Chapter One: The House That Watches
The gravel crunches beneath Grace’s sandals as the Uber idles behind her, twin red brake lights glowing like a pair of tired eyes. She doesn’t look back. She’s already halfway up the long circular drive, suitcase wheels bumping over uneven stones. The estate rises ahead of her like a sleeping giant—three stories of weathered stone and climbing ivy, green as the summer air is thick. She hasn’t been home since Christmas. Seven months away, but it still stuns her how huge the house is. Grand in that arrogant, old-money way: pillared entrance, arched windows tall enough to swallow a cathedral’s shame, and the heavy iron front door that looks like it should groan when opened. She pauses at the base of the steps. The air smells like overgrown roses and sun-warmed stone. Her shirt sticks to her lower back. Thunderheads bruise the sky beyond the treeline—just heat lightning now, but the pressure feels like a held breath. And somewhere inside this house is Julian. She hasn’t seen him in person since the holidays, just a few photos her mom had posted on F******k before disappearing to Europe for the summer. Grace had zoomed in on them more times than she’d admit. Julian with his button-down sleeves rolled, scotch in hand, that unreadable half-smile curving his mouth. A little more gray at the temples, maybe, but still the same lean body, the same shoulders that seem too broad to belong to a man who prefers books to sports. She'd been twenty when her mother married him—late for a second marriage, early for Grace to care. At first, she’d been wary. Who was this quiet, polished, way-too-composed man her mother brought home like a new handbag? Then he’d looked at her once. Really looked. Long enough to make her feel like the most dangerous thing in the room. Not a kid. Not a step-anything. She knocks once, then twice. The door opens almost immediately. Julian. White linen shirt open at the throat, collarbones shadowed in the dusky light. Black slacks loose around his hips. He smells like sandalwood and tobacco leaf, something warm and complicated. His hair is damp at the temples like he’s just come from the shower—or just sweating, she realizes, with the heat. “Grace,” he says, smile understated. That slow, almost curious way of speaking that makes it sound like he’s tasting your name. “You’re early.” “Couldn’t wait,” she replies, and lets her smile linger. She watches the shift in his eyes—how quickly he tracks her bare legs, the tiny hem of her denim shorts. She’s dressed for the drive, not for greeting her stepfather. But that’s not an accident. He steps aside, lets her pass. The foyer swallows her in cool air and the soft echo of her footsteps on marble. She always forgets how cold the house is, like it refuses to let summer in. There’s a vase of lilies on the table. Their scent is rich, almost too much. Julian closes the door behind her, and the click of the latch sounds final. “Your mother’s flight left late,” he says, gesturing toward the sweeping staircase. “She’s already in Paris. Left this morning.” “I know,” Grace answers. “She called me from the airport. Sounded giddy.” “She usually is when she’s shopping.” He says it without judgment, but there’s something tight in his voice, some subtle derision. Grace looks up at him, amused. “You two fighting again?” Julian’s expression doesn’t change, but the muscles in his jaw pulse faintly. “We don’t fight. We disagree. Occasionally with volume.” He glances toward her suitcase. “Want help carrying that up?” “No,” she says, dragging it to the bottom of the stairs. “I’ve got it. I need the workout.” He doesn’t argue. Just watches her start up the stairs, slowly, deliberately. She knows what her ass looks like in these shorts. She can feel his gaze like warm breath between her thighs. And God help her, she likes it. Her bedroom hasn’t changed. Pale linen curtains float in the warm breeze, and her sheets are crisply turned down. The housekeeper must’ve come today—everything smells faintly of lavender and starch. She unpacks slowly. Her fingers trail over folded bras, thin cotton panties, cropped sleep shirts. She picks one deliberately—white, sheer, hangs just below her hips—and tosses it onto the bed. She imagines wearing it tonight. Imagines coming down for water. Imagines the way Julian’s eyes would catch, flicker, refuse to move away. By the time she heads downstairs again, dusk has crept into the corners of the house. The lamps are on, warm pools of gold across leather and glass. She finds Julian in the sunroom, reading. He hasn’t turned on the overhead lights, just a single tall lamp behind his chair. He looks up as she enters. She’s barefoot now, wearing a tank top and the same tiny shorts. Her skin is flushed from the shower, still slightly damp at the collarbone. She drops onto the couch opposite him, legs folding beneath her. “What’re you reading?” He lifts the book slightly. The Collected Stories of Nabokov. “Jesus,” she says, grinning. “You never change.” His eyes narrow faintly. “You say that like it’s a bad thing.” “I don’t know. Depends on how you were to begin with.” “Grace,” he says, her name like a warning—but there’s amusement too, buried under the low timber of his voice. “Are you trying to provoke me already?” “Only a little.” She stretches her arms above her head, sighing as her spine arches. “It’s just… good to be home.” He’s silent for a beat too long. Then: “You were supposed to stay in New York for the summer.” “I was supposed to take that internship at that awful hedge fund.” She leans back on her elbows. “Then I realized I don’t want to wear heels and kiss ass for the next ten years.” “So instead you came here. To… kiss mine?” It’s a dry joke, but it lands between them like a lit match. Her breath hitches just enough to give her away. Julian doesn’t move. Doesn’t smirk. Just watches. “I came for the pool,” she says airily. “And the view.” “Ah,” he murmurs, eyes on her throat now. “The view.” There’s silence then, taut and vibrating. The sound of cicadas rising in waves through the open windows. The breeze lifting the edge of her tank top. His gaze follows it, lingers on the bare skin just below her ribs. He closes his book without marking the page. “I’ll open a bottle,” he says, voice low. “I’m twenty-one,” she calls as he walks past. “No rules now.” He doesn’t answer. Just disappears into the kitchen. When he returns, he’s carrying two glasses and a bottle of white wine, the condensation already sliding down the green glass. They drink in silence for a while. She sits cross-legged now, sipping slowly, letting the alcohol fuzz the edges of her thoughts. He’s across from her, legs stretched out, one arm slung over the back of the chair. Watching. Always watching. “How’s school?” he asks eventually. “Fine.” “You like it?” “No.” “Why not?” “Because everyone there’s trying too hard. They act like they know everything. I’d rather be here.” He doesn’t reply. Just takes another sip of wine. She watches his throat move as he swallows, watches the tendons shift under skin. “It’s weird without her here,” she says, voice softer now. “The house feels… different.” Julian nods. “Quieter.” “Better?” He doesn’t answer that either. Instead, he stands, sets his empty glass down. “I should lock up.” Grace watches him move—how his shirt pulls across his back, the clean lines of his shoulders. Something stirs low in her belly, dangerous and old and familiar. “I might go for a swim,” she says. “After dark.” He pauses by the door. Looks back. “Alone?” She smiles. “Unless you want to join.” His mouth twitches. But he says nothing. When he disappears down the hall, she lets her head fall back against the cushions and exhales slowly. Her skin is hot. Her thighs sticky against the fabric. Her nipples hard under her thin shirt, no bra tonight. She hadn’t planned to feel this keyed up already. But maybe she had. The next morning dawns hot and bright. Birds loud. The smell of cut grass thick in the air. She comes downstairs in nothing but her tiny white sleep shirt. No panties. She tells herself it’s because it’s too hot to wear anything more. But her heartbeat says otherwise. Julian’s in the kitchen. French press on the counter, sleeves rolled, forearms tan and dusted with fine hair. He doesn’t look at her right away. Just slides a mug toward her. “Coffee?” “Please,” she says, voice hoarse. She perches on a stool, one knee drawn up. Her shirt rides dangerously high. She knows it. He knows it. But he doesn’t look—yet. “Sleep okay?” “Sort of. Dreamed too much.” “About what?” She grins. “Swimming.” He pours himself a cup, slow and methodical. Then leans against the counter, finally meeting her eyes. “Did you swim last night?” “No. Got distracted.” “With what?” “You.” There’s a silence that could slice skin. He doesn’t speak. Doesn’t move. Just stares, the air between them electric, suffocating. She shifts on the stool, thighs parting just a little more. She watches his eyes flick down—just for a second—then snap back up. Then he turns away, lifts his mug. “We should get groceries today. House is empty.” “So am I,” she murmurs, just loud enough for him to hear. He freezes for half a heartbeat. Then walks out. She laughs under her breath. Victory curling warm in her chest. By sunset, the storm has arrived. Lightning forks across the sky, thunder cracking close. The power flickers, then steadies. She walks through the hallway barefoot, floor cool under her soles, shadows rippling like water. Julian’s in the study now, shirt half unbuttoned, collar open. The heat’s gotten to him too. A bead of sweat rolls down the side of his neck. She stares at it, transfixed. “Still planning on swimming?” he asks, voice dry. “Too stormy. I’d drown.” He glances up. “Don’t tempt fate.” “Never,” she says, smiling slowly. “Fate doesn’t tempt me.” Another pause. This one loaded. “You hungry?” he asks. “I could eat.” “I’ll cook.” She follows him to the kitchen, watches the way he moves, precise and effortless. He cooks like he reads—slow, thoughtful, no wasted motion. She doesn’t help. Just sits and watches, knees drawn up on the stool, arms wrapped around them. “I forgot you were good at this,” she says, voice soft. “I’m good at a lot of things,” Julian says without looking at her. The words land low in her belly. Hot. Sharp. She swallows hard. They eat by candlelight when the power finally dies for real. The storm howls against the windows. Outside, the trees lash and bend. Inside, something else is bending. Something is curling and coiling, drawing them inward. Grace can feel it like a rope tightening around her throat. A pull she doesn’t resist. After dinner, she reaches for a bottle of wine without asking. Julian doesn’t stop her. They sit close on the couch, knees almost touching. The flickering candlelight throws long shadows, softens the edges of everything. Their glasses empty too quickly. Her skin is too hot. Her thighs ache. She turns toward him. Her lips part. Julian looks at her like he’s reading the last page of a novel he didn’t want to end. And for a moment, neither of them moves. The candle crackles. He leans in—slow, hesitant—but it’s her who bridges the final inch. Her mouth finds his. Soft. Testing. Then again, firmer. Hungrier. And he doesn’t stop her. Doesn’t pull away. His hand rises—curls around her jaw. She moans, soft and broken. And just as his tongue flicks across hers, just as his hand slips to the back of her neck— He pulls away. “Grace,” he whispers, breathless. “Stop.” She stares at him, wide-eyed, lips swollen, chest heaving. He closes his eyes. Stands. Walks out. Leaves her burning. Alone.CHAPTER 6: AN OFFER WRAPPED IN CHAINSANITA’S POV“You are the one being insane, sir. You’re the one overstepping your boundaries. You need to stop, please. This is not part of the menu.”My words spill out sharp, edged with desperation. But instead of backing down, he chuckles—a dark, low rumble that vibrates through the air between us.“Oh, it’s just about to become part of the menu,” he murmurs, his eyes glinting with cruel amusement. “And if you do not cooperate, I promise you that recommendation letter you think my wife is going to give you—you’re not going to get it. Forget the fact that she’s the one in charge on paper. I have my ways. I’m the owner of this house. I own everything… I even own her. So whatever recommendation she’s about to give you, I’m still the one in charge since I’m the one high above her. Do you understand that?”The weight of his threat crushes the air out of my lungs. My eyes blink rapidly, my brain scrambling to process his audacity, his arrogance. He st
CHAPTER 5: THE PRICE OF DEFIANCEANITA’S POV “You know,” his voice dips lower, slower, thicker than before, each word weighted with authority and threat. “I’m the owner of this house. I can send you out at any point in time. So you should really, really answer my questions whenever I’m talking to you.”My spine stiffens as though an iron rod has been shoved between my shoulder blades.Oh my God. Seriously?Is he actually threatening me right now? The sheer audacity of his words makes my stomach knot. My heart pounds against my ribs so hard I think he might hear it. Jesus. Is he seriously?I bite down hard on my bottom lip, holding back the rush of words I want to fling in his face. The sharp sting centers me, reminding me I have to keep control. My gown clings tightly around me, restricting, making it harder to breathe, as though even the fabric is conspiring to cage me in this moment. My back is against the cold center table of the kitchen, its marble edge pressing into me like a si
CHAPTER 4: THE TEST OF FIREANITA'S POV “This is literally the biggest kitchen recorded in the world right now, the largest in this estate, the grandest in this entire country,” she says with a note of pride, and my eyebrow arches in disbelief.“Oh my God…” The words slip from me in a whisper as my eyes widen, drinking in the sight before me.It isn’t a kitchen. It’s an empire built in marble and gold. The width stretches impossibly, the breadth rolling out like a ballroom floor, the vast expanse gleaming with wealth. Jesus, what the hell is this? Who was the architect bold enough to design such excess? What the fucking hell was he thinking? This space isn’t meant for pots and pans—it could host a dinner for hundreds, a charity gala, even a ball for royalty.Cookers gleam in perfect alignment, their steel polished to mirrors. The tiles on the walls and floor shimmer as though set with powdered diamonds, every inch glistening in the flood of overhead light. Marble sprawls endlessly, v
CHAPTER 3: SILENT WARNINGSANITA'S POV My eyes widen, locked on him as fury surges through me. Then I hear it—a sharp inhale beside me, delicate yet commanding. I turn toward her, and there it is: one perfectly arched eyebrow raised, a silent warning cloaked in elegance. The shame burns instantly in my chest.I squeeze my eyes shut, teeth sinking into my lower lip until the sting forces composure. “I am so sorry,” I blurt, my voice quick, contrite. My gaze flickers between the two of them, my pulse hammering against my ribs. “This is all my fault. It was a clumsy mistake. It’s not going to happen again.”Her lips curve into a warm, forgiving smile, her eyes softening. “Oh, it’s alright, dear,” she says, her voice like velvet smoothing over jagged edges. “My goodness, you are actually so cute.” She tilts her head, studying me with genuine curiosity. “Why would someone as pretty as you be volunteering for a maid project? Aren’t you supposed to be among the elites, doing something else
CHAPTER 2: SHATTERED GLASSANITA'S POV I narrow my eyes, brows knitting as I fix him with a glare sharp enough to slice. My silence is deliberate, a warning delivered through the tension of my jaw and the steady burn in my gaze. He only chuckles, as though my fury amuses him. His hands lift in mock surrender, palms open, eyes glittering with mischief.“Oh, trust me,” he says smoothly, voice dripping with false reassurance. “I’m practically not going to do anything to you. You’re not hot anyway.”Confusion floods me, curling tight in my stomach. Not hot? That’s his measure? I want to snap at him—wasn’t this the same man who called me hot and sexy not even a minute ago? What the hell changed in sixty seconds?He chuckles again, as though reading my thoughts. “Oh, and if you’re thinking about what I said earlier, I was just testing you.” His grin widens, arrogance radiating off him like perfume. “But it’s fine. I can see you’re a perfect fit for this volunteer-type shit, whatever you pe
BOOK 6: MY BOSS'S HUSBAND CAN'T RESIST MECHAPTER 1: THE GOLDEN THRESHOLDANITA'S POV I am practically bubbling with joy, a fizzy warmth rising in my chest until it feels like my skin itself might burst with light. This is one of those rare moments in life where everything feels aligned—the universe leaning in my favor, my stars finally tilting to smile at me. I stand in front of the Don Carlo residence, a tray balanced in my trembling hands, my heart hammering so loudly it might as well be knocking on the door with me.Finally, I’m here. Doing something I’ve dreamed of. A chance to be seen, a chance to be heard, a chance to be part of something larger than myself—a community that stands for good, that represents the kind of change our city needs. This isn’t just volunteer work; this is a stepping stone that could shape my future. If I do this well, my GPA gets the boost it needs, and that scholarship I’ve been chasing, clawing toward with sleepless nights and endless study sessions,