Rain tapped lightly against the tall windows of the grand ballroom, blurring the city lights outside. Inside, the air smelled of perfume, polished wood, and the faint tang of expensive wine. At a corner table, Vivian Harper sat alone, her small hand gripping the stem of a crystal glass. She was thirty, a single mother, and for the third time that month, she had been invited to a wedding she did not want to attend. Her ex-husband’s absence had left a quiet emptiness that the chatter around her only seemed to magnify. Whispers floated across the room. Some pitied her, some openly mocked her. “She comes alone again,” one woman murmured, her voice laced with judgment.

Vivian lowered her eyes, forcing a polite smile she did not feel. Couples twirled beneath the chandeliers, laughter rippling like champagne. For a moment, she felt invisible, insignificant, a ghost in a room full of celebration.

Then a deep voice cut through the noise. “Dance with me.”

Startled, Vivian turned toward the speaker. A man stood there, taller than anyone else, dressed in a dark tailored suit that made him seem almost unreal. His hair was dark and slicked back, a thin scar traced his jawline, and his eyes held the kind of sharp intelligence that made the room seem smaller. “I—I don’t even know you,” she stammered, clutching her small purse.

“Good,” he said, voice low, magnetic. “No one will know you’re pretending to be my wife.”

Before Vivian could respond, he held out his hand. Hesitating only for a heartbeat, she placed hers in his, and he led her to the dance floor. Gasps rippled through the room. The music shifted to a slow, languid waltz. She felt every eye on them, but the man’s presence made her forget their stares.

“I don’t understand,” she whispered as they began to move.

He leaned close, enough that only she could hear. “They are watching me. If they think I am married, they do not touch my family. You are my family tonight.”

Vivian swallowed hard. Her breath came faster. “You are in danger?”

A faint smile curved his lips. “Always.”

The guests who had mocked her before now watched in silent astonishment. Vivian, the lonely single mother, was suddenly the center of attention, dancing with a man who exuded power and danger. For the first time in years, she felt truly seen.

When the song ended, he bowed slightly, his dark eyes meeting hers. “Thank you, Mrs. DiLorenzo,” he murmured.