On the far edge of the city, where streetlights thinned and silence stretched wider than sound, stood a mansion known as Ignite.
No one remembered when the name first appeared on its iron gates. The letters were forged in black metal, sharp-edged and severe, as if they had been carved to warn rather than welcome.
From a distance, Ignite looked magnificent.
Up close, it felt untouchable.
The structure rose in cold symmetry — glass, stone, and shadow woven into architectural perfection. During daylight, its reflective surfaces mirrored the world back at itself. At night, the mansion absorbed light instead of reflecting it, becoming a dark presence against the skyline.
Locals spoke of it rarely.
When they did, their voices lowered.
Because Ignite did not feel like a residence.
It felt like something that watched.
LEONID VOSS
Ignite belonged to Leonid Voss.
At fifty-four, he stood at the peak of influence — a man whose name moved markets, whose decisions reshaped industries, whose silence alone could dismantle careers.
He was not a man known for anger.
He was known for control.
His voice never rose. His expressions rarely shifted. He did not repeat himself, and he did not negotiate twice.
Compassion had never survived long in his proximity.
Employees did not admire him.
They endured him.
Rivals did not challenge him.
They avoided him.
He had built his empire through precision, patience, and a ruthless understanding of human weakness.
Leonid Voss did not break people.
He allowed them to collapse.
Years ago, there had been a woman inside Ignite.
Shayana.
Graceful. Soft-spoken. Quiet in a way that calmed rooms instead of emptying them.
For reasons no one understood, she had been the only person Leonid never interrupted.
The accident happened on a rain-slick highway.
A crushed front end. Shattered windshield. Headlights swallowed by darkness.
The report called it tragic.
Unavoidable.
Closed.
Condolences came. Flowers arrived. Voices lowered. Then, gradually, the world resumed its pace.
Leonid returned to work within days.
No public grief.
No visible mourning.
No questions.
Only silence.
Their son had turned fifteen that year.
Ignite lost its warmth the same night.
Present Day
The top floor of Voss International overlooked the entire city — a view most men would admire.
Leonid did not.
From behind the tinted glass walls of his office, he observed movement below: assistants crossing corridors, executives speaking in hushed urgency, interns rushing with files clutched to their chests.
Order. Efficiency. Obedience.
Everything functioned as designed.
Yet his attention drifted away from the skyline… and settled elsewhere.
On the open office floor sat a new employee.
Aansi.
She did not belong to the category of women who demanded attention.
Which made it impossible not to notice her.
Her dark-toned skin held a quiet luminosity under fluorescent light. She carried a straight, well-balanced frame — toned, healthy, and grounded in quiet strength rather than fragile delicacy. Her posture remained lean but straight, movements measured, expression calm without appearing submissive. There was no deliberate charm in her behavior — no performative smiles, no nervous eagerness to impress superiors.
She worked with focus, as if the surrounding hierarchy did not intimidate her.
That alone made her different.
Leonid had spent years surrounded by people who wanted something.
Promotion. Approval. Protection. Access.
Aansi projected none of it.
He watched her pause briefly, scanning a document with unwavering attention.
No restlessness.
No self-consciousness.
No attempt to be seen.
His fingers tapped once against the desk — the only sign of irritation.
Leonid Voss did not like unpredictability.
And he disliked curiosity even more.
Yet his gaze returned to her again.
And again.
Across the room, Aansi adjusted a file, then stilled.
For the faintest moment, she sensed observation — not obvious, not crude, but deliberate.
She did not look toward the glass office.
She simply resumed working.
As if she understood something without needing confirmation.
The air inside the building felt subtly altered.
Not tense.
Waiting.
