LOGINWhen twenty-five-year-old Solyn Fairchild survives a brutal attack outside her apartment, the police call it a random mugging. Solyn knows better. The man who tried to strangle her whispered her full name, as if he had been waiting for her. Terrified and running out of places to hide, she reluctantly agrees to move into the safest home her father can think of. The home of Dr. Calian Winslow. Her father’s most trusted friend. A man Solyn barely remembers, yet cannot forget. Calian is everything her father swears by: brilliant, elegant, composed to the point of being unreadable. But behind the calm exterior lies a darkness Solyn senses before she even steps through his door. Calian feels nothing and fears nothing. A rare condition has kept his emotions frozen since childhood. Until Solyn moves in. She is the one thing his careful control cannot contain, the only person who makes his pulse rise and his cold veneer crack. As the stalker escalates, leaving messages that echo Calian’s own research, Solyn is pulled deeper into the shadows of his past. Every step she takes toward safety draws her closer to Calian’s dangerous orbit. Every stolen glance, every forbidden moment, every slip in his voice makes it harder to remember the rules that should keep them apart. Her father trusts him. Her attacker fears him. And Solyn is falling for the one man who could ruin everything. Because loving Calian Winslow might save her life or cost her everything she has left.
View MoreSolyn Fairchild locked the door of her studio with fingers that ached from hours of gripping charcoal and brushes. The clock above the exit blinked past midnight, its soft ticking suddenly loud in the empty corridor. She tucked her coat tighter around herself and glanced at her phone, Four percent battery. No signal and the last metro would leave in less than five minutes.
The night swallowed her footsteps as she cut through the alley behind the art block, the city unusually quiet for a weekday. Her bag thudded against her hip with every stride. She hated working late, hated the way the city changed after midnight, how even familiar streets felt sharpened and watchful. When she reached the metro entrance, her lungs burned and her pulse hammered, but the turnstile lights were still on. She slipped through just as the warning chime echoed down the platform.
The platform was nearly empty. Solyn slowed, forcing herself to breathe evenly as she walked closer to the edge. The train lights appeared in the tunnel, distant and trembling. She rubbed her arms, suddenly aware of the chill creeping through her coat. That was when the sensation hit her, subtle but unmistakable. She was being watched.
Her head snapped up. She scanned the platform. Every pillar, every bench and every flickering screen announcing delays that no longer mattered. No one stood close enough to explain the prickle running up her spine. She exhaled sharply and shook her head. Lack of sleep. Too much coffee. Too many nights alone with her thoughts.
The metro slid into the station with a metallic scream. The doors opened wide. Solyn stepped inside and froze. The carriage was empty.
There were no commuters. No tired workers dozing up in seats. Just rows of plastic benches and the low hum of the engine. Her instinct told her to step back out, but the doors slid shut behind her before she could decide. The train lurched forward, pulling her into motion.
She chose a seat near the door and kept her bag clutched in her lap, eyes trained on the dark window. Her reflection stared back, pale and drawn, eyes too alert. The train rattled on, each stop announced in a flat automated voice, yet no one boarded.
At the next station, the doors opened again. An old man stepped inside. He moved slowly, leaning on a cane, his coat buttoned up to his throat. His hair was thin and grey, his eyes sharp and bright. He did not look at Solyn as he entered. Instead, he shuffled to the seat beside her and sat down heavily.
Too close, Solyn shifted toward the window, her pulse quickening. The doors closed and the train moved.
The old man turned his head then and smiled. It was not warm. It was knowing. Before she could move, his hand slid onto her thigh. Her breath caught violently.
“Don’t,” she said, her voice barely steady.
His fingers pressed harder, grip tightening. “Lucky night,” he muttered.
Fear snapped into something sharp and electric. Solyn’s hand plunged into her bag, fingers closing around the pepper spray she carried out of habit more than hoped. She twisted, raised it, and sprayed blindly.
The man screamed. He recoiled, clutching his face, howling as the train jolted. Solyn was on her feet instantly, heart slamming as she bolted toward the door. The train slowed. She stumbled as it rocked, nearly losing her balance.
A hand caught her arm. She gasped and turned, panic surging. The figure behind her wore a dark hoodie, face hidden beneath the shadow of the hood. His grip was strong, practiced.
She opened her mouth to scream.
“Careful,” he said lightly. “It’s my lucky day today.”
The old man laughed through his pain, a broken, wheezing sound. “Told you,” he spat.
Solyn’s blood ran cold. The train screeched as it pulled into the next station. The doors slammed open and chaos erupted. Shouts. Heavy boots. Flashing lights.
Police flooded the carriage. The hooded man released her instantly and melted backward, slipping past bodies in a blur of movement. By the time Solyn turned, he was gone. The old man was dragged to the floor, shouting obscenities as officers cuffed him.
Solyn stood shaking, breath coming too fast, too shallow.
Someone wrapped a blanket around her shoulders. Another officer asked her name, her age, whether she was hurt. She answered automatically, eyes fixed on the door where the hooded man had vanished.
Minutes later, a familiar voice cut through the noise.
“Solyn.”
Her knees nearly buckled as Nelson Fairchild pushed through the crowd.
Her father looked nothing like the composed judge the state admired. His tie was loose, his hair disheveled, his face stripped bare with fear. He pulled her into his arms with crushing force, one hand cradling the back of her head as if afraid she might disappear if he let go.
“You’re safe,” he said hoarsely. “You’re safe.”
She clung to him, the weight of the night crashing down all at once. “How did you find me?”
Nelson pulled back just enough to look at her, his hands still firm on her shoulders. “Your phone went off. You didn’t answer. I made a call.”
Just one.
“The entire department was alerted,” he continued grimly. “Every station. Every route. I was not taking chances.”
She stared at him, stunned. He said it plainly, without pride, without apology. This was simply what he did when the world threatened his daughter.
The officers finished their statements quickly. The old man was taken away. The hooded accomplice remained unidentified.
That bothered Solyn more than anything.
Nelson did not ask if she wanted to go home. He guided her out of the station, his arm firm around her back, and drove her straight to his house. Only once the doors were locked and the lights were on did the tightness in her chest ease slightly.
She sat at the kitchen table, wrapped in a mug she never drank from, while her father paced.
“You are not staying alone again,” Nelson said finally.
“Dad,” she started.
“I won’t argue about this.” His voice softened, but his resolve did not. “You will stay somewhere secure.”
“Here,” she said. “With you.”
He shook his head. “No!! Somewhere safer.”
Her stomach tightened. “Where? There is no place safer than being here with you.”
Nelson met her gaze, his expression unreadable. “There is one, with an old friend of mine. Calian Winslow.”
The name landed heavily in the quiet room.
“He has resources I don’t,” Nelson continued. “And experience with situations like this.”
Solyn swallowed. Tonight had already stripped her of choice, of comfort, of certainty. The idea of being sent away again made her chest ache.
“I don’t want to be moved around like evidence,” she said quietly.
Nelson stepped closer, resting his hands on the back of her chair. “I know. But until we know who that second man was, I won’t risk you.”
She looked down at her hands, still faintly trembling. The last train had not taken her home. It had delivered her somewhere else entirely.
Solyn had stopped arguing on every topic. She felt exhausted trying to prove she wasn't week. So, she decided to be calculated. If Calian wanted obedience, she would give him obedience so flawless it unsettled him.She followed every rule. Ate when food was served. Stayed within the boundaries of the mansion. Attended her workshop without complaint. No wandering. No late-night pacing. No questions about investigations.She watched the relief flicker in his eyes the first day that she didn’t push back. That was when she knew control comforted him.She would be the easiest responsibility he had ever managed. But when she sat alone in her room that night, the quiet pressed against her ribs. Eda’s face surfaced first. Then the metro, the hospital stall and lastly, it was Allen’s smile right before the lorry swallowed him.Her stomach tightened and she wanted to puke in disgust. Dots started to connect and none of it felt random anymore. The fear had edges now and every line in that shape
Solyn was in the garden when Nelson called.The air smelled like jasmine and wet soil, the kind of smell that should’ve meant peace. Instead, it made her think of the club. Of headlights. Of a smile that wouldn’t leave her head.Her phone buzzed.She answered. “Hello!”Nelson didn’t greet her. “What is wrong with you, Solyn?”She blinked. “Good morning to you too.”“This isn’t funny,” Nelson snapped. “You’re making things difficult for Calian.”Solyn’s fingers tightened around the phone. “How? How did I made anything difficult for him?”“Don’t act innocent,” Nelson said. “Do you have any idea what kind of pressure he’s under?”Solyn stared at a rosebud, tight and stubborn. “Pressure?”“Yes,” Nelson replied sharply. “You’re acting like a spoiled child.”The words hit like a slap.Solyn’s throat tightened. “I almost got shot.”Nelson paused, only for a second. Then he said, “And Calian saved you.”Solyn let out a short, bitter laugh. “So I should behave?”“Yes,” Nelson said immediately.
Calian didn’t wait for morning. He stood near the window of his bedroom, phone in hand, watching the security lights sweep across the garden like slow-moving eyes. The mansion was silent, but his mind wasn’t. It kept replaying the club. The gunshot, Solyn’s scream, Allen’s smile.And the bail record Noah had sent, which was sealed.Calian dialed.Nelson picked up on the second ring. “Calian.”“You need to answer something,” Calian said.Nelson’s tone sharpened immediately. “What is it?”“Did you ever introduce Solyn to any of your former enemies?” Nelson scoffed. “What kind of question is that?”“Answer it.”“No,” Nelson snapped. “Of course not.”Calian’s eyes narrowed. “Think harder.”“I don’t need to,” Nelson shot back. “I would never put my daughter near anyone dangerous.”Calian’s voice turned colder. “She was attacked twice.”Nelson went quiet for a moment. Then his voice dropped. “Did you find him?”“Yes.”Nelson’s breath caught. “Who?”“Allen Cook.”The silence on the line thi
Calian psuhed Solyn gently and picked his phone out from the packet. He looked at the screen and his entire posture changed.“What? Is everything okay?” Solyn asked instantly.Calian didn’t answer her but loooked at her briefly. Then he answered the call.“Yes, Noah? What's the matter?” he asked. There were murmers coming through the phone.Solyn watched his face as he listened carefully. Calian's jaw tightened slowly, his eyes narrowing with each sentence."We need to find out that name... I want to you to work on it." Calian instructed the man. When the call ended, he remained still for a moment, staring at the phone as if it had become something heavier than metal.Solyn’s stomach twisted. “What is it?”Calian looked up at her. “Allen Cook wasn’t free by accident,” he said.Solyn’s blood ran cold. “What do you mean? He wasn't any random killer?”Calian walked to the table, pulling out a chair and sitting down as if he needed the stability. He motioned for her to sit too.Solyn hesi






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