My name is Harper, and I’m about to die over fifty thousand dollars. That’s the exact cost of keeping my mother breathing on life support for an extra six months, a debt that just got sold to the worst kind of people in Boston. The icy rain was stinging my cheeks as I sprinted down a dead-end alley in the South End, my lungs burning, the heavy thud of boots echoing right behind me.
“Nowhere left to run, sweetheart!” a voice barked over the storm.
Three massive guys in leather jackets cornered me against a brick wall. I gripped my pepper spray, my hands shaking violently. I worked three jobs—barista, night auditor, freelance coder—but it was never enough to outrun the interest rate. The leader, a guy with a jagged scar across his jaw, flicked a switchblade. “Your time’s up. The boss says we make an example.”
I closed my eyes, bracing for the agony.
Instead, there was a deafening screech of tires. The blinding glare of headlights flooded the alley. Three matte-black SUVs skidded to a halt, boxing the thugs in. The doors flew open in unison. A dozen men in tailored suits stepped out, aiming suppressed weapons directly at my attackers. The loan sharks dropped their knives instantly, their cocky smirks vanishing into pale terror.
The back door of the center SUV opened slowly. A man stepped out into the pouring rain. He was impossibly tall, wearing a bespoke charcoal coat, his sharp, aristocratic features looking like they belonged on the cover of a European fashion magazine. But it was his eyes—cold, piercing, and terrifyingly familiar—that made my breath catch.
He didn’t look at the thugs. He walked straight toward me, his expensive leather shoes splashing in the grimy puddles. He stopped inches away, taking off his coat and wrapping it over my trembling shoulders.
“Harper,” he murmured, his voice a deep, resonant rumble that sent a shiver down my spine. “You kept me waiting.”
Part 2
“Julian?” I whispered, the name tasting like ash on my tongue. “Julian Thorne?”
The ruthless syndicate boss gave a slow, deliberate nod. Ten years ago at Oakridge Elite Prep, Julian was a chubby, awkward kid with a thick accent and glasses held together by duct tape. He was the favorite punching bag of Trent Sterling and his wealthy, sadistic friends. I was the only one who stepped in, bloodying Trent’s nose to get Julian’s stolen sketchbook back. Then, Julian vanished. Rumor had it his estranged grandfather—a notorious European oligarch—had dragged him across the Atlantic.
Now, he was back. And he was terrifying.
Within an hour, I was whisked away from my miserable reality and deposited into the clouds—specifically, a sprawling, glass-walled penthouse overlooking the city skyline. Julian’s armed men stood guard at the private elevators like statues.
“Your debts are erased, Harper,” Julian said, pouring a glass of amber whiskey at a massive marble bar. “I bought the paper. Every medical bill, every predatory loan. You owe them nothing.”
“So, I owe you instead?” I shot back, my defensive instincts flaring despite my exhaustion. “Is that how this works? A mafia boss buys a girl?”
Julian stopped, his knuckles turning white around the crystal glass. He closed the distance between us, his sheer size overwhelming. “You owe me nothing,” he said, his voice dangerously low. “For two years, I have watched over you from the shadows. Making sure you didn’t starve. Making sure you survived. I only intervened tonight because they crossed a line.”
“Watched me?” A cold chill washed over me. “You’ve been stalking me?”
“Protecting you,” he corrected smoothly. “And tonight, we finish it.”
He turned and left the room, telling me to wash up and change into the dress waiting on the guest bed.
Alone, my mind raced. I wandered down the long, shadowed hallway of the penthouse, looking for an exit or a phone. Instead, I found an open door leading to a sprawling study. Bookshelves lined the walls, but my eyes were immediately drawn to a pedestal in the center of the room.
It was a bulletproof glass display case, softly illuminated by a spotlight.
I walked closer, my breath catching in my throat. Sitting on a velvet cushion was a pair of old, cracked eyeglasses, the bridge clumsily wrapped in yellowing duct tape. My heart hammered. It was the exact pair Trent had broken ten years ago. The pair I had handed back to a weeping Julian in the rain. He had kept them. He had enshrined my one act of kindness like a sacred relic.
“A reminder,” his voice suddenly echoed from the doorway.
I spun around. Julian was leaning against the frame, fully dressed in a black tuxedo that made him look like the devil himself.
“A reminder of what?” I managed to ask.
“Of the only person in this godforsaken world who ever treated me like a human being,” he replied, walking toward me. He handed me a small, velvet jewelry box. “And a reminder of those who didn’t.”
I opened the box. Inside was a breathtaking diamond necklace, dazzling and cold.
“Put it on, Harper. We have a gala to attend.”
“A gala? I don’t belong in high society, Julian. I belong in the real world.”
“The real world is an illusion built by men like Trent Sterling,” Julian sneered, the name dripping with absolute venom.
That was the twist. The sudden realization hit me like a physical blow. “Trent? Trent is the one who funded the loan sharks?”
“Trent’s investment firm secretly backs the criminal underground of this entire city,” Julian revealed, his eyes burning with a dark, obsessive fire. “I didn’t just come back to America to save you, Harper. I came back to tear down his empire piece by piece. And tonight, I’m going to use you to do it.”
He offered me his arm, his expression unreadable. “Are you ready to watch them burn?”
Part 3
The ballroom of the Grand Plaza Hotel was a sea of silk, champagne, and poisonous whispers. I walked beside Julian, my hand resting on his arm, feeling the tense, coiled power radiating from him beneath his tuxedo. Every eye in the room tracked our entrance. I wore a crimson gown that his staff had provided, but inside, I was still the terrified girl from the alleyway.
It didn’t take long for the shark to circle.
Trent Sterling sauntered over, holding a crystal flute of champagne. He was older, his face sharper, but he still wore the same arrogant, entitled smirk he had in high school. He was flanked by two bodyguards and a sycophantic entourage of wealthy businessmen.
“Mr. Thorne,” Trent said, extending a hand that Julian ignored. Trent’s smile faltered slightly, but his eyes slid to me, flashing with predatory recognition. “Harper? Is that really you? Word on the street was you were drowning in debt, serving coffee to pay off your dead mother’s bills. Looks like you found a rather lucrative new… profession.”
Before I could even react, Julian moved.
It wasn’t a violent strike, but a calculated, terrifying shift in posture. He stepped entirely between Trent and me, his towering frame casting a long shadow. The music in the ballroom seemed to grind to an immediate halt.
“Mr. Sterling,” Julian said, his voice echoing loudly enough to draw the attention of the surrounding elite. “I believe you are confused about who holds the power in this room.”
Trent scoffed, trying to maintain his bravado. “Listen here, Thorne. You might be some hotshot European money, but this is my city. My firm owns half the real estate and the debt of everyone in this zip code.”
“Not anymore,” Julian replied smoothly. He snapped his fingers.
One of Julian’s men stepped forward, handing Trent a thick leather folder. Trent snatched it, ripping it open. As he read the documents inside, all the color drained from his face. His arrogant smirk completely dissolved into sheer, unadulterated panic.
“This… this is impossible,” Trent stammered, his hands shaking violently. “You… you hostile-took over Vanguard Investments? You bought my offshore accounts? The loan portfolios?”
“I bought everything,” Julian declared, his voice cold and commanding. “I bought your firm, your properties, and the illicit debts you used to terrorize innocent people. I own the banks that hold your mortgages. As of this exact second, Trent, you are entirely bankrupt. You have absolutely nothing.”
Whispers erupted across the ballroom. The socialites and politicians began backing away from Trent like he was diseased.
“Why?” Trent gasped, looking completely broken. “Why would you target me?”
Julian reached up, slowly pulling a pair of old, tape-covered glasses from his tuxedo pocket. He held them up so Trent could clearly see.
Recognition hit Trent like a freight train. “Julian? The kid from Oakridge?”
“You made my life hell,” Julian whispered, stepping so close Trent had to crane his neck up. “But I didn’t destroy you for that. I destroyed you because you dared to put a bounty on the only woman who ever showed me mercy.”
Julian’s guards suddenly moved in, kicking the back of Trent’s knees. Trent collapsed to the marble floor with a pathetic cry, landing right at my feet.
“Apologize to her,” Julian commanded, his voice shaking the room. “Apologize, or you won’t even have a cardboard box to sleep in tonight.”
Trent, weeping openly, pressed his forehead to the marble. “I’m sorry, Harper. I’m so sorry. Please.”
I stared down at the boy who used to rule the school, now nothing but a hollow, broken shell. “Get out of my sight,” I whispered. Trent scrambled to his feet and ran from the ballroom, his entourage abandoning him instantly.
The silence in the room was absolute.
Then, Julian turned to me. To the absolute shock of the hundreds of elites watching, the ruthless syndicate boss dropped to one knee before me, right there in the center of the glittering ballroom.
He took my trembling hands in his large, warm ones. The terrifying mafia king was gone, and looking up at me were the soft, devoted eyes of the boy I had saved ten years ago.
“Everything I have built over the last decade,” Julian said softly, loud enough only for me to hear. “Every dollar, every company, every drop of blood I spilled… it was all for this. To create a world where no one could ever hurt you again.”
He kissed the back of my hand. “Welcome home, Harper.”