
He Said I Owed Him
Chapter 1
The crystal chandelier cast fractured light across the mahogany-paneled walls of Harry's private club, each shard reflecting off the cut glass tumblers held by New York's most powerful men.
I stood in my designated corner, a shadow in expensive silk, the dress Harry had selected clinging to my body like a second skin.
The deep emerald fabric was beautiful, but the neckline plunged too low, the hem rode too high. Everything about it was calculated to remind everyone in this room exactly what I was.
A possession. An object. Nothing more.
The murmur of conversation filled the space—mergers, acquisitions, political maneuvering. These men controlled empires, shaped economies with their decisions. And I was invisible to them, just another piece of Harry's carefully curated world.
My fingers traced the smooth marble of the side table beside me, a nervous habit I'd developed over the years. The coolness grounded me, reminded me I was still here, still breathing, even when I felt like I was dissolving into the wallpaper.
"Harry, don't you think this has gone on long enough?"
The voice belonged to Marcus Thorne, Harry's longtime friend and business partner. I'd heard him speak those words before, or variations of them, always in that same careful tone. Marcus was one of the few people who dared question Harry about anything, and the only one who ever mentioned me at all.
I kept my eyes fixed on the Persian rug beneath my feet, but I could feel the shift in the room's energy. Conversations quieted. Ice clinked against glass as drinks were set down.
"Long enough?" Harry's voice carried that dangerous edge I knew so well. "Marcus, I'm not sure what you're referring to."
"You know exactly what I'm referring to." Marcus's voice dropped lower, but in the sudden quiet of the room, every word carried. "Eight years, Harry. Eight years of this... whatever this is. The girl has done nothing but exist in your shadow, and you treat her like—"
"Like what?" The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees. "Please, Marcus. Enlighten us all."
I could feel every eye in the room turning toward our corner. My chest tightened, and I fought the urge to shrink further into myself. Nothing good ever came from being the center of attention in Harry's world.
"Harry, I'm just saying—"
"No." Harry's voice cut through the air like a blade. "I think there's been a misunderstanding here. About roles. About consequences. About justice."
Footsteps approached. Expensive Italian leather against Persian silk. I didn't need to look up to know he was coming for me. My body knew his presence like a tuning fork knows its note—every nerve ending vibrating with awareness and dread.
"Mia."
The single word was a command. I lifted my head, meeting his steel-gray eyes for just a moment before dropping my gaze again. He stood before me in his perfectly tailored charcoal suit, every inch the billionaire prince of Manhattan. But I knew the cruelty that lived beneath that handsome exterior.
"Come here."
My legs moved without conscious thought, eight years of conditioning overriding any instinct for self-preservation. The room had gone completely silent now. I could feel the weight of their stares, the discomfort radiating from men who'd seen worse things than this but never in such civilized surroundings.
I stopped directly in front of Harry, close enough to smell his cologne—cedar and bergamot, scents that had once meant safety but now only meant danger.
"Kneel."
The word hit me like a physical blow. Heat flooded my cheeks, and for a moment, I couldn't breathe. Not here. Not in front of all these people. But I could see the challenge in his eyes, the test. This wasn't about Marcus's comment anymore. This was about power. About reminding everyone—especially me—exactly where I stood in his world.
My knees hit the floor with a soft thud that seemed to echo in the silence. The Persian rug was soft beneath me, but it might as well have been concrete. I kept my eyes fixed on the polished tips of Harry's shoes, my hands folded in my lap like a penitent.
"Tell them," Harry said, his voice carrying across the room with perfect clarity. "Tell them what you told me. About your father. About what you deserve."
My throat felt like sandpaper. I could hear Marcus shifting uncomfortably somewhere behind me, the clink of someone setting down a glass too hard. But Harry's presence loomed over me, waiting.
"I..." The words stuck in my throat like broken glass.
"Louder, Mia. I don't think everyone heard you."
I lifted my chin slightly, still not looking at the room full of powerful men watching this humiliation unfold. "These punishments are what I deserve."
The silence that followed was deafening. I could feel the collective discomfort, the shifting of expensive suits, the clearing of throats. These men had built their fortunes on ruthless decisions, but this—this was something else entirely.
"For my father's crimes," I continued, the words tasting like ash in my mouth. "For what we did to you. For ruining your life. These punishments are what I deserve."
Harry's hand came to rest on the top of my head, fingers threading through my hair with deceptive gentleness. To anyone watching, it might have looked almost tender. But I felt the threat in his touch, the reminder of his control.
"You see, Marcus?" Harry's voice was conversational now, as if we were discussing the weather. "Justice isn't always pretty. But it's necessary."
"Jesus, Harry." Marcus's voice was barely above a whisper.
Someone cleared their throat. Another man muttered something about needing air. I heard the soft sounds of movement, of powerful men suddenly finding reasons to be elsewhere.
But I remained kneeling on that Persian rug, Harry's fingers still tangled in my hair, feeling like the smallest person in the world. This was my life. This was what I deserved. Wasn't it?
The question flickered through my mind like a dying flame, so brief I almost missed it. But it was there. For just a moment, I wondered if Marcus was right. If eight years was long enough. If maybe, just maybe, I deserved something different.
Then Harry's fingers tightened in my hair, and the thought disappeared like smoke.
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