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GLIDED CAGE
GLIDED CAGE
Autor: EDREA BELLINGHAM

CHAPTER 1

last update Última atualização: 2026-02-03 15:01:58

The sun didn’t rise for Milo; it merely suggested itself through the sheer, cream-colored curtains of his bedroom.

Milo sat at the edge of his bed, his toes curling into the plush white rug. He looked down at himself, a sight that usually brought a flush of heat to his cheeks. Even in a simple oversized sleep shirt, he couldn't hide the way his body was built. His skin was pale, almost translucent like fine bone china, and beneath the fabric, his hips flared into soft, wide curves that felt entirely too feminine for a boy of nineteen. His "feminine" face stared back at him from the vanity mirror—big, doe-like brown eyes framed by lashes that were too long, and hair that was a chocolate-colored mess of fluffy, bouncy curls.

He reached for a binder, then hesitated. His parents hated when he constricted himself. "You’re perfect as you are, Milo," his mother would say, kissing his forehead. But his mother didn't see the way the boys at the university looked at him. They didn't see the way they whispered about his "bouncy ass" or how they tried to corner him in the library just to see him cry.

He settled for his armor: a heavy, charcoal-colored hoodie three sizes too big and baggy cargo pants that he hoped would swallow the shape of his legs.

Downstairs, the house smelled of blueberry pancakes and expensive coffee.

"There’s my sunshine!" His father, a man of high standing and even higher warmth, looked up from his newspaper and beamed. "Sleep well, Milo?"

"Yes, Dad," Milo whispered, his voice soft and melodic, another trait the bullies loved to mock. He slid into his chair, and immediately, his mother was there, placing a plate of food in front of him and smoothing down his unruly curls.

"You look tired, honey. Are those boys bothering you again? I could call the Dean," she fretted, her eyes full of the fierce protection that kept Milo's world from falling apart.

"I'm fine, Mom. Really," Milo lied, picking at a pancake.

Across the table, Elena, his twin sister, didn't look up from her tablet. She was the mirror image of him, but where Milo was soft and curved, Elena was sharp and poised. They shared the same beautiful face, but she wore it like a weapon. She wasn't mean—she never joined in on the teasing—but she was a silent observer. She lived in a different world, one of high-fashion galas and the family business. To her, Milo was like a delicate antique her parents kept on a shelf.

"Elena, are you walking with your brother today?" their father asked.

"I have a meeting with the board's junior associates, Dad," Elena said, her tone neutral, devoid of any malice but also empty of warmth. "Milo can handle the bus."

Milo looked down. He hated the bus. The bus was where the laughing started.

Five miles away, the sun didn't suggest itself—it glared off the chrome of a customized Harley-Davidson.

Jax let out a low growl as his wrench slipped, his knuckles barking against the cold metal engine block. He didn't flinch. He just wiped the blood onto his oil-stained jeans, his dark eyes narrowed in focus. At 6'4", Jax was a titan of a man, his frame packed with dense, functional muscle that made him look more like a Greek statue than a college-aged heir.

"Boss, you're gonna kill that engine if you keep staring at it like it owes you money," a voice yelled over the sound of a nearby air compressor.

Jax looked up, his face an unreadable mask of handsome, rugged indifference. His "friends"—the pack of bikers and thrill-seekers who followed him like he was a dark sun—were lounging around the garage, drinking cheap energy drinks and bragging about their latest speeds. They were rough, loud, and dangerous, but to Jax, they were just background noise.

"It’s not sitting right," Jax said, his voice a deep, gravelly rumble that commanded instant silence. He stood up, towering over his second-in-command. A few tattoos peeked out from under the sleeves of his black t-shirt—sharp, geometric designs that ran down his forearms like armor.

"Your old man called the shop," the other guy said, his voice dropping. "Said something about a dinner tonight. Said you better be in a suit, not leather."

Jax’s jaw tightened. The Rich Heir side of his life was a cage he constantly tried to kick the bars out of. He was the golden boy of a tech empire, but he felt alive only when the wind was screaming past his helmet at a hundred miles per hour.

"I'll go when I'm ready," Jax snapped, grabbing a rag to wipe the grease from his large, calloused hands.

He felt a strange, gnawing boredom in his chest. He was tired of the girls who threw themselves at him because of his money, and he was tired of the guys who tried to prove their manhood by picking fights with him. He wanted something real. Something that didn't smell like perfume or gunpowder.

He hopped onto his bike, the engine roaring to life with a violent, chest-thumping vibration. He needed to ride. He needed to get away from the Heir and the Biker and just be Jax for an hour.

He didn't know that three blocks away, a small, soft-spoken boy with porcelain skin was currently being pushed into a locker, his books scattering across the floor like fallen leaves.

Milo standing at the edge of the campus parking lot, his eyes red from held-back tears after a particularly nasty encounter with the school's varsity wrestling team. He’s shaking, his oversized hoodie pulled tight around his wide hips.

And then, he hears it. A low, predatory growl.

A massive black motorcycle swerves into the lot, the rider looking like a god of war in black leather. Jax pulls his helmet off, his dark hair messy, his eyes scanning the crowd with boredom—until they land on the small, trembling figure by the lamp post.

Milo looks up, his big doe eyes meeting Jax's cold stare.

For the first time in his life, Jax feels the boredom vanish. And for the first time in his life, Milo feels a different kind of fear—the kind that makes your heart beat in your throat.

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  • GLIDED CAGE   CHAPTER 5

    The week that followed was the strangest of Milo’s life. He couldn't shake the feeling that the air behind him was always just a few degrees warmer than it should be, or that the shadows in the corner of his eye were more solid than they had any right to be.He had gone back to his routine—head down, oversized hoodie pulled low, heart hammering against his ribs every time a group of boisterous students walked past. But something had changed. The world felt… cushioned.Milo sat in the back of his Advanced Literature class, his fingers nervously tracing the spine of a worn copy of The Iliad. He was thinking about the Shadow. Since that day in the park, the bullies had been strangely absent. Miller hadn't cornered him at his locker. The girls who usually snickered at his feminine walk were suddenly preoccupied when he passed. It was as if a silent decree had been issued across the campus: Milo is off-limits.He didn't know that three rows back, in the very last seat near the door, a gian

  • GLIDED CAGE   CHAPTER 4

    The weight of the sunglasses in Milo’s hand was a strange comfort. They were heavy, expensive, and carried the faint scent of motor oil and something else – something clean and masculine, like distant cedar or crisp autumn air. He had retrieved his broken glasses from the grass, the lenses spiderwebbed with cracks, a mirror to his own shattered composure. But these, the ones the shadow-man had given him, felt like a promise.He sat on a bench outside the campus library, the frantic energy of the earlier encounter slowly ebbing, leaving behind a cold, hollow ache. Who was he? The figure had been a blur of power, a fleeting titan against the harsh glare of the sun. All Milo remembered was the sheer scale of him, the rumble of his voice, and the swift, brutal efficiency with which he had dispatched his tormentors."Milo? There you are! I was so worried!"A soft voice pulled him from his thoughts. Liam, his best friend and fellow bookworm, rushed towards him, a worried frown etched on his

  • GLIDED CAGE   CHAPTER 3

    The world was a smear of grey stone and cruel laughter. Without his glasses, Milo felt untethered, floating in a sea of predatory shapes. He reached out, his fingers trembling as they brushed the cold, damp grass, searching for the frames that allowed him to navigate a world that already felt too sharp for him."Looking for these, Princess?" Miller’s voice was right above him. Milo heard the distinct crunch of a boot heel pressing into plastic and glass.Milo’s heart stuttered. A sob caught in his throat, making his chest heave, the movement straining the fabric of his oversized hoodie. "Why?" he whispered, his voice cracking. "I didn't do anything to you.""You exist," Miller sneered, reaching down to grab a fistful of Milo’s fluffy brown hair. "You walk around here with those hips and that face, looking like you’re waiting for someone to—""Let go of him."The voice didn't sound human. It sounded like the tectonic plates of the earth shifting. It was a low, guttural vibration that M

  • GLIDED CAGE   CHAPTER 2

    The university hallway felt three miles long when you were trying to be invisible.Milo clutched his bag to his chest, the heavy canvas acting as a shield against the eyes he felt boring into him. He could hear them before he saw them. Miller and his group of friends—guys who spent more time in the gym than the library and seemed to have a personal vendetta against anything they couldn't understand."Look at that," Miller’s voice rang out, dripping with a mock-sweetness that made Milo’s stomach turn. "If it isn't the campus doll. Hey, Milo! Where’d you get those pants? Do they even make them in the men's section, or did you shop in your sister’s closet again?"Milo kept his head down, his fluffy brown hair falling over his eyes. "Please," he whispered, his voice trembling. "I just want to go to lab.""Oh, he wants to go to lab!" Miller laughed, stepping into Milo’s path and forcing him to stop. He leaned in close, looming over Milo’s 5'5" frame. "You know, with a face that pretty and

  • GLIDED CAGE   CHAPTER 1

    The sun didn’t rise for Milo; it merely suggested itself through the sheer, cream-colored curtains of his bedroom.Milo sat at the edge of his bed, his toes curling into the plush white rug. He looked down at himself, a sight that usually brought a flush of heat to his cheeks. Even in a simple oversized sleep shirt, he couldn't hide the way his body was built. His skin was pale, almost translucent like fine bone china, and beneath the fabric, his hips flared into soft, wide curves that felt entirely too feminine for a boy of nineteen. His "feminine" face stared back at him from the vanity mirror—big, doe-like brown eyes framed by lashes that were too long, and hair that was a chocolate-colored mess of fluffy, bouncy curls.He reached for a binder, then hesitated. His parents hated when he constricted himself. "You’re perfect as you are, Milo," his mother would say, kissing his forehead. But his mother didn't see the way the boys at the university looked at him. They didn't see the way

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