ログインThe stables smelled faintly of hay and horse sweat, the scent lingering long after the lanterns had been extinguished. Nikolai stood in the doorway, arms crossed, silent, watching. The boy—Arlo—was frozen in the aftermath, cheeks flushed, hands trembling slightly. He had looked so small, so delicate, yet something about the way he had stiffened under Nikolai’s gaze had stirred a sensation he couldn’t name.
It shouldn’t matter. He shouldn’t care. He was the heir, the one who controlled this house. The rules were clear. And yet… he couldn’t look away.
Nikolai’s blue eyes followed Arlo as he retreated, moving cautiously down the hall. Every step precise, careful, wary. A small, deliberate hesitation in the boy’s movement—an unconscious pause that spoke volumes.
Obsessed, yes, that was the word. But it wasn’t just curiosity. Not yet. It was something deeper, something dangerous.
He remembered the touch. The brush of lips, fleeting but impossible to ignore. The audacity of it, the innocence. And beneath it all, the confidence. Arlo had dared. Arlo had risked everything in this house—the rules, his family, his life—for a moment.
And Nikolai had been there. Watching. Stopping it. Protecting it. Or punishing it. He wasn’t sure which.
But he had acted. And in that action, something had changed.
He paced silently across the stables, boots whispering against the stone floor. Each step calculated, each breath measured. He replayed the moment in his mind, the boy’s hands, the tilt of his head, the sharp intake of breath.
Why does it matter so much?
The answer was terrifyingly simple: it did.
He didn’t understand the sensation fully—not yet—but he knew it had the weight of inevitability. He would follow. He would watch. He would not let this boy slip from his awareness again.
The hallway leading from the stables was empty, silent. Nikolai lingered in the shadows, noting every detail: the faint scent of Arlo’s hair, the way his shoulders had tensed, the precise way he moved. He cataloged it, stored it, savored it in a way he didn’t want anyone to notice.
There was something about Arlo—something that demanded attention. Something that drew him in despite every rule, despite every expectation of control and distance.
Later, in the study, Nikolai couldn’t focus on anything else. The sound of his father’s papers, the distant ticking of the clock, the faint rustle of the curtains—it all blurred. His thoughts were consumed by the boy.
Arlo’s presence lingered in the corners of his mind, impossible to ignore. He imagined the brush of hands, the tension in Arlo’s stance, the sharp inhale he had made when caught. Every detail burned in Nikolai’s memory, impossible to erase.
He’s mine, the thought came unbidden. Not in ownership—at least, not yet—but in the way a hunter recognizes prey, a protector recognizes vulnerability, a man recognizes the one person who could unravel him if he let them.
The following day, Nikolai’s observation became more deliberate. Every movement of Arlo’s was cataloged: how he polished the banisters, how he carried the buckets, how he tucked stray strands of hair behind his ear. Small, mundane gestures, yet each one resonated with a force Nikolai couldn’t explain.
He began to anticipate Arlo’s movements, predicting where he would be next, who he would speak to, how he would interact with others. A faint thrill ran through him every time he caught a glimpse of the boy in the hall or at the stairwell.
At breakfast, Nikolai’s gaze swept over the long dining table. Arlo sat at the far end, performing his duties as usual, quiet, unassuming. Yet Nikolai’s eyes found him immediately.
Every flick of Arlo’s fingers, every tilt of his head, every careful bite of food—it was cataloged. Noticing the way his shoulders tensed when a servant moved too close. Noticing the subtle way he tried to make himself smaller, less noticeable.
And Nikolai’s chest tightened.
Something about the boy’s vulnerability, his careful control, demanded attention. He couldn’t explain it. Couldn’t rationalize it. But he would watch. He would follow. He would wait.
Later, walking through the corridors, Nikolai found himself pausing outside the wing where Arlo slept. The faint candlelight flickered against the walls, and he imagined the boy inside: small, careful, unaware.
The urge to intrude—to make his presence known—rose sharply, but he restrained himself. Observation first. Control always. Patience.
And yet, even as he stepped away, the feeling lingered. Possession. Protection. Desire. All tangled together in a way he couldn’t yet untangle.
He replayed the stables incident in his mind again. The brush of lips. The boy’s hesitation. The sharp inhale. The tiny tremble in his hands.
Every detail burned into him, impossible to ignore, impossible to forget.
By nightfall, Nikolai was certain of one thing: he could not stop thinking about Arlo. Every step he took, every glance he stole, every silent observation confirmed the truth.
Arlo had marked him in a way no one else ever could. And from this moment forward, he would not allow the boy to escape his notice again.
He stood at the balcony of his room, overlooking the estate. Lights flickered faintly below, casting golden patterns across the polished floors. He could imagine Arlo moving through the halls, polishing, cleaning, breathing, existing.
And he would watch.
Because he needed to.
Because he couldn’t help it.
Because for the first time, someone had truly captured his attention, and he would not release them—not now, not ever.
Chapter 17: Nikolai’s POV He didn’t follow him out. That would’ve been obvious. Unnecessary. Nikolai stayed exactly where he was, watching the space Arlo left behind like it still held something worth studying. Three years. And Arlo still walked away the same way. Controlled. Deliberate. Like distance was a decision, not instinct. Nikolai exhaled slowly, adjusting his sleeve. No rush. There was never a need to rush. Because now— He knew where to find him. The next day is quieter. Structured. Predictable. Nikolai arrives early. Not because he needs to. Because timing matters. He takes a seat near the back of the lecture hall, posture relaxed, attention casual. Students filter in. Voices rise. Settle. Then— Arlo walks in. No hesitation. No searching. Straight to his usual seat. Bag down. Notebook out. Pen ready. Routine. Nikolai watches him for a moment. Still disciplined. Good. He moves then. No announcement. No hesitation. Just crosses the space and
Chapter 16: Arlo’s POV — ReplacementThe music is too loud.Arlo should have left twenty minutes ago.Maybe longer.Time feels off here—stretched, blurred, unnecessary.Kevin is talking. Or was. Arlo isn’t sure when he stopped paying attention.“…and then she tried to say it was conceptual,” Kevin laughs, shaking his head. “Like that makes it any better.”Arlo nods faintly. “Right.”Kevin pauses mid-sentence, watching him.“You’re doing it again.”“Doing what?”“Not being here.”“I’m here.”Kevin studies him for a second, then exhales. “Yeah. Sure.”He doesn’t push. He never really does.Instead, he downs the rest of his drink and leans closer. “I’m grabbing another. Try not to disappear.”“I won’t.”Kevin gives him a look like he doesn’t believe that, then turns and slips into the crowd.Arlo stays where he is.Back near the wall. Same spot. Same distance.It’s easier that way.The bass vibrates through the floor. People move too close, too fast. Conversations overlap into noise.And
Chapter 15: Arlo’s POV — Off Balance“You’re still thinking about it.”“I’m not.”“You are.”Arlo doesn’t look up from his laptop.Kevin leans back in his chair, studying him like he’s a sketch he hasn’t decided how to finish.“It’s a party, not a contract,” he says. “You don’t need to analyze it.”“I’m not analyzing it.”“You paused for ten seconds before answering.”“I was working.”Kevin tilts his head. “You always say that.”“Because I usually am.”A beat.Kevin exhales through his nose, not annoyed—just… noticing.“That’s kind of the problem.”Arlo’s fingers still over the keyboard.“What is?”“You’re always working. Always thinking. Always…” Kevin gestures vaguely, searching for the word. “Somewhere else.”Arlo finally looks at him.“I’m here.”Kevin meets his gaze.“You are,” he agrees. “But not really.”Silence settles between them.Not heavy.But not easy either.Arlo closes his laptop.Slowly.Deliberately.“What do you want me to say?”“I don’t want you to say anything,” Ke
Chapter 14: Three Years Later Arlo's Pov:“You’re ignoring me.”“I’m listening.”“You’re typing.”“I can do both.”Kevin leans over, trying to peek at Arlo’s laptop. “That’s offensive.”Arlo tilts the screen away without looking up. “That’s private.”“It’s economics,” Kevin says. “How private can it be?”“Very.”Kevin huffs, then nudges Arlo’s shoulder with his own. “You’re actually impossible, you know that?”Arlo finally glances at him.“You’re still here.”“That’s because I like you,” Kevin shoots back easily.Arlo pauses.Then returns his attention to the screen.“Debatable.”Kevin laughs under his breath, not offended. He never is.That’s part of it.Part of why this works.Kevin doesn’t push too hard.Doesn’t ask too many questions.Doesn’t try to dig into things Arlo has no intention of explaining.---It’s easy.---Kevin shifts closer anyway, resting his chin briefly on Arlo’s shoulder.“You’ve been working for two hours.”-“Three."“That’s worse.”“I have a deadline.”“You
Chapter 13: Nikolai’s POV — A ProblemThe gun clicked empty.Again.“Focus.”Nikolai didn’t lower the weapon.Didn’t blink.Didn’t respond.Across from him, the target hung shredded at the edges but intact at the center—where it mattered.Where it counted.Missed.Not completely.But enough.A mistake he wouldn’t usually make.“Your grip is off,” Viktor said from behind him.Nikolai inhaled slowly through his nose, adjusting his hold, feeling the weight settle differently in his palm.Familiar.Controlled.He fired again.This time, the bullet landed clean.Center.Silence stretched through the training room, thick with the scent of gunpowder and expectation.“Better,” Viktor said.Nikolai lowered the gun, setting it down with deliberate care.“That wasn’t the first shot,” he replied flatly.“No,” Viktor agreed. “It wasn’t.”There it was.Not criticism.Worse.Observation.Nikolai reached for a cloth, wiping his hands slowly, methodically. No wasted movement. No visible irritation.Bu
Chapter 12: Arlo’s POV – What LingersArlo didn’t stop working.He couldn’t.Even after Nikolai left, even after the room settled back into silence, even after the air felt lighter—His hands kept moving.Fold. Align. Stack.Again.Again.Again.But it wasn’t right.The rhythm was off.He stared down at the linen in his hands, noticing the crease wasn’t clean. Not sharp enough. Not like the one Nikolai had shown him.His fingers tightened.Focus.He redid it.Slower.More deliberate.Exactly the way Nikolai had—Arlo stopped.The realization came quietly.Too quietly.I’m copying him.His chest tightened.He dropped the fabric onto the table a little harder than necessary, stepping back as if the linen itself had done something wrong.This is exactly what I said I wouldn’t do.He exhaled slowly, pressing his palm against the edge of the table.This was supposed to be simple.Work. Save. Leave.That was it.No distractions.No complications.No—You already have.The words landed again







