The world of The Night's Game is not ordinary. It is a world where nights stretch longer than they should, where silence weighs heavier than words, and where a single move on a chessboard can shift more than the game itself.
Here, Selene reigns. A woman cloaked in shadows, flawless in her control, her presence is its own kingdom. Every glance is deliberate, every word sharpened, every silence a trap. She does not allow anyone close enough to see what lies beneath or if there is anything beneath at all.
And then comes Orion.
He does not fight to conquer her world, but to survive inside it. He refuses to fall behind, answering her piece for piece, silence for silence. With every move he makes, he is drawn deeper into her rhythm, into a place where vulnerability feels like strategy and truth feels like a lie.
It is not just a game. It is a universe of power and secrecy, a place where night itself has rules, and where the question is not who will win, but how long the game can last.