The Date That Made Daniel Kwan Lose Control of His Own House-hothiyenvy_5

“I have a date tonight.”

Harper Williams did not mean to say it like a confession.

She was standing in Daniel Kwan’s kitchen with a knife in her hand, slicing carrots into clean orange coins while beef stew simmered low on the stove.

Image

The whole room smelled like garlic, onions, black pepper, and the deep brown warmth Daniel preferred on cold nights.

Outside, November pressed against the windows until the glass had turned dark.

Inside, the marble island held the kind of chill that crawled into your wrist if you stood there too long.

One of the younger security men had stopped by the hallway and asked if she needed anything before he checked the west entrance.

Harper’s mind had been upstairs.

It had been on the burgundy dress hanging from the closet door in the staff wing, the gold hoops sitting on the dresser, and the little nervous flutter in her stomach that had nothing to do with danger.

“No, I’m fine,” she had said without thinking. “I have a date tonight.”

The security man froze.

Harper froze with him.

Then she noticed Daniel Kwan standing six feet away.

He had come into the kitchen so quietly that even the house seemed embarrassed for not warning her.

He wore a black suit without a tie, his dark hair combed back, one hand resting on the island as if he owned the silence as much as he owned the marble under it.

In Chicago, Daniel’s name did not move through rooms like a normal name.

It lowered voices.

It stopped jokes.

It made businessmen glance toward doors before answering questions.

He had restaurants, hotels, import companies, real estate holdings, and several other sources of money that nobody in the house discussed while the sun was up.

Harper had learned that before she had ever unpacked her suitcase.

She had also learned his preferences.

Stew when the weather turned cold.

Coffee black by 6:10 a.m.

No lilies in the foyer because the smell bothered him.

Read More