He was lying on his stomach, his face buried in the pillow. He was massive, his shoulders broad and sculpted with a lethal kind of strength that my husband, Joshua, had never possessed. But it was his back that made my breath hitch. A jagged, ugly scar tore across his right shoulder blade, a map of violence etched into bronze skin.
*What have I done?*
Memories of the Charity Gala flashed in disjointed bursts. The suffocating polite conversation. Joshua ignoring me for his phone. The whiskey I shouldn't have touched. The stranger with eyes like storm clouds who had looked at me not as a hostage, not as a Hartman trophy, but as a woman.
I scrambled out of bed, my legs trembling. My silver silk dress was a puddle of shame on the floor. I snatched it up, my hands shaking so hard I could barely pull the zipper.
I needed to leave. Now. Before he woke up. Before Joshua realized I hadn't come home.
I reached for my clutch on the nightstand and froze.
Next to a heavy crystal tumbler sat a notepad. Embossed in the thick, cream paper was a black, gothic 'C'.
*Caldwell.*
The blood drained from my face. I hadn't just cheated on my husband; I had slept with a member of his family. The family that had decimated mine, the family that held me captive in a loveless, political marriage. If Joshua found out, I would be punished. If *The Don*-Anthony Caldwell, the monster who ruled this city-found out I had tainted his bloodline with my infidelity, I would disappear.
I looked at the sleeping man. He wasn't Joshua. He was too big, too scarred. A cousin? An enforcer?
It didn't matter. I had to make sure he never looked for me. I had to make this meaningless. A transaction.
I opened my wallet. Three hundred dollars. It was pathetic, but it was all I had in cash. I pulled a pen from the nightstand-a heavy Montblanc that probably cost more than my life was worth-and tore a page from the notepad.
*For the service. Keep the change.*
I shoved the bills and the note under the crystal glass. It was an insult. A way to reduce a night of earth-shattering passion into a cheap exchange. If he thought I was just a bored, rich wife paying for a gigolo, maybe his pride would stop him from chasing me.
I grabbed my heels, not daring to put them on yet, and ran. The plush carpet swallowed the sound of my bare feet as I fled the penthouse, escaping the cage I had built for myself, only to run back to the one I had been sold into.
*
Anthony Caldwell POV
The door clicked shut, and the silence of the penthouse returned.
I didn't move for a long moment. I lay there, listening to the fading echo of her footsteps. Usually, the morning after a woman stayed over-which was rare-my skin crawled. My senses, always dialed up to a maddening eleven, would scream at the lingering perfume, the noise of their breathing, the cloying neediness.
But with her... there was only silence. A heavy, velvet quiet that settled over the chaos in my head.
She was an anchor.
I rolled over and sat up, the sheets pooling at my waist. The headache that usually plagued me was gone, replaced by a strange, hollow hunger. I wanted her back in this bed. I wanted to know why a woman with sadness in her eyes tasted like salvation.
My gaze drifted to the nightstand.
A stack of crumpled bills sat under my water glass. A piece of paper fluttered slightly in the draft from the air conditioning.
I frowned, reaching out to snatch the paper.
*For the service. Keep the change.*
The words hit me like a physical blow. The air in the room seemed to drop twenty degrees.
A low, dark sound rumbled in my chest-half laugh, half growl. She thought I was a whore? Me? The man who held the leash of every politician and criminal in Chicago?
She had left me three hundred dollars.
I crushed the note and the money in my fist, my knuckles turning white. The insult burned, hot and bright, but beneath it, something darker uncoiled. A possessive, predatory instinct that I hadn't felt in years.
She thought she could use me, pay me, and discard me?
I picked up the internal phone and dialed a single number.
"Don?" Clay Shepard's voice was sharp, alert.
"Check the penthouse elevator and lobby surveillance from the last ten minutes," I ordered, my voice a jagged blade of ice. "Find the woman in the silver dress."
"Is there a problem, sir?"
I looked at the empty side of the bed, the indent of her body still visible on the pillow.
"No," I said softly, dangerously. "But there is going to be."
I stood up, the predator fully awake now.
"I don't care what it takes, Clay. Find her. And bring her to me."