Liv had spent 3 years learning how not to notice Dominic Cain.
That was not because he made it easy.
Nothing about Dominic was easy.

He walked through their office like he owned not just the building, but every room he had not entered yet.
He was all dark hair, expensive suits, clean cologne, and that infuriating half smile that made smart women forget the exact reasons they had promised themselves they were done with men like him.
Liv was not one of those women.
She had bills, boundaries, and enough self-respect to know trouble when it wore a tailored jacket.
Dominic was her boss.
He was also a millionaire, a public-facing success story, and the kind of man people watched without meaning to.
At company dinners, women leaned closer when he spoke.
At charity events, photographers somehow always found him beside someone gorgeous.
On Monday mornings, the office kitchen filled with quiet little comments about which date had been seen leaving his building, which model had posted a blurry elevator picture, which old girlfriend had shown up at the gala like she still had a key to his life.
Liv heard all of it.
She filed it away under “not my problem.”
For 3 years, she kept their relationship exactly where it belonged.
He gave her assignments.
She finished them early.
He tossed out a dry remark during long meetings.
She answered with one of her own and went back to her notes.
He opened doors, remembered how she took her coffee, and once sent a car service when she worked too late to catch the train.
She thanked him professionally and never gave the rumor mill anything to chew on.
That was the rule.
A line stayed a line only if you stopped testing it.
Then the conference happened.
It was supposed to be ordinary.
A two-day business event, a presentation Liv had built almost entirely herself, a hotel ballroom with bad coffee, name badges, and too many men pretending they had asked the smart question in the room.
Dominic had insisted she come because the project was hers.
Liv had pretended not to be pleased by that.
Recognition was dangerous when it came from a man whose approval already carried too much weight.
Still, the morning had gone well.
The slides worked.
The client laughed in the right places.
Dominic did not interrupt her once.
Afterward, while other executives shook his hand and acted like he had personally written every line of the proposal, he pointed straight to Liv.
“She built it,” he said.
Four words.
No drama.
No performance.
Just credit, given cleanly in front of people who mattered.
Liv told herself it did not affect her.
By late afternoon, the clouds had turned the color of dirty wool.
Rain started as a sheet across the parking lot, then became a wall.
The conference hotel lobby filled with stranded attendees pretending not to panic while watching the windows.
Phones buzzed with weather alerts.
Cars crawled past the entrance with their hazard lights blinking.
Someone near the coffee station said the highway was already flooding, and someone else replied that the airport had delays stacked into tomorrow.
Liv checked her own phone and tried to ignore the knot forming under her ribs.
She hated storms when she was not home.
She hated not knowing where she would sleep.
She hated the specific helplessness of being well dressed, competent, and still completely at the mercy of water on a road.
Dominic handled the first hour with his usual impossible calm.
He spoke to the valet.
He called someone from the conference office.
He asked for road updates without sounding irritated.
But even he could not make a room appear where none existed.
By the time they made it to the car, the rain had turned violent.
It hit the roof so hard Liv had to raise her voice over it.
The inside of Dominic’s car smelled like wet leather, cold air, and the coffee they had grabbed on the way out because neither of them had eaten a real dinner.
Her shoes were damp.
Her coat sleeve clung to her wrist.
Outside, the streets shone black under headlights, and every dip in the pavement looked deeper than it should have.
Dominic drove slowly.
That should have helped.
Instead, it made every flooded patch last longer.
Water sprayed up from passing trucks.
The windshield wipers worked so hard they sounded like they were angry at the glass.
Liv opened the hotel app on her phone and started searching.
At first, she expected inconvenience.
Then she expected frustration.
Then she expected nothing at all.
Every decent hotel within reach had the same cold little message beside it.
No availability.
No availability.
No availability.
The conference hotel was sold out.
The chain hotel by the exit was sold out.
The airport hotel was sold out, though neither of them was going anywhere near the airport in that storm.
Liv called the conference hotel anyway.
At 8:41 p.m., a tired front desk clerk told her there was nothing open.
At 8:53 p.m., the same clerk heard her voice and said, “Ma’am, I’m sorry, nothing has changed,” before the line clicked dead.
Liv stared at the call log as if it had personally betrayed her.
Dominic glanced over.
“Anything?”
She kept scrolling.
“Define anything.”
He did not answer.
“Because if you mean a motel that looks like a place people check into under fake names, yes,” she said. “Several.”
One listing had a photo of a sign with half the letters out.
One had a room picture where the bedspread looked older than Liv’s first apartment.
One had a review that consisted of a single word in capital letters.
RUN.
Liv turned the screen toward Dominic.
The faint blue light cut across his face.
His jaw moved once.
“That seems direct,” he said.
“Refreshing honesty, honestly.”
Another option came up 40 miles away.
The app said it would take 51 minutes.
The traffic map underneath said the road leading there was closed in two places.
Liv read that twice, then backed out.
Dominic nodded toward the screen.
“What about that one?”
“It’s 40 miles in the wrong direction on a road currently pretending to be a river.”
He looked back at the windshield.
Water sheeted over it again, blurring the taillights ahead into red smears.
The weather alert banner dropped down across Liv’s phone.
FLOOD WARNING.
She hated how official it looked.
Plain letters.
No comfort.
No solution.
Just a fact.
They passed a gas station where cars had packed into every open space beneath the awning.
A family SUV sat half crooked near the pump, the driver’s door open while someone wrestled a toddler out of the back seat under a jacket.
A pickup rolled through standing water ahead of them and sent a wave against the curb.
Dominic slowed even more.
For the first time all evening, Liv saw tension creep into his shoulders.
It should not have surprised her that he could be worried.
He was human.
Still, she was used to the version of Dominic everyone else saw.
Smooth.
Untouchable.
A man who could charm donors, clients, and bored board members without ever seeming to give away anything real.
This version was quieter.
More careful.
His hand stayed firm on the wheel.
His eyes kept scanning the road, not her.
That helped.
A little.
Liv refreshed the app.
Her battery read 12%.
It felt like a countdown.
“This one has availability,” she said.
Dominic looked hopeful for half a second.
She opened the reviews.
The first mentioned bed bugs.
The second said the heater made a sound like screaming.
The third referred to something in the basement and did not elaborate.
Liv closed the page.
“No,” Dominic said.
“I did not even say it out loud.”
“You made a face.”
“That face may have saved our lives.”
He almost smiled.
Almost.
Then the car hit a stretch of water deep enough to pull at the tires.
Dominic’s expression changed instantly.
He eased off the gas and guided them toward the shoulder with both hands on the wheel.
The car stopped with a low, wet hiss beneath them.
For a moment, the only sound was the rain.
It drummed on the roof, streamed down the glass, and turned the outside world into moving shadows.
Liv’s breath fogged faintly near the passenger window.
She tried not to think about being stuck there.
She tried not to think about how close Dominic was.
There was barely a console between them.
The dashboard light made the inside of the car feel smaller than it was.
She could see rain caught in his hair from the dash to the parking lot.
She could see the damp fabric of his shirt at the shoulder.
She could see, with unfair clarity, that the famous Dominic Cain smile was gone.
“Liv,” he said.
Something in his voice made her stop scrolling.
Not the command voice he used in meetings.
Not the teasing one that made interns blush and senior partners roll their eyes.
This was lower.
Careful.
She looked up.
He was watching her, and for a second she could not read him.
That bothered her more than she wanted to admit.
Dominic was easy to label from across a conference table.
Boss.
Millionaire.
Playboy.
Problem.
A person was harder to dismiss when he was sitting two feet away in a flooded storm, looking at you like your safety mattered more than his charm.
“I found a place,” he said.
Liv blinked.
“You what?”
“A place,” he repeated. “About 10 minutes from here.”
Relief moved through her so quickly she felt dizzy.
“Why didn’t you say that first?”
“Because I was checking it.”
“Clean?”
“Yes.”
“Not a murder motel?”
“No.”
“Actual doors with locks?”
His mouth twitched.
“Yes.”
Liv exhaled and let her head fall back against the seat for one second.
Her whole body felt loose with the first real hope of the night.
“Book it.”
Dominic did not move.
That tiny pause found every nerve in her body.
Liv lifted her head.
“What?”
His phone glowed in his hand.
He had the reservation screen open.
His thumb hovered near the button.
“There is one problem,” he said.
Of course there was.
There was always one problem after the moment you let yourself feel relief.
“Dominic.”
He held her gaze.
No wink.
No joke.
No little comment designed to make the tension easier.
“There is 1 room.”
Liv waited.
The rain filled the silence.
“And 1 bed,” he said.
The words seemed to stay in the car after he said them.
One room.
One bed.
With Dominic Cain.
Her boss.
The man whose name made half the office lean forward and pretend they were not listening.
The man she had sworn, privately and repeatedly, would never become part of her personal life.
Liv looked down at her own phone as though the screen might save her.
It did not.
The app was still loading some terrible backup motel.
The battery still read 12%.
The warning banner still sat across the top of the screen like a verdict.
Outside, the road ahead was black, slick, and broken by ribbons of moving water.
A car passed too fast in the opposite lane and sent spray over Dominic’s windshield so hard the whole world vanished for two seconds.
Liv flinched before she could stop herself.
Dominic saw it.
He did not comment.
That mattered too.
He had never pushed when it mattered.
That was the inconvenient truth beneath every reason she had for distrusting him.
He flirted with ease, but never with pressure.
He joked, but he noticed when someone stopped finding it funny.
He had never used his title to corner her.
Never put a hand on her lower back in a hallway.
Never asked her to stay late alone unless someone else was still in the office or the work truly demanded it.
Once, a client at a dinner had placed a hand too close to Liv’s knee under the table.
Dominic had stopped speaking mid-sentence, looked at the man with a calm so sharp it could cut glass, and asked Liv if she would join him at the other end of the table to review numbers.
He had not made a scene.
He had made space.
She had never thanked him for it.
He had never asked her to.
Trust was not always built from speeches.
Sometimes it was built from what a person chose not to do.
That was the thought Liv hated most in that car.
Because it made him less simple.
It made the line between them feel less like a wall and more like something she had been holding with both hands.
Dominic shifted the phone so she could see the reservation details without moving closer.
“I can keep looking,” he said.
His voice was steady.
Too steady.
“I do not want you uncomfortable.”
Liv almost laughed, but there was no humor in it.
“I’m already uncomfortable.”
“I know.”
“You’re my boss.”
“I know that too.”
“And you are not exactly famous for sleeping alone.”
There it was.
The thing she had no right to say but could not swallow fast enough.
Dominic’s expression did not change in the way she expected.
He did not smirk.
He did not defend himself.
He looked back at the rain.
“No,” he said. “I’m not.”
The honesty landed harder than a denial would have.
Liv turned toward the window.
Her reflection stared back at her from the wet glass, pale and tired, hair frizzed around her face, mascara smudged at the lower corner of one eye.
She looked like a woman one bad decision away from becoming office gossip.
She also looked like a woman sitting beside a flooded road with nowhere else to go.
Dominic’s phone chimed softly.
He glanced down.
Something crossed his face.
“What?” Liv asked.
“The reservation hold expires in 3 minutes.”
The number sat beneath the booking button.
A small digital countdown.
Cold.
Practical.
Merciless.
Liv’s stomach tightened.
She wanted an answer that made her feel like herself.
She wanted a safe room with two beds.
She wanted daylight.
She wanted the conference hotel to call back and apologize and say a suite had opened up.
She wanted this to be somebody else’s story.
Instead, the storm kept beating against the roof.
The car stayed parked on a shoulder that looked less solid every minute.
Her phone dimmed.
Dominic did not reach for her.
He did not tell her she was being dramatic.
He did not say they were adults, as if that magically erased every power imbalance between them.
He sat there with the reservation in his hand and waited for her decision.
That made it worse.
A man who pressured her would have been easier to refuse.
A man who made a joke would have been easier to resent.
A man who quietly gave her the choice left her alone with the truth.
She trusted him more than she wanted to.
Liv swallowed.
“What happens if we don’t book it?”
Dominic looked through the windshield.
A line of red taillights crawled ahead of them, then stopped.
“I don’t know.”
That was the second honest thing he had said in under a minute.
It scared her more than the first.
Her phone buzzed again.
Another alert.
ROAD CLOSURE REPORTED AHEAD.
The notification took up half her screen.
Then the battery icon blinked.
11%.
Liv closed her eyes for one second.
She could still hear the wipers dragging.
She could smell the cold coffee.
She could feel the damp cuff of her blouse against her wrist and the seat belt pulled tight across her chest.
Everything about the moment was too sharp, too close, too real.
When she opened her eyes, Dominic was watching the road, not her.
He had turned the phone slightly away, as if even the booking screen was too much pressure.
“Dominic,” she said.
He looked over.
Her voice came out smaller than she wanted.
“You promise this is not some setup?”
For the first time, something like hurt passed through his expression.
It disappeared quickly, but not before she saw it.
“No,” he said. “I promise.”
The rain softened for half a second, just enough for the sound of their breathing to become noticeable inside the car.
Then it came down harder again.
Liv looked at the screen one last time.
One room.
One bed.
Reservation hold.
02:14.
She thought about the conference ballroom that morning, his voice saying, “She built it,” in front of everyone.
She thought about the client’s hand disappearing from beneath the dinner table months ago because Dominic had noticed.
She thought about every line he had never crossed.
Then she thought about how badly she wanted to believe those things meant something.
That was the real danger.
Not the storm.
Not the room.
Not even the bed.
The real danger was that the part of her that knew better was beginning to lose the argument.
Dominic’s thumb hovered over the button.
He still waited.
Liv wrapped both hands around her dying phone.
Her pulse beat so hard she felt it in her throat.
“Liv,” he said softly. “Tell me what you want me to do.”
Outside, another vehicle rolled past, slow and careful, water pushing away from its tires in small brown waves.
Inside, the reservation countdown kept falling.
01:39.
01:38.
01:37.
Liv looked at Dominic Cain, at the man she had spent 3 years keeping at arm’s length, and realized she was about to choose between the danger outside and the danger sitting right beside her.
And for the first time all night, she was not sure which one scared her more.