Chapter 2

The Venom in His Vows

The heavy steel doors of the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility groaned open, spitting Harper out into the bleak, gray morning.

There was no fanfare. No apologies for the three years of hell she had endured. Just the harsh, metallic slam of the gates closing behind her, sealing away the nightmare of concrete, violence, and institutionalized cruelty.

Harper stood on the cracked pavement, wearing a cheap, ill-fitting tracksuit issued by the state. She reached up with a trembling hand, her fingers brushing the scarred tissue behind her left ear. A dull, incessant ringing buzzed in that side of her head—a permanent souvenir from her second month inside. A girl named Roxy had wanted Harper’s commissary tray. Harper, fiercely protective of the only things she owned, had fought back. Roxy had used a sharpened toothbrush handle.

Now, the world on her left side was nothing but a muted, watery hum.

"Keep moving, Quinn! You’re loitering on state property!" a guard shouted from the watchtower.

Harper didn't flinch. The fear had been beaten out of her a long time ago, replaced by a cold, hardened shell. She gripped her plastic belongings bag and started walking down the desolate access road, heading toward the small bus stop a mile away.

She needed to get to the city. She needed to see Liam.

Her younger brother was the only thing that had kept her from swallowing a handful of smuggled pills in her cell. He was supposed to be finishing his engineering degree by now. The thought of his bright, easy smile was the only beacon of light in her ruined mind.

As she rounded the bend toward the bus stop, she saw a man in a wrinkled suit leaning against a rusted bench, holding a manila folder. Harper’s steps faltered. It was David, the overworked public defender who had utterly failed to keep her out of prison.

Harper marched up to him, her posture rigid, her surviving ear straining to hear him over the wind.

"David," Harper said, her voice raspy from disuse. "What are you doing here? I told you I never wanted to see your face again after you let Julian walk away scot-free."

David looked up, his eyes bloodshot and heavy with exhaustion. He didn't offer a greeting, nor did he flinch at her hostility. He just looked... incredibly sad.

"Hello, Harper," he said quietly. He held out the manila folder. "I didn't know how to tell you in a letter. The warden wouldn't approve an emergency phone call because it wasn't a death notification."

Harper stared at the folder, a cold dread pooling in her stomach. The fierce, defensive armor she had built over three years suddenly felt paper-thin. "What are you talking about? What wasn't a death notification?"

"It’s about Liam," David said, his voice breaking slightly.

Harper snatched the folder from his hands, her heart hammering wildly against her ribs. "Where is he? Why isn't he here to pick me up? He promised he would be here."

"Harper, please, sit down," David urged, gesturing to the bench.

"I don't want to sit down!" she yelled, ripping the folder open. "Tell me what happened to my brother!"

David swallowed hard, looking away from her desperate, wild eyes. "Six months ago, Liam was walking home from his night shift at the library. He was crossing the intersection at 4th and Elm. A black SUV ran the red light."

Harper stopped breathing. The words on the police report blurred together, but a few jumped out like physical blows. *Hit and run. Massive spinal trauma. Comatose.*

"No," Harper whispered, stumbling backward. She dropped her plastic bag. "No, no, no. He’s twenty-two. He’s healthy. Where is he?"

"He survived the initial impact," David explained quickly, stepping forward to catch her arm, but she violently shoved him away. "Harper, listen to me. He survived, but his spine was shattered. He’s paralyzed from the neck down. He’s been on a ventilator at the Riverside Care Facility ever since."

"Paralyzed?" The word tasted like ash in her mouth. Her brilliant, energetic brother, who used to run marathons and dance in her kitchen while she cooked. "Who did it? Did they catch the driver?"

"No," David sighed, rubbing his temples. "The cameras at the intersection were malfunctioning that night. The police have no leads. It was a ghost car."

Harper sank onto the rusted bench, her legs completely giving out. Tears, which she had sworn she would never shed again, spilled hot and fast down her hollowed cheeks. "Riverside? That’s a private neurological clinic. How... how is he there? I have nothing. Julian and Chloe took the restaurant, they took my accounts. I’m a felon, David! How am I supposed to pay for a ventilator?"

"The state was going to move him to a public ward," David said softly. "But... someone intervened. An anonymous donor stepped in and paid the facility for a full year of private care. I don't know who. I just know the bills are astronomical, Harper. Close to fifty thousand a month."

Harper buried her face in her hands, her mind spinning into a dark, suffocating abyss. She was utterly broken. Her career was destroyed, her reputation was a punchline, she was half-deaf, and now her reason for breathing was trapped in a broken body.

"I need to see him," she sobbed, rocking back and forth. "I need to get to him."

"The bus comes in an hour," David said gently. "I can give you twenty bucks for the fare, Harper. That's all I have on me."

Before Harper could respond, the low, powerful purr of a high-end engine cut through the quiet morning air.

David turned, squinting down the dusty road. Harper slowly lifted her head, wiping her eyes with the rough sleeve of her tracksuit.

A massive, sleek black limousine was gliding down the access road. It looked entirely alien against the backdrop of the razor wire and dead grass. The vehicle moved with a predatory grace, slowing down perfectly as it approached the bus stop.

It rolled to a stop right in front of them, the heavy tires crunching over the gravel.

Harper stood up instinctively, her fierce, protective instincts flaring to life. She didn't know who this was, but three years in Bedford Hills had taught her that nothing shiny ever came without teeth.

The rear passenger window began to lower with a soft, electric hum.

Harper held her breath.

Sitting in the immaculate leather interior was a man who practically radiated wealth and ruthless power. He had sharp, aristocratic features, dark hair swept back flawlessly, and eyes that were a striking, piercing silver. He looked like a predator resting in a custom-tailored suit.

Harper recognized him instantly from the magazines Julian used to leave around the apartment. Silas Mercer. The billionaire venture capitalist. The hospitality tycoon who bought up failing empires and gutted them for sport.

Silas’s silver eyes locked onto Harper, completely ignoring David. His gaze was intense, assessing, and strangely... hungry. He looked at her not like a ruined ex-convict in a cheap tracksuit, but like something entirely precious.

Silas rolls down the window and says, "Get in, Harper. Your brother is waiting for you."

Chapter 3

The electric hum of the tinted window rolling down sounded like a vault sealing shut behind her. Harper stood rooted to the cracked pavement, the harsh midday sun beating down on her oversized, threadbare tracksuit. Her left ear, still buzzing with the permanent, hollow ring of a severed eardrum, struggled to process the ambient noise of the street. But her right ear caught his voice perfectly.

"Get in, Harper. Your brother is waiting for you."

Harper didn't move. She stared at the man in the backseat of the Maybach. Silas Mercer. She had never met him, but she knew the face. It was a face that graced the covers of *Forbes* and *Wall Street Journal*, usually accompanied by headlines about ruthless corporate takeovers.

"How do you know about my brother?" Her voice was entirely foreign to her—a gravelly, unused rasp. Three years in a concrete box, defending herself against predators, had stripped away the polished, authoritative tone of an executive chef.

"Get in the car, Harper," Silas repeated, his tone devoid of impatience but heavy with an authority that brooked no argument. "We don't have time to waste standing in the dirt."

"I asked you a question," she snapped, her hands balling into fists. Her knuckles were still scarred from the fight that had cost her half her hearing. "Who are you to me? Why are you here?"

Silas sighed, a slow, measured sound. He shifted on the pristine white leather, the fabric of his charcoal suit pulling taut across broad shoulders. "I am the man keeping your brother alive. Now, you can either get in this car and go see him, or you can walk to the nearest bus station with the forty dollars the state gave you and try to find him yourself. Your choice."

A cold spike of adrenaline pierced her chest. *Keeping him alive.*

She didn't have a choice. She never did anymore.

Harper pulled open the heavy door and slid into the cavernous interior. The moment the door clicked shut, the oppressive noise of the city vanished, replaced by the hushed, climate-controlled silence of extreme wealth. The air smelled of expensive leather and cedarwood. It made her stomach churn.

"Drive," Silas instructed the chauffeur. The privacy partition hummed as it slid up, sealing them in the back.

Harper pressed herself into the furthest corner of her seat, instinctively angling her right ear toward him so she wouldn't miss a syllable. She kept her hands clamped between her knees to hide their trembling.

"Where is he?" she demanded, refusing to look at the customized minibar or the plush carpeting. "My public defender told me he was in a state facility. He said there was an accident. A hit-and-run."

"Your public defender was an overworked idiot who hadn't checked a file in two years," Silas said smoothly, pouring a glass of sparkling water from a crystal decanter. He offered it to her.

She stared at the glass. "I don't want anything from you. Tell me where my brother is."

Silas set the glass down on the console between them. "He was at a state facility. For exactly four days after the accident. The hit-and-run severed his spinal cord at the T-8 vertebrae. He required three emergency surgeries just to stabilize his breathing, let alone manage the internal hemorrhaging."

Harper couldn't breathe. The sterile air of the car suddenly felt too thick. "No. No, they said he was stable. They said it was just his legs—"

"They lied to keep you from rioting in a cell where you were already a target," Silas cut in, his silver eyes locking onto hers. They were terrifyingly calm. "The state hospital was going to pull the plug, Harper. He had no insurance, no conscious brain activity for the first forty-eight hours, and his only next of kin was serving a ten-year sentence for corporate sabotage and reckless endangerment."

A choked sob tore from her throat before she could stop it. She covered her mouth, her eyes burning with unshed tears. *Liam.* Her sweet, brilliant younger brother, who had been on his way to his college graduation the week after her conviction.

"Where is he?" she whispered, the fight draining out of her, replaced by a suffocating panic. "Is he... is he..."

"He is alive," Silas said, his voice dropping an octave, softening into something that almost sounded like comfort. "He is at Crestview Pavilion."

Harper’s head snapped up. "Crestview? That's in the hills. That's a private neuro-rehabilitation center. It costs..." She couldn't even calculate the math. "It costs thousands a day."

"Ten thousand a day, on average," Silas corrected mildly. "Including the round-the-clock physical therapy, the private respiratory specialists, and the specialized neurological equipment."

"I don't understand." Harper shook her head, her mind spinning. "Who is paying for that? Julian?"

At the mention of her ex-fiancé's name, a dark, fleeting shadow crossed Silas's flawless features. "Julian Thorne wouldn't spend a dime to save a drowning man if it meant getting his cuffs wet. No, Harper. Julian didn't pay for it."

She stared at him, the realization crashing over her like freezing water. "You did."

"I did."

"Why?" The word was a desperate plea. "I don't know you. I've never cooked for you. My restaurant was ruined before the first appetizer even made it to the floor. Why would Silas Mercer spend millions of dollars on a disgraced chef's paralyzed brother?"

Silas leaned forward, invading her space just enough to make her breath hitch. He reached out, his long, elegant fingers lightly brushing a stray, jagged lock of hair away from her face. Harper flinched, but he didn't withdraw.

"Because I know what it looks like when a prodigy is slaughtered on the altar of someone else's mediocrity," Silas said softly. "I know you didn't poison those people, Harper. I know you were framed. And I know that the world decided to punish you for being brilliant. I simply decided to intervene."

Harper wanted to scream. She wanted to believe him. She was so tired of fighting, so tired of the cold, heavy reality of the world she had been thrust into. But the survival instincts beaten into her over the last three years screamed that billionaires didn't do charity without collateral.

"What do you want from me?" she asked, her voice shaking.

"Right now? I want you to see your brother." Silas leaned back, gesturing to the window as the car slowed. "We're here."

Harper turned. Through the tinted glass, she saw the sprawling, impeccably manicured grounds of Crestview Pavilion. It looked more like a five-star resort than a hospital. Fountains trickled over white marble, and patients in wheelchairs were being guided through sunlit botanical gardens by nurses in crisp uniforms.

The car stopped at the private VIP entrance. The door was opened by an attendant before Harper could even reach for the handle. Silas stepped out first, offering her a hand.

She ignored it, climbing out on her own, her cheap sneakers squeaking against the polished stone portico.

Silas didn't seem offended. He simply placed a hand at the small of her back—a warm, heavy weight—and guided her inside. The scent of bleach and misery that usually accompanied hospitals was absent here, replaced by the faint aroma of lavender and fresh linen.

"Mr. Mercer," the head nurse said, rushing forward from the concierge desk with a beaming, reverent smile. "We weren't expecting you today."

"I brought a guest, Elaine," Silas said, his voice smooth and commanding. "We're going to Room 412."

"Of course, sir. Right this way."

Harper walked in a daze. The elevator ride was silent. Her heart pounded against her ribs so hard she thought it might crack them. When the elevator doors parted on the fourth floor, Silas led her down a quiet, sunlit corridor.

He stopped in front of a heavy oak door. Room 412.

"Take a deep breath," Silas murmured, stepping back to give her space.

Harper reached for the brass handle. Her hand was shaking so violently she could barely grip it. She pushed the door open.

The room was vast, bathed in golden afternoon light from floor-to-ceiling windows. But Harper didn't see the luxury. She only saw the bed in the center of the room, and the frail, motionless figure lying in it.

"Liam," she choked out.

She practically collapsed at the bedside. Her brother looked so small. The vibrant, athletic boy she remembered was gone, replaced by a ghost with sunken cheeks and translucent skin. Tubes snaked from his arms, and a rhythmic, mechanical hiss filled the room as a ventilator pushed air into his lungs through a tracheostomy tube.

"Oh, God. Liam. I'm here. I'm so sorry, I'm here." Harper fell to her knees, burying her face in the crisp white sheets next to his motionless hand. She didn't dare touch his skin, terrified she might break him.

The dam broke. Three years of repressed terror, of solitary confinement, of beatings in the shower blocks, of mourning the life she had lost—it all poured out of her in ragged, ugly sobs. She cried until she couldn't pull air into her lungs, until her throat was raw and her vision was black at the edges.

"He can hear you," Silas's voice came from above her, calm and steady. "The neurologists say his cognitive functions are intact. He's locked in, Harper. The paralysis is from the chest down, but the trauma to his upper spine requires the ventilator for now. He knows you're here."

Harper lifted her tear-streaked face. "He's trapped. He's trapped in his own body."

"He is safe," Silas corrected softly, stepping closer. "He is receiving the best care on the planet. He has a physical therapist who works his muscles twice a day to prevent atrophy. He has a team of surgeons monitoring his spinal regeneration. He is not going to die."

Harper looked from her brother's pale face to Silas. The billionaire was looking down at her, his silver eyes reflecting the sunlight.

"I owe you," she whispered, the magnitude of her debt crushing the breath out of her. "I owe you everything. Millions. I have nothing, Silas. I have a felony record. I can't even get a job washing dishes. I can never pay you back."

"I haven't asked for your money, Harper."

"Then what?" she cried, clutching the edge of Liam's mattress. "What do you want?"

Silas knelt beside her. The pristine fabric of his suit pants touched the linoleum floor, completely disregarding the dirt on her clothes. He reached out, taking her scarred, trembling hands in his large, warm ones.

"I want you to stop surviving and start living," he said, his voice a dark, hypnotic hum. "I want to watch the woman who created a culinary masterpiece out of nothing rise from the ashes. You owe me nothing but your recovery."

Harper stared at him, her chest heaving. It sounded impossible. It sounded like a fairy tale. But as she looked at her brother, kept alive by the grace of this stranger's wallet, the heavy, defensive armor she had built around her heart began to crack.

She was so exhausted. She just wanted to be safe.

Silas stood up, pulling her gently to her feet. She was shivering violently, the adrenaline crash leaving her freezing cold despite the warmth of the room.

Silas unbuttoned his custom-tailored suit jacket and slipped it off. He stepped behind her, draping the heavy, silk-lined wool over her shoulders. It smelled like him—power, safety, and control.

Silas wraps his coat around her shivering shoulders. "I'll take care of you now. Both of you."

Chapter 4

The penthouse sat sixty floors above the glittering skyline of the city, a fortress of glass, steel, and black marble. Harper stood in the center of the massive living room, Silas’s heavy suit jacket still draped over her shoulders, feeling like a feral stray dog that had accidentally wandered into

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