As she lay there waiting for the room to stop spinning, her hand brushed against her chest. The fabric was wrong. She wasn't wearing her usual silk nightgown. She looked down. She was wearing an unfamiliar, oversized gray t-shirt. It smelled faintly of cedar and clean laundry.
Panic flared in her chest, hot and fast. Her heart kicked against her ribs. She frantically scanned the messy bedroom. Her designer dress from last night lay in a crumpled heap near the door.
Then, her gaze landed on the velvet chaise lounge at the foot of her bed. A dark, tailored suit jacket was draped over it.
The sound of running water stopped. A tall figure stepped out of her en-suite bathroom.
Colette stopped breathing.
Alexander paused at the foot of her bed. He held a glass of ice water in his large hand. His dark hair was slightly messy, lacking its usual severe corporate styling. Colette stared at his chest. His crisp white dress shirt was slightly wrinkled, and the top two buttons were undone, exposing the strong column of his throat.
Colette gasped. She scrambled backward, pulling the thick duvet up to her chin in a rigid, defensive posture. Her knuckles turned stark white.
"What did you do?" Her voice trembled, a raw mix of fear and rising anger. "You crossed a massive line, Alex. I will have Harrison reevaluate your position, your clearance, and what your 'loyalty' to the Beaumont family actually means." She lifted her chin, refusing to let him see the depth of her panic. She needed him to remember exactly who she was-not just a hungover girl in his shirt, but the heir to the empire that signed his paychecks.
Alex didn't flinch. His expression remained entirely unreadable, a smooth mask of stone. He tilted his head slightly, his dark, bottomless eyes locking onto her panicked face.
He took a slow, deliberate step forward.
Colette shrank back against the tufted headboard, her pulse hammering in her ears. He was her father's Chief Operating Officer. The estate steward's adopted son. He was always quiet, always in the background, always perfectly obedient. But right now, standing in her bedroom, his sheer physical size swallowed the oxygen in the room.
Alex placed the water glass on the nightstand. The glass made a quiet, controlled clink against the marble.
He leaned over her slightly. His broad shoulders cast a heavy shadow over her trembling form. Colette held her breath, bracing for a confrontation, her chest tight with terror.
Alex calmly reached past her. He picked up her discarded phone from the carpet.
He tapped the screen. He unlocked it using her passcode-a detail that made Colette's stomach drop-and handed the device to her. He never broke eye contact.
"How do you know my passcode?" she demanded, her voice dropping to a cold, suspicious register, the realization sending a fresh wave of unease through her veins. She gripped the phone tightly, waiting for a confession.
Alex didn't blink. His expression remained an impenetrable fortress. "Your passcode is entirely too simple. For security reasons, I highly suggest you change it immediately."
He smoothly sidestepped her accusation, leaving her frustrated by his flawless deflection. "Check your call logs from last night," he said. His voice was a low, steady rumble that vibrated in the quiet room.
Colette snatched the phone from his hand. Her fingers shook violently as she swiped to the recent calls tab.
The screen lit up with red text. Twelve unanswered outgoing calls to Julian Sterling. Twelve times she had stood in that crowded bar, crying over her fiancé, and he had ignored her.
Below that sea of red was a single white line. One outgoing call to Alexander. Duration: ten minutes and forty-two seconds.
"You called me at two in the morning," Alex explained, his tone devoid of judgment. "You were crying outside a bar in Manhattan. You couldn't stand up."
Colette stared at the screen. The memory hit her in fragmented flashes. The cold pavement. The tears ruining her makeup. The sound of Alex's voice on the other end of the line.
"I drove you home," Alex continued, stepping back to give her space. "I called Mrs. Davies. The housekeeper changed you out of your ruined clothes. She put you in one of my spare shirts that I keep at the office."
The realization hit Colette like a bucket of ice water. The defensive anger drained from her muscles, leaving behind a hollow, crushing mortification. She had drunk-dialed her father's employee. She had made him clean up her pathetic mess.
She dropped the phone onto the duvet. She couldn't look at him. She stared at the intricate pattern of the blanket, her cheeks burning with shame.
Alex picked up the water glass again. He reached out and pressed the cold glass into her trembling hands.
His warm fingers brushed against her knuckles. An unexpected, sharp jolt of electricity shot up Colette's arm. She flinched slightly, finally looking up at him.
"How do you feel?" he asked softly.
The corporate stiffness was gone from his voice. It was replaced by something dangerously tender, something that made Colette's damaged heart skip a very confused beat.