The clock on the wall of the executive suite ticked toward midnight, its rhythmic thrum sounding like a heavy, mechanical heartbeat in the oppressive silence. The office—which had belonged to Dominic just twelve hours ago—now felt like a battlefield covered in silk and shadows. Every inch of the room was a reminder of the man Serafina was currently dismantling. The scent of expensive sandalwood and aged scotch still clung to the heavy drapes, a ghost of the life she had once shared with him, back when she was the quiet wife waiting in the wings.
Serafina sat behind the massive mahogany desk, the leather of the executive chair creaking softly as she shifted. The blue light from her laptop screen reflected in her eyes, casting a cold, ethereal glow over her features that made her look more like a marble statue than a woman. She had spent the last six hours systematically restructuring the Sinclair board, moving pieces on a digital chessboard that would leave Dominic with nothing but the clothes on his back. It was grueling, clinical work, but a dark spark of satisfaction flared in her chest with every loyalist she removed.
Still, her mind kept drifting to the look on his face when the security team had escorted him out earlier that day. It hadn't just been anger; it had been the look of a man who realized his entire world was built on sand.
A sudden, sharp click echoed from the heavy oak door.
Serafina didn’t look up. She knew that stride—the heavy, arrogant rhythm of a man who believed the world should make room for him. She kept her fingers moving, the steady clack-clack of the keys a rhythmic dismissal of his presence.
"The locks have been changed, Dominic," she said, her voice dropping to a dangerous, clinical coldness. "Which means you either committed a felony to get in here or you’re prepared to be arrested for trespassing. I’m leaning toward the latter."
Dominic stepped out of the shadows, the red emergency lighting from the hallway silhouetting his broad frame. His jacket was gone, and his white dress shirt was unbuttoned at the collar, revealing the frantic pulse at the base of his throat. He looked like a man who had spent the last eight hours at the bottom of a bottle—disheveled, dangerous, and unnervingly focused. He held up a small, silver key, twirling it between his fingers with a dark, mocking grin.
"My father had a private elevator installed through the maintenance shaft during the '08 expansion," he said, his voice a low, gravelly rasp that seemed to suck the oxygen out of the room. "Even the Valkyrie doesn't know every secret of this building, Serafina. I built this empire. You’re just a squatter in a high-rise."
He walked toward the desk, his movements slow and predatory. He didn't stop until he was standing directly over her, his shadow stretching across the wall, swallowing the light behind him. The scent of him—expensive cologne cut with the sharp tang of scotch—swirled around her, triggering a landslide of unwanted memories. Memories of nights spent in this very office, of him leaning over her just like this, telling her she was the only thing in his life that actually mattered.
It had been a lie then.
Now It was a weapon.
"I told you to leave, Dominic," she said, finally leaning back and meeting his gaze. She didn't look small; she looked bored, as if he were an uninvited guest at a gala he was no longer wealthy enough to attend. "The building is under new management. You’re just trespassing in a house that’s already been sold."
"And I told you I don't lose," he countered. He leaned down, slamming both hands onto the mahogany surface, caging her in. The force of it made the laptop screen wobble. "You took my company. You took my board. You even took my name off the lobby directory. Tell me, Sera... when will the blood on the floor finally satisfy you? When is the revenge enough?"
Serafina stood up slowly, her movement forcing him to take a half-step back to avoid a collision. She didn't retreat; she moved into his space until she could feel the restless heat radiating from his chest.
"When you feel exactly as small as I felt when you handed me those divorce papers in the rain," she whispered, her voice a razor-thin blade. "When you look in the mirror and realize that the only thing you ever truly had, you threw away for a lie. You think I’m the villain here? I’m just the consequence of your own arrogance."
Dominic’s gaze dropped to her lips, and for a heartbeat, the corporate war vanished. The air between them hummed with a violent, undeniable electricity—the kind that precedes a lightning strike. He reached out, his fingers grazing the silk of her sleeve before sliding up to the sensitive, pulsing skin of her neck.
Serafina didn't gasp. She didn't tremble. She tilted her head, watching him with the detached curiosity of a scientist observing a dying specimen under a microscope.
"You think I don't see it?" Dominic breathed, his thumb tracing the line of her jaw, his touch both a caress and a threat. "You can buy every share in this company, Serafina. You can burn my legacy to the ground. But you can’t rewrite the way your blood thunders when I’m this close to you. You’re still mine, in the ways that matter."
"This is nothing but biology, Dominic," she countered, her voice steady and sharp. "A ghost of a muscle memory I’m currently training out of my system. Like a bad habit... or a parasite that stayed too long in its host."
"Is it?" He leaned in closer, his lips brushing against hers as he spoke, an agonizing promise of the intimacy they once owned. "Then tell me to stop. Tell me you don't miss the way I used to make you scream my name in the dark. Tell me you don't want me to take you right here, on the desk you stole from me."
The tension snapped—but not because she yielded.
Serafina’s hand flew up, not to push him away, but to grip the collar of his shirt. She yanked him down with a sudden, violent strength that caught him off guard. She didn't melt into him; she attacked. Dominic crashed his lips against hers, a desperate, hungry kiss that tasted of scotch and years of repressed longing. It wasn't romantic; it was a collision. His hands tangled in her hair, pulling her head back—but she matched his ferocity, her nails digging into his shoulders through the thin fabric of his shirt.
For a split second, the CEO and the Valkyrie vanished, leaving only two people who had been hollowed out by their own pride, seeking a comfort that was already dead.
But then, the memory of the sonogram flashed in her mind. The memory of him laughing with the woman who had helped him ruin her.
Serafina tore herself away, her chest heaving, her lips swollen and red. She didn't look flustered—she looked triumphant. She shoved him back, her eyes narrowing as she watched him struggle to catch his breath. The distance between them now felt like a canyon of jagged ice.
"Is that it?" she asked, her voice ringing with a cold, mocking laughter that echoed off the high ceilings. "The Great Dominic Sinclair, reduced to using a maintenance key and a desperate kiss just to feel relevant? It’s pathetic, Dominic. You’re not a king anymore. You’re just a stalker in an expensive suit."
Dominic stood there, his breath ragged, the dark triumph in his eyes fading into raw, jagged frustration. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, looking at her with a hunger that now reeks of desperation. For the first time, he looked like a man who was truly losing control.
"You can hate me all you want, Serafina," he hissed, his voice a dangerous promise. "But we’re not done. Not by a long shot. Tomorrow morning, I’m going to that hotel. I’m going to see my son. And this time, Julian Vance won't be there to protect you from the truth."
He turned and walked toward his private elevator, his heels clicking sharply against the marble floor. But Serafina’s voice stopped him before the doors could hiss open.
"Go ahead, Dominic. Go to the hotel," she said, her voice dropping to a level that made the hair on his arms stand up. "But remember—I own that hotel. I own the security team that guards the perimeter. And by tomorrow morning, I might just have my lawyers own the rights to your visitation, too. I’d sleep well if I were you. It might be the last night you have a clear conscience."
He paused, his jaw tightening so hard the bone seemed ready to snap, his fingers clenching into white-knuckled fists at his sides. He didn't look back. He stepped into the elevator and vanished into the depths of the building he no longer owned.
Serafina sank back into the mahogany chair. She didn't cry. She didn't let her hands shake. She reached out and pulled her laptop back toward her, the blue light reflecting in her cold, clear eyes. She was a Valkyrie, and the field was covered in the bodies of her enemies.
"Tomorrow," she whispered to the empty room, her voice a final, echoing vow. "You lose something you can't take back."





