MasukRhys’s POV
I stood at the top of the main staircase, hands in my pockets, looking down into the foyer. The marble floors gleamed under the chandelier’s soft glow. The Christmas tree was already up, because Mirabel would complain if it wasn’t, towered in the corner, lights twinkling in slow, programmed patterns. Boxes of ornaments sat open on the floor, waiting for her to arrive and finish the job. She always insisted on doing it herself, saying the tree didn’t feel right unless she hung the crooked star at the top. I descended slowly, my footsteps echoing. The house had been built for a family—it had wide halls, multiple living rooms, a kitchen big enough for staff and chaos—but for years it had mostly held echoes. Mine and Mirabel’s laughter when she came home. And the quiet creak of floorboards when I walked alone at night. The chef and head of staff—Maria—had arrived earlier to prep. I could smell cinnamon and butter drifting from the kitchen. She poked her head out as I passed. “Mr. Connell. The tarts are cooling. I made extra batches—your daughter’s friend likes cinnamon, yes?” I nodded. “She does. Thank you, Maria. Make sure the guest room has fresh flowers. And please, tell someone to keep extra blankets there. Mirabel said her friend gets cold easily.” Maria smiled, a knowing look in her eyes. “Already done. And the library’s stocked, with new releases on the romance shelf, just in case.” I gave a small huff that might have passed for a laugh. “Good thinking.” She disappeared back into the kitchen, and I continued down the hall to the library. The double doors opened silently. Floor-to-ceiling shelves lined every wall, rolling ladders in place, and leather armchairs arranged by the fireplace. The room smelled of aged paper and polished wood. I flicked on the lamps—soft amber light spilled across the spines. Mirabel had told me her friend was a reader. “Like, obsessively,” she’d said. “She’ll probably spend the whole holiday in here if you let her.” I walked the aisles slowly, trailing my fingers over the books. Classics. Thrillers. A whole section of contemporary romance—Mirabel’s doing, mostly. She’d started collecting them in high school, said they were “escapist but smart.” I’d never read them. Too many happy endings. Too much hope wrapped in pretty words. I pulled one down at random. Dark cover, brooding man in a suit, and title written in gold foil: Claimed by the Billionaire. I snorted softly, then slid it back. My phone buzzed in my pocket. I checked, and it was Hayes. Hayes: Zanzibar paperwork signed. The deal's closing tomorrow. Mark’s company tried one last pushback, but it’s nothing we couldn’t handle. You good? I typed back: Good. Keep an eye on him. He’s not done, you know him. Hayes: Always do. Enjoy the quiet while it lasts. You said Mirabel’s bringing company, right? Me: Yes. Her best friend from school. Hayes: About time you had more than ghosts in that house. I chuckled, but didn’t reply. I slipped the phone away and crossed to the window. The backyard stretched out—pool covered for the season, lights strung along the pergola, the garden dormant but still beautiful in its winter sleep. I could already picture Mirabel out there, dragging her friend into the cold for “one quick dip” before the heater kicked in properly. Laughing. Splashing. Filling the silence. The thought eased something tight in my chest. I hadn’t realized how much I’d been looking forward to her coming home until the text arrived. Two weeks. No board meetings. No late-night calls from Asia. Just my daughter, her friend, and the house finally feeling lived-in again. I turned back to the shelves, pulled down a first-edition copy of Pride and Prejudice—one of Elena’s favorites. The spine was worn from her hands. I opened it gently, and traced the inscription inside in her handwriting; To my Rhys, who makes every day feel like a happy ending. —E The grief hit like it always did—sudden, dull, familiar. I closed the book, and set it back carefully. Twenty-five years. Mirabel had never known her mother, only the stories I told and the photos we kept. She never complained, never asked why I hadn’t remarried. But I saw it sometimes—the way she watched me when she thought I wasn’t looking, like she was waiting for me to break, or heal, or do something other than exist in this careful half-life. I didn’t know how to explain that moving on felt like betrayal. That every woman who’d come after Elena had felt like a placeholder. Polite. Attractive. Forgettable. I told myself it was better that way. A clean break. A perfect, contained fantasy. No complications. No risk of hurting Mirabel. But some nights, when the house was too quiet, I let the memory play out in full. The way Elena had always been excited to have me back home after a long day at work, her laughter, her long luscious hair, and her soothing voice. I shook my head, and stepped away from the shelves. “Enough.” I cautioned myself. I walked back to the foyer, checked the thermostat—it was sixty-eight degrees, warm enough for guests. I checked the guest room myself: fresh linens, a small stack of towels, a vase of white lilies on the dresser. A basket of books on the nightstand—new releases, a mix of genres. Maria’s touch again, she’d done well by giving her colleagues the right instructions on what to do. I turned off the light and closed the door. Downstairs, I poured a glass of scotch, and carried it to the study. The fire was already lit, so I sat in the leather armchair, and stared into the flames. I began the count down to their arrival in my head. We have three days left.Alicia’s POV The ride back to campus felt too short. I stared out the tinted window, my body still humming with the warmth of the weekend. I kept replaying Rhys’s steady voice telling me I wasn’t alone in this, the way he’d held me like I was something precious he refused to lose again. I was glowing differently, even when exhaustion tugged at my edges, and guilt sat heavy in my stomach like a stone. Mirabel was waiting when I pushed open the dorm door, legs crossed on her bed, eyes lighting up the second she saw me. “You’re back!” She jumped up and pulled me into a tight hug. “How was the literature retreat? Tell me everything. Was it amazing? Did you meet famous authors? Did you read until your eyes fell out?” I hugged her back, forcing a bright smile as I dropped my bag. “It was incredible, actually. Super intense but so much fun. We talked about classic romance tropes for hours, analyzed different books… and I took so many notes. You would’ve loved it. Next time they do one, I
Rhys’s POV The clock on my desk read past midnight, but the city lights outside my office window were still bright. I couldn’t focus on the reports in front of me. My mind kept drifting back to Alicia, the way her voice had sounded on that last call, the hesitation in her texts, the growing distance that was slowly driving me insane. I picked up the phone and called Hayes. “Set it up for this weekend,” I said quietly. “Tell her it’s a literature study retreat upstate, make it sound exclusive and academic. Mirabel will buy it. Get the jet ready for Friday night, and the private villa suite too. No one else knows.” “Done,” Hayes replied without question. I sent the message to Alicia before I could second-guess myself. Me: I got you a ticket for a literature study retreat this weekend, Mirabel has been informed. Car picks you up Friday at 7. I need to see you, sunshine. Just us. Her reply came after a few minutes: Okay. The private villa suite overlooked the water, it was elegant
Alicia’s POV Weeks later, I got a text from Rhys saying he got me something cute. The package arrived at the dorm front desk just after my afternoon lecture, wrapped in plain brown paper with no return address. I knew who it was from the second I saw it, my heart did a traitorous flip as I carried it upstairs, glancing over my shoulder like Mirabel might appear at any moment. I slipped into our room, locked the door, and tore it open on my bed. Inside was a small wooden box. Nestled in velvet lay a rare first-edition copy of Jane Eyre, the cover worn but beautiful, it pages edged in gold. My breath caught. I’d mentioned it once during the holidays, of how it was my ultimate book boyfriend fantasy in physical form. Rhys had remembered. I opened it carefully. Tucked inside the front cover was a handwritten note on heavy cream paper, his strong, decisive script unmistakable. Sunshine, Some stories deserve to be claimed again and again, just like you. I hope you enjoy this. —R My
Alicia’s POV My phone buzzed again on the nightstand, the sound cutting through Mirabel’s laughter like a live wire. I froze, my fingers tightening around the edge of my blanket. Mirabel didn’t notice, she was still giggling about something Alex had said during their call, replaying the conversation out loud as if I hadn’t been sitting right there. I reached for the phone slowly, my heart already racing before I even saw the name. Rhys: Did you get my last message, sunshine? Or are you still trying to run from me? The words sent a rush of heat straight through me, pooling low in my belly. I could practically hear his voice saying them against my ear. My thighs pressed together instinctively under the blanket as memories flooded back— his mouth between my legs, the way he’d held me open like I was his favorite meal, the filthy praise that had me shattering on his tongue. I typed back quickly, thumbs flying before Mirabel could glance over. Me: I’m not running. Just… trying to be
Alicia’s POV “Chris,” I said, turning to face him. I kept my voice level, casual. “What are you doing here?” He shrugged, hands still in his hoodie pocket, that easy smile plastered on. “I saw you when I was heading out, figured I should say hi. You’ve been avoiding me since the holiday.” “I haven’t been avoiding you,” I lied. “I’ve been busy, with library shifts and classes.” “Right.” He stepped closer, glancing down the empty aisle. “Look, I know I came on strong before break. My bad, I was an ass. I just… I like you, Alicia. Can we start over?” I studied him, looking out for the edge in his voice, and that jealous glare. But there was none, he was just calm. The Chris from the coffee shop who grabbed my wrist felt far away. “Start over how?” I asked, crossing my arms. He exhaled, rubbing the back of his neck. “Like a walk. No pressure. You said you were done in the library, right? Just give me fifteen minutes. We walk the quad, clear the air. If you still want me gone after
Rhys’s POV “But she’s Mirabel’s best friend. She’s twenty-five, you’re forty-five, a widower, and her best friend’s father, this is kinda wrong in every way that counts. Power imbalance doesn’t even begin to cover it. And Mirabel…” He trailed off, shaking his head. “That girl worships you. Losing her mother the way she did, you’ve been her whole world. If she finds out you’ve been with Alicia behind her back, even if it started before she knew who Alicia was to her… it could break something.” “I know.” The words tasted bitter, I picked up the scotch again but didn’t drink. “Alicia’s terrified of that. She keeps pulling back, saying we have to stop, that it’s wrong, that Mirabel would never forgive either of us. She almost confessed to Mirabel when I sent her the rose. Alicia doesn’t want me to tell Mirabel yet. She needs time, she’s scared.” Hayes nodded slowly, processing what I’d said. “Smart girl. Scared, but smart. Are you planning to respect that?” “I am.” My grip tightened







