
The Billionaire’s Untamed Obsession
Chapter 3
"Mack is going to skin me alive," Gert Holm muttered, his hands shaking as he adjusted his hard hat. He stood at the edge of the muddy construction site overlooking the Hvalfjörður coastline. "If that woman doesn't sign the easement by Friday, the Zartholm Sky Residence is dead in the water before the first crane even arrives."
Zonrik Zartholm didn't look at his foreman. He stood like a statue of polished granite, his tailored wool coat defying the biting Icelandic wind. "Mack Zartholm Sr. doesn't skin people, Gert. He liquidates them. And I didn't come here to fail my father’s first legacy directive."
"Then you haven't met Elín Demánsdóttir," Gert sighed, pointing toward a cluster of weathered wooden buildings nestled against the cliffside. "She’s a vet. Runs that Haven Sanctuary. She’s got a heart of gold and a spine made of reinforced rebar. She’s already blocked the survey teams twice."
Zonrik’s jaw tightened. "She’s a civilian with a bankrupt hobby. Offer her double the market value."
"We did," Gert replied grimly. "She threw the check in the muck and told the lawyers to go play in traffic. She says the land is for the animals, not for 'glass coffins for the elite.'"
Zonrik turned, his blue eyes cold and sharp. "Then I’ll handle her myself. No one says no to Zartholm Global Holdings."
Elín Demánsdóttir’s POV
"Hold him steady, Ala! If he kicks, he’s going to open that suture right back up!" Elín shouted over the roar of the wind rattling the sanctuary’s corrugated metal roof.
"I’m trying, Elín! He’s a two-hundred-pound ram with a grudge against the world!" Ala Lind yelled back, leaning her full weight against the animal’s flank.
Elín’s hands were steady, despite the exhaustion deep in her bones. She finished the stitch on the ram’s leg, her fingers covered in a mixture of antiseptic and mud. This sanctuary was her life’s work, a refuge for the creatures the rest of the world deemed "useless." It was also the only thing she had left of her grandmother’s legacy.
"There," Elín breathed, stepping back and wiping sweat from her forehead with her sleeve. "He’s patched up. Get him into the recovery stall."
As Ala led the ram away, she paused. "The black cars are back, Elín. At the gate."
Elín’s heart did a slow, heavy thud against her ribs. "Let them wait. I have a foal to bottle-feed."
"It’s not just the lawyers this time," Ala whispered, looking out the barn door. "There’s a man. He looks like he owns the atmosphere."
Elín felt a strange prickle at the back of her neck. She grabbed a rag, wiped the worst of the grime from her hands, and marched out into the cold afternoon light. Standing by the perimeter fence was a man who looked entirely out of place amidst the wild, rugged beauty of Hvalfjörður. He was tall, golden-haired, and radiated a level of power that made the air feel thin.
It was him. The man from the Aurora Table—the one she’d shared a reckless, whiskey-fueled night with three years ago. The man she’d fled from before the sun rose, pregnant and terrified of the coldness she’d seen in his eyes when he talked about his father’s "empire."
Zonrik Zartholm.
"You’re trespassing," Elín said, her voice cracking like a whip. She didn't let the tremor in her knees show. She was a mother now; she had more than just animals to protect.
Zonrik turned slowly. The recognition in his eyes was instantaneous and searing. He didn't look like a developer; he looked like a predator who had just found a long-lost trail. "Elín Demánsdóttir. I spent six months looking for you after you vanished from that hotel in Copenhagen."
"I was a 'pleasant distraction,' remember? Your words, Zonrik," Elín snapped, crossing her arms. "Now you’re here to take my land. I should have known you were Mack Zartholm’s son. You have the same soul as a bulldozer."
Zonrik stepped closer, his presence overwhelming. "This land is a graveyard of debt, Elín. My father wants the Zartholm Sky Residence here. I’m here to make sure you get out with enough money to never work a day in your life again. Don't be a martyr for a few stray sheep."
"Those 'stray sheep' are worth more than your glass towers," Elín hissed. "Leave. Before I set the hounds on you."
"We aren't finished," Zonrik warned, his gaze lingering on her face with an intensity that made her skin burn. "I always get what I want, Elín. Eventually."
Elín Demánsdóttir’s POV
"He’s here for the land, Charles. Just the land," Elín whispered, pulling her young son closer as they sat in the small, warm kitchen of their cottage.
Charles looked up at her, his eyes the exact same piercing blue as the man at the fence. "Is the mean man going to take the foxes, Mommy?"
"No one is taking anything," Elín promised, kissing his forehead. But inside, she was drowning. Zonrik didn't know about Charles yet. If he found out, if Mack Sr. found out, they would take him. The Zartholms didn't share. They conquered.
The next morning, the "war" truly began. Elín arrived at the local Land Trust office, where she worked part-time as a consultant to keep the sanctuary’s taxes down. Her supervisor, Gert Holm—who she now knew was moonlighting for Zonrik—looked like he wanted to crawl under his desk.
"Elín, Mr. Zartholm is in the conference room. He’s requested the environmental impact reports," Gert said, avoiding her eyes.
"He can request a trip to the sun for all I care," Elín muttered, grabbing her files. She marched into the room, ready for a fight.
Zonrik was sitting at the head of the table, looking through a set of blueprints. He looked up as she entered, his expression unreadable. "Sit down, Elín."
"I’ll stand. I don't plan on being here long," she said, dropping the files on the table with a loud thud. "These reports prove that your resort will destroy the nesting grounds of the local falcon population. It’s illegal to build here."
Zonrik didn't look at the files. He looked at her. "I’ve reviewed your sanctuary’s financials. You’re three months behind on your grain shipments. Your water main is leaking. You’re drowning, and you’re trying to pull a billionaire down with you."
"I’d rather drown in my own dirt than breathe your filtered air," Elín retorted.
The door opened suddenly, and a tall, older man with silver hair and a face like a hatchet walked in. Mack Zartholm Sr. The room seemed to shrink.
"Zonrik," the old man barked. "Why am I looking at a vet instead of a demolition permit?"
"We’re discussing the environmental hurdles, Father," Zonrik said, his voice tightening.
Mack Sr. turned his gaze on Elín. It was a cold, soul-stripping look. "You’re the girl holding up my legacy? My son tells me you have a 'sentimental' attachment to this muck. Sentiment is for the weak. Name your price and get out."
"My price is your absence," Elín said, her heart hammering against her ribs. "You can't buy the Haven. And you can't buy me."
"We’ll see about that," Mack Sr. sneered. He turned to Zonrik. "Fix this. Or I’ll find someone who can."
Zonrik Zartholm’s POV
Zonrik sat in his Sky Residence penthouse, the lights of the Reykjavík–Copenhagen Corridor shimmering below him like a sea of diamonds. But all he could see was Elín’s face—the fierce, beautiful defiance in her eyes.
"She’s a problem, sir," Kasper Nørgaard, his driver and confidant, said softly from the doorway. "The town is starting to side with her. They’re calling her the 'Guardian of the Hvalfjörður.'"
"She’s a fool," Zonrik snapped, though the words felt hollow. He remembered her from three years ago—the way she had laughed at the gala, the way she had looked at the animals in the charity photos with such pure, unshielded love. He had been drawn to that light, a light that didn't exist in his father’s world.
"Mack Sr. is losing patience," Kasper added. "He’s talking about 'forced relocation' through the city council."
Zonrik stood up, pacing the length of the glass-walled room. "No. If he does that, she’ll hate me forever. I need to get through to her. Find out what she really needs."
"Sir," Kasper hesitated. "I did some digging into her personal life, as you asked. To find leverage."
"And?"
"She lives alone with a son. Charles. He’s three years old."
Zonrik froze. Three years. The math hit him like a physical blow. The night in Copenhagen. The morning she disappeared.
"Show me the photo," Zonrik commanded, his voice barely a whisper.
Kasper handed him a tablet. It was a grainy shot taken from a distance—Elín walking near the shore, holding a small boy’s hand. The boy was laughing, his head tilted back, showing a smile that Zonrik saw every morning in the mirror.
The world seemed to tilt on its axis. He wasn't just fighting for a resort anymore. He wasn't just fighting his father’s cold expectations. He was looking at his son. A son his father would try to turn into a weapon. A son Elín had kept hidden to protect him from the Zartholm name.
"Get the car," Zonrik ordered, his voice thick with a new kind of steel. "I’m going back to the sanctuary."
Elín Demánsdóttir’s POV
The storm hit without warning, a true Icelandic gale that threatened to rip the roofs off the enclosures. Elín was out in the mud, trying to coax a frightened horse into the main barn, when the headlights of a car cut through the darkness.
A black Bentley swerved into the yard, and Zonrik leaped out, his expensive suit immediately soaked.
"What are you doing here?" Elín screamed over the wind. "Go away!"
"The river is rising, Elín! The lower enclosures are going to flood!" Zonrik shouted, running to her side. He didn't wait for her permission. He grabbed the horse’s lead rope, his muscles straining as he forced the animal toward safety.
For the next three hours, the billionaire and the veterinarian worked in the freezing rain. They moved sheep, crated injured birds, and hauled sandbags. Zonrik didn't complain about his clothes or the filth. He worked with a grim, focused intensity that Elín had never seen before.
When the last animal was secure, they collapsed into the warmth of the barn, drenched and shivering.
"Why did you come back?" Elín asked, her voice small.
Zonrik looked at her, the water dripping from his golden hair. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the tablet, showing her the photo of Charles.
"Why didn't you tell me, Elín?"
The silence in the barn was heavier than the storm outside. Elín looked away, tears blurring her vision. "Because I saw how your father looked at you. Because I saw how you looked at the world—like it was something to be owned. I wouldn't let him be an 'asset' in your portfolio."
Zonrik reached out, his hand hovering near her cheek before he pulled back. "I’m not him, Elín. I’ve spent my life trying to prove I’m the best version of what he built, but I’m not him."
"Then prove it," she challenged. "Save this place. Not for me. For him."
Zonrik looked out at the dark, flooded fields. For the first time in his life, the "Wharton Peak" resort felt like a pile of rubble. "I’ll handle my father. But you have to trust me."
"Trust is expensive, Zonrik," Elín said, standing up and heading toward the cottage where Charles was sleeping. "And you’re currently bankrupt in that department."
Zonrik watched her go, the weight of his legacy pressing down on him. He knew what he had to do. He would have to go to war with Mack Zartholm Sr., and he would have to do it using the only thing the old man understood: power.
But as he looked at the rustic, mud-covered barn, he realized he finally had something worth fighting for that didn't have a price tag. He had a son. And he had the woman who was fierce enough to protect him from the world—even from the Zartholms.
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