Chapter 1
The private jet cut through the night sky. Inside, the cabin was all quiet luxury —from the supple cream leather seats and gleaming polished walnut panels to the faint scent of aged scotch that lingered from the glass by his elbow.
Adrian Cole sat alone, save for the man across from him—Daniel, his personal assistant. The younger man held himself with crisp discipline, posture straight, folder balanced neatly on his lap. He was waiting, as always, for instruction.
Adrian preferred it that way.
The tablet in his hand glowed, each line of the report a fresh piece of evidence. The words, numbers, and charts told a clear story of embezzlement. For weeks, his team had been circling the same problem, feeding him excuses dressed as updates. He’d given them more than enough time, but as he looked at the data now, his patience finally snapped.
He set the tablet down on the table beside him, the leather creaking as he leaned back. His jaw tightened.
“They’ve failed me again,” he said at last, his voice calm but weighted with steel.
Daniel looked up, composed. “They claim progress, sir. They believe they’re close.”
Adrian’s eyes cut to him, sharp and unyielding. “Do you believe them?”
A beat of silence. Daniel lowered his gaze. “No, sir.”
“Neither do I.” Adrian’s tone was final, as though a gavel had struck. He turned his gaze to the window, the inky night stretching endless beyond the glass. “Three months of waiting, and I still don’t have answers. I’m done relying on others to clean up what only I can resolve.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Make the arrangements,” Adrian continued, every word precise. “No one is to know. Not the board or the directors. Not even my security detail. When I step off this plane, Adrian Cole disappears. What remains is a man no one notices.”
Daniel brows furrowed almost imperceptibly. “You want a new identity sir?”
Adrian’s gaze was steady, unblinking. “Yes. Papers, records, everything. If I walk through the doors of my own empire, it won’t be as Adrian Cole. It’ll be as someone no one dares to look at twice.”
Daniel inclined his head. “Understood, sir. It’ll be done.”
There was no tremor in his voice, no hesitation. That was why Adrian kept him close. He was respectful and efficient.
Adrian reached for the glass of scotch but didn’t drink. The amber liquid caught the low light, glinting like molten gold. He had everything a man could want—power, wealth, control. The Cole empire, built on his father’s legacy, had expanded under his hand into industries his father never dreamed of touching. Real estate, technology, shipping and finance—every venture he touched turned to profit.
And yet, for all the excess that surrounded him, Adrian felt nothing.
He thought of his father briefly, the old man’s voice still crisp in memory; “Never let them see your weakness, Adrian. The empire comes first.”
It always had.
His mother’s voice, softer, was harder to recall. She’d been gone too long, her absence a hollow space he’d learned to barricade with work and steel. He was only eight when she died, and after that, he saw no use for things like tenderness or love. Women came and went—a constant stream of them drawn to the raw power of his wealth. He gave them nothing more than fleeting nights and a polite dismissal the moment they wanted more.
His phone buzzed, breaking his thoughts. Adrian glanced at the screen.
Vanessa Blake.
The corner of his mouth curved in disdain. Vanessa, Head of Design and Marketing department, brilliant when she wanted to be, manipulative when she thought he wasn’t looking. She’d been circling him for years, mixing business with thinly veiled ambition. She wanted him, or rather, she wanted the name, the status of being by his side.
The phone buzzed again. He let it ring out.
“Another call you’d like me to redirect?” Daniel asked carefully.
Adrian slid the device face-down on the table. “No. Let her wonder why I don’t answer.”
“Yes, sir.”
Silence reclaimed the cabin, broken only by the steady thrum of the engines. His reflection in the glass caught his eye for a moment—the distinctive dark hair cut by a single streak of silver at his temple. A mark carried by his father, and his grandfather before him. It was not about age, but a signature of the Cole men, etched into him like a birthright.
Adrian let his gaze drift back to the window. Down there, somewhere in the sprawl of the city, his answers waited. He could almost see the streets glittering with neon, crowded with people who would never guess that the man walking beside them owned half the skyline.
That was the irony he savored most. For years, he’d lived above the world, untouchable, a figure glimpsed only in financial circles and rare press releases. He’d kept a low profile by design—let other billionaires parade themselves across tabloids. Adrian preferred moving in the shadows, where he could maintain absolute control and anonymity.
Now, that anonymity would serve him again.
“Daniel,” he said without turning.
“Yes, sir.”
“You’ll remain in contact, but discreetly. No one breathes a word of this—not even if it costs them their job.”
“I understand.”
Adrian finally lifted the scotch and took a slow sip, savoring the burn as it slid down. His mind was already moving ten steps ahead. Going undercover was a risk, but he thrived on risk. It was the reason his father’s empire hadn’t just survived, but multiplied under his reign.
What he hadn’t planned for, what he could never have predicted, was that in those shadows he was about to step into, something far more dangerous than corruption or betrayal was waiting.
Her.
He didn’t know it yet, but she would unravel him in ways no enemy ever could.
For now, he only felt the weight of control, the familiar solitude of a man who needed no one.
He set the glass down and folded his hands together, voice low, commanding.
“Prepare the disguise. Build my identity carefully—one that fits inside the company walls but leaves no trace. When we land, I’m just another man. And Daniel—” His eyes locked on his assistant, cold and absolute.
“Yes, sir?”
“If anyone asks where I’ve gone, you tell them nothing. Not a word. Do you understand?”
“Perfectly, sir.”
Adrian’s lips curved into the faintest of smiles, sharp and humorless. “Good.”
The engines roared a little louder as the jet descended, carrying him closer to the city that thought it knew him.
By the time it touched the runway, Adrian Cole—the billionaire every woman whispered about, the name every rival feared—would cease to exist.
And in his place would walk a stranger.





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