispers about. The man I should stay far, far away from.
So why does it feel like I'm already caught?
The music slowed, shifting into something deeper, sultrier. The kind of melody that lingered on the skin like heat. I made the mistake of looking toward the dance floor, at the swirl of gowns and tuxedos, before turning back.
He was already on his feet.
Adrian's hand extended toward me, steady and certain, as if my refusal had never been an option. "Dance with me."
I laughed, sharp and defensive. "Not a chance."
"Why not?" His voice was maddeningly calm, edged with amusement.
"Because I don't dance with strangers." I kept my chin high. "And I definitely don't dance with arrogant billionaires who think everything bends to their will."
His mouth tilted in something far too close to a smile. "You think the world bends for me?"
"I think you take what you want." My pulse betrayed me, quick and uneven. "And I'm not about to be taken."
Instead of backing down, his eyes darkened with intrigue. He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "And yet, you're still here, still talking."
Before I could deliver the cutting reply on my tongue, his hand moved closer, waiting. "Just one dance, Amelia. No strings. No promises. Just this."
I should have walked away. Every part of me screamed at me to put distance between us. But his voice curled around my name like a secret, and my hand betrayed me.
The moment our palms met, something sharp and electric jolted through me.
He led me into the crowd, the room parting easily around him. When his hand settled at the small of my back, steady and unyielding, my breath caught. Heat spread through my skin like fire racing across dry grass.
"This is a mistake," I whispered, hating how shaky I sounded.
"Probably." His lips brushed the edge of my ear, low and dangerous. "But the best ones usually are."
The music pulled us into motion. His steps were smooth, effortless, his body close to mine as if it had always known where I belonged. My hand rested against his shoulder, and despite every warning in my head, I fit against him too easily, like we had been made for this rhythm.
I tried to focus on anything else, the chandelier glittering overhead, the laughter nearby, but his thumb grazed against my spine, and my eyes snapped back to his.
The look he gave me stole the ground from beneath my feet. Heat. Hunger. Certainty.
"You're trembling," he murmured.
"I am not," I lied.
His soft laugh made my pulse stumble. "Brave little liar."
I should have pushed him away. Instead, I let him guide me deeper into the music, every brush of his hand unraveling something carefully bound inside me. My breath shortened, my chest rising against his with every step, and then the strings swelled.
Adrian's head lowered. "What are you....?!"
His mouth claimed mine before I could finish.
The world stopped.
It wasn't gentle. It wasn't tentative. It was bold and searing, the kind of kiss that took without asking, that left no room for denial. My body went rigid and then melted, betraying me completely as his lips moved against mine.
I tasted heat, spice, danger. I felt his hand tighten against my back, pulling me closer until the air between us ceased to exist. A soft sound escaped me, half protest, half surrender, and his mouth curved against mine like he'd won something.
When he finally broke away, I was breathless, dazed, and trembling.
"That," he said, voice low and steady, "won't be the last time."
My hand lingered on his chest, my palm rising and falling with the thrum of his heartbeat. Then sense snapped back like a whip. I shoved lightly against him, stumbling away, breath ragged.
"This was a mistake," I whispered, though the words rang hollow.
"Maybe," he said smoothly, eyes burning into mine. "But you'll think about it tonight. And tomorrow. And every time you walk into a room and wonder if I'll be in it."
I didn't answer. Couldn't.
Because he was right.
I turned on my heel and forced myself to leave the dance floor, weaving through the glittering crowd, desperate for distance. But even as I fled, my lips burned, my body ached, and my mind betrayed me with the truth: I already knew I'd never forget the way Adrian Blackwood kissed me.