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"Liar, King, Kneel" Chapter 2

Chapter 2: The Velvet Leash

The air in the penthouse was cold, purified to a sterile degree that felt like the inside of a tomb. Max did not release Kaelen until they had crossed the threshold of his private sanctuary, his hand gripped firmly on the younger man's shoulder like a shackle.

"Welcome to the top of the world, Kaelen," Max said, his voice echoing against the floor-to-ceiling glass walls that overlooked the sprawling, neon-drenched city.

He released Kaelen finally, watching with a twisted sense of satisfaction as Kaelen smoothed his lapels. The space was immense, filled with the kind of aggressive minimalism that screamed of power and total isolation.

"It is quite a view, Mr. Draken," Kaelen replied, his gaze flickering across the horizon with an unreadable expression.

Max poured two drinks, the ice clinking against the crystal glass like a warning bell. He handed one to Kaelen, his eyes tracking every subtle shift in the man's posture.

"You’re going to be my shadow now," Max declared, pacing the length of the rug. "Every meeting, every dinner, every late-night session—you will be right there."

Kaelen took the glass but did not drink from it. "That is a significant amount of proximity for a consultant, sir."

Max laughed, a sharp, humorless sound that cut through the silence. "I don’t pay for consultants, Kaelen. I pay for people who make themselves useful, and I’ve decided you’re going to be very useful indeed."

He moved closer, invading Kaelen’s personal space with the ease of a man who owned everything he looked at. "Are you going to be a problem, or are you going to be the efficient tool I hired?"

Kaelen held his gaze, his blue eyes as still as a winter lake. "I will be whatever is required to ensure the interests of your firm, sir."

Max hummed, a low vibration in his chest that seemed to vibrate through the entire room. He was satisfied with the answer, even if he knew it was a performance.

"See that you remain that way," Max said, turning toward his massive mahogany desk. "I dislike surprises in my personal space."

Kaelen watched him move, his eyes tracking the way Max shifted his weight. Every movement was a tell, and Kaelen was meticulously recording every single one of them.

"I understand completely," Kaelen whispered, the words slipping out as soft as smoke.

Max sat down, feeling the heavy silence of the night settle over them. He pulled a heavy, ornate key from a chain around his neck and tossed it across the desk.

It skittered across the polished wood, coming to a rest right at Kaelen’s feet. Max watched as Kaelen looked down at the cold metal, then back up at him.

"That is the key to my private study," Max said, his voice dropping into that predatory register he enjoyed so much. "All my encrypted files, my personal history, my secrets—everything I’ve built is behind those doors."

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Kaelen reached down, his fingers closing around the metal with a deliberate, slow grace. "Why would you give me this, Mr. Draken?"

Max leaned back, a dark, dangerous smirk spreading across his face. "Because I want to see if you have the courage to look inside, or if you’re just as boring as I initially suspected."

Kaelen slipped the key into his pocket, his movements betraying nothing. "I am a man of many secrets myself, sir."

Max watched him, his heart hammering against his ribs in a way he hadn't felt in years. He felt as though he were inviting a wolf into the pen, and he was absolutely electrified by the risk.

Outside, in the bustling shadow of the street, Detective Elias Thorne adjusted the collar of his coat against the biting wind. He stared up at the Draken Tower, his eyes narrowed as he clicked a button on his recorder.

"Entry confirmed," Elias muttered, his voice barely audible over the roar of the city traffic. "The target is inside the penthouse, and the primary subject is behaving with uncharacteristic recklessness."

Elias had been tracking the Draken family for three years, ever since the scandal that had nearly leveled the stock market. He knew the pattern, and he knew that Max Draken was beginning to lose his footing.

"The tower is showing signs of stress," Elias continued, his gaze locked on the flickering lights of the penthouse balcony. "Everything is starting to move out of place."

He shifted his position, moving into the deeper shadows of an alleyway. He was a man who lived on the periphery, a man who had long ago given up on justice in favor of obsession.

"I will be waiting for the cracks to widen," Elias added, tucking the recorder into his pocket. "And they will widen, soon enough."

Upstairs, the atmosphere was thick with the scent of expensive bourbon and impending disaster. Max walked over to the balcony door, sliding it open to let the roar of the city flood into the room.

He didn't look at Kaelen. He knew Kaelen was watching him, studying the way he stood, the way he breathed, the way he held his drink.

"Do you hear that, Kaelen?" Max asked, gesturing toward the sea of lights below. "That’s the sound of a million people waiting to see what I’m going to do next."

Kaelen stepped up behind him, stopping just far enough away to be respectful, yet close enough that Max could feel the heat radiating from him.

"It sounds like a great deal of pressure for one man," Kaelen remarked.

Max turned around, finding Kaelen standing perfectly framed by the moonlight. He looked like an apparition, something that didn't quite belong in the opulent reality of the penthouse.

"I thrive on pressure," Max replied, his eyes narrowing slightly as he tried to discern what Kaelen was truly thinking.

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Kaelen didn't respond immediately. He just kept looking at the city, his face a mask of calm, cold indifference.

"Then I suppose we shall see how much weight you can actually carry," Kaelen said eventually, his voice barely a whisper.

Max felt a surge of genuine, visceral curiosity. He realized then that he didn't just want to own Kaelen; he wanted to see him shatter.

He wanted to be the reason for that shattering, even if it meant losing everything in the process. He turned back to the window, his drink forgotten in his hand.

"Are you hungry?" Max asked, breaking the sudden, heavy silence that had fallen between them.

Kaelen moved toward the small kitchenette, his motions efficient and precise. "I’m not particularly fond of food, Mr. Draken, but I will prepare something for you if you’re hungry."

Max felt a strange flicker of something like disappointment. He wanted Kaelen to have needs, to have desires, to have a human pulse.

"I’m never hungry," Max said, though he hadn't eaten since the previous morning. "I find that hunger makes a man weak."

Kaelen paused, his hand hovering over the counter. "Hunger is the only thing that keeps a man honest, sir."

Max watched him, fascinated by the way Kaelen stood. He looked like a statue that had decided, just for a moment, to mimic the living.

"You speak as if you’ve spent a lifetime being hungry," Max observed, his tone mocking but his eyes searching.

Kaelen turned to look at him, his face bathed in the cold, artificial light of the kitchen. "I’ve spent a lifetime learning how to survive the absence of things, Mr. Draken."

Max smiled, a slow and deliberate expression that didn't reach his eyes. "Well, you don't have to worry about absences in this house. Everything you could ever want is here."

Kaelen looked around the sterile, expensive space, his expression shifting from indifference to something that looked suspiciously like pity.

"Everything is here," Kaelen agreed, his voice echoing in the vast, empty room. "But I wonder how much of it is actually alive."

Max didn't like the question. It touched on something he had been trying to suppress for years.

"Don't get philosophical on me, Kaelen," Max snapped, his patience fraying at the edges. "I didn't pay for a philosopher. I paid for a man who gets things done."

Kaelen bowed his head slightly, the perfect employee once again. "My apologies, sir. It won't happen again."

Max turned away, moving toward his bedroom. He felt a desperate, clawing need to be away from Kaelen, to be alone with his own thoughts.

He walked into the dark, silent room, closing the door behind him and leaning his back against it. He could hear Kaelen moving around in the living room, the faint sound of footsteps on the floor.

It was an intrusive sound, a constant reminder that he was no longer alone in his own fortress. He waited for Kaelen to go to sleep, to go into his own assigned quarters, but the footsteps kept moving.

He peeked through the crack of the door, watching as Kaelen paced the living room floor. Kaelen was moving with a strange, rhythmic purpose, tracing the layout of the penthouse.

He seemed to be memorizing the room, noting the exits, the cameras, the blind spots. He was a predator in the pen, and Max was the one who had opened the gate.

A dark, intoxicating thrill surged through Max’s veins. He had invited a disaster into his life, and he was absolutely certain he had never felt more alive.

In the living room, Kaelen finally stopped by the large balcony glass. He looked down at the city, his hands clasped behind his back, his posture stiff and regal.

He stood there for a long time, bathed in the blue glow of the city below. He looked like a king looking over a kingdom that he already considered his own.

Max watched him, his fingers gripping the doorframe until his knuckles turned white. He had given Kaelen the key, and he had given him the run of the house.

He was waiting for Kaelen to make a move, waiting for the first sign of a betrayal that he knew was coming. He was waiting for the fire to start, so that he could finally see what he was made of.

Kaelen stood at the balcony, staring at the city like it was already his. Max felt the breath catch in his throat, a mix of fear and desire so potent it nearly brought him to his knees.

He watched as Kaelen raised a hand, his fingers tracing a pattern against the glass. He was mapping his own path to the center of the world, and Max was more than willing to let him.

The night was long, and the silence in the penthouse was heavy with the weight of things left unsaid. Everything was in motion, a series of dominos waiting for the slightest push.

Max leaned his head against the door, his eyes closed as he imagined the sound of the glass shattering. It would be beautiful, and it would be the start of everything.

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