Chapter 1: The First Encounter
October 22, 2025 at 7:00 PM
....The ballroom shimmered with gold light and ambition.
Crystal chandeliers hung like frozen rain, their reflections gliding across marble floors where the city’s wealthiest mingled, smiled, and made promises no one intended to keep. Cameras flashed at every turn, recording deals sealed with champagne.
Dora Elwood had been to hundreds of such events, but tonight felt different. The Elwood family’s firm — Elwood Innovations — had spent decades building its empire from the ground up, a symbol of determination and grit. And yet, behind her composed smile, Dora could already hear her father’s voice reminding her that tonight wasn’t about celebration; it was about strategy.
Across the room, standing near the entrance, was him.
Michael Raines.
The name carried the weight of rivalry. The Raines Corporation was the Elwoods’ greatest competitor — old money, ruthless tactics, polished perfection. Their feud stretched back two generations, tangled in lawsuits, contracts, and betrayals no one fully remembered. The rule was simple: Elwoods and Raines didn’t mix.
But there he was — confident, calm, and effortlessly magnetic in a black suit that seemed to absorb the room’s light.
She didn’t mean to stare.
He caught her anyway.
Their eyes met — just for a heartbeat — and something in the noise of the party dimmed. It wasn’t love, not yet. It was awareness. The sharp kind that slices through reason before you can build walls.
“Dora.” Her father’s voice pulled her back. He handed her a champagne flute. “Stay close tonight. The Raines people are here, and I don’t want any unnecessary pleasantries.”
“Of course,” she said, even as her pulse betrayed her.
Minutes passed. Conversations blurred. She felt watched, though she wasn’t sure by whom until she turned — and found Michael again, crossing the room with easy, unhurried grace. He wasn’t heading toward her, exactly, but every step drew him nearer. People stopped to greet him, their admiration obvious, their envy barely hidden.
He fit into this world too well.
And yet… there was something about the way his eyes lingered on the details — the chandeliers, the art, the small orchestra tucked in the corner — as if he were half elsewhere, half longing for something beyond it all.
When the host announced the next auction item, a hush fell. A charity project for rebuilding old city schools — something both companies had invested in. Dora’s father stepped forward to place a bid, his tone firm, his posture that of a man who refused to lose even for goodwill.
Then came another voice.
Smooth. Steady. Close.
“I’ll double it,” Michael said.
Heads turned. The tension in the room tightened, invisible but sharp. Her father’s jaw set, but he said nothing. Instead, he gave Dora a look that said watch and learn.
Michael didn’t gloat. He didn’t need to. He simply smiled faintly and walked toward the balcony, slipping out into the cool night air.
And somehow, before she knew why, Dora followed.
Outside, the music softened into a dull echo. The city stretched before them — towers glowing, streets alive, a thousand stories moving in quiet rhythm. Michael stood with his back to her, hands resting on the rail.
“I didn’t mean to start a war in there,” he said without turning.
“You did,” she replied, stepping closer. “But I suppose it was inevitable.”
He chuckled softly. “Maybe. Or maybe it’s just what everyone expects of us.”
She studied him in the pale light — the calm curve of his expression, the hint of weariness behind it. “And what do you expect?” she asked.
He looked at her then, really looked, and for the first time, Dora saw something she didn’t expect in a Raines — sincerity. “I expect,” he said, “that we’ll both spend our lives pretending to hate each other for reasons we didn’t choose.”
The honesty in his tone caught her off guard. “That’s a dangerous thing to admit,” she murmured.
“I know.” His lips curved into a half-smile. “But maybe danger’s the only real thing left in rooms like these.”
A silence followed — fragile, uncertain. Somewhere inside, applause erupted for another bid, but out here, only the night seemed to listen.
Finally, he said, “You shouldn’t be talking to me. Your father’s watching.”
“I’m aware,” she said softly. “But if I walk away now, it’ll look like I’m afraid.”
He tilted his head. “Are you?”
She held his gaze, steady and unflinching. “Not yet.”
He smiled then — small, quiet, devastating — and turned back to the skyline. “Then I hope I see you again, Dora Elwood.”
“You will,” she said before she could stop herself.
And she meant it.
As she returned inside, heart unsteady but strangely alive, she realized something she’d never admit aloud:
The first crack in a fortress doesn’t come from the outside.
It starts with a glance, a word — and a heart that dares to lean too close.
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