LOGINThe ringtone blared through the apartment like a tiny alarm, vibrating against the glass coffee table until Rhea swooped it up with a manicured hand and a smirk.
I was still in bed when I heard Rhea screaming from the kitchen. "Hey, girl!" she sang, her voice coated in that honey-sweet charm she used when talking to her wild friend circle. I watched her from the kitchen counter, spooning cereal into my mouth as if she wasn't far from where i was laying and as if it would protect me from the inevitable chaos that came whenever Rhea got a phone call that started with that tone. "Tonight?" she gasped dramatically, already pacing. "Ugh, it has been forever!" I felt a chill run down my spine. She hung up with a squeal, tossed her phone on the couch, and turned to me like a woman with a mission. "We’re going out tonight." I blinked slowly. "Out where?" She rolled her eyes. "Out as in out, Arabella. Music. Lights. Drinks. Hot guys. Maybe a little sin if the universe is kind." I scoffed. "You know that’s not really my thing." "Exactly! That’s why it has to be your thing tonight." She strolled to me, grabbing my cereal bowl and dumping the rest in the sink like a villain. "No excuses. You’ve been here three months, Arabella. Three months of self-pity, hiding, weird dreams, and late-night sketching. It’s time you have a life again." "I do have a life," I muttered. "A hot, tragic Victorian novel is not a life, babe." She grabbed my hand and dragged me toward her closet space like some kind of glittery tornado. "Rhea, seriously, I have nothing to wear to a club." She gasped. "Say that again. I dare you." "I said I—" "—Nothing to wear? Oh, sweet cursed baby girl. Don’t you know you live with me now?" She flung open her closet, and a rainbow of different colored outfits stared back at me—silks, satins, sequins, crop tops, boots that could kill a man. She dived in, emerging like a treasure hunter with three dresses in hand. "Option one: slutty-chic. Option two: velvet seductress. Option three: slutty-chic but with rhinestones." “I feel like I’m walking into Barbie’s private vault,” I said, fingers trailing along the shimmer of a gold dress so tiny it looked like it might vanish if I blinked too hard. Rhea popped her head out from behind a row of boots. “Thank you. I take that as the highest compliment.” She shoved a bundle of fabric into my arms. I stared at her. "I hate you." "You love me. Now strip." “What?” I stared at the black satin sliver in my hands. “This isn’t even a dress. It’s a threat.” “Exactly. You’re going to thank me when someone offers to buy you a penthouse suite just for looking like heartbreak in heels.” I raised a brow. “You mean a breakdown in boots.” “Arabella.” Her voice dropped an octave in mock seriousness. “For once in your life, can you just let your tits be free and your standards be low?” I laughed. I didn’t want to, but I did. The kind of laugh that made your stomach ache and your guard slip, She was ridiculous. And she was right. “I haven’t worn anything like this!" She didn’t push. She just smiled and shoved me toward the mirror. “Then it’s time.” I turned my back and peeled off my hoodie, feeling the air kiss my skin. There was something reverent about trying on another girl’s dress. Like stepping into her power, her confidence, her don’t-give-a-damn fire. Behind me, Rhea let out a low whistle. “Damn, babes—your boobs are getting fuller. You’re so lucky,” she said, eyes wide with mock jealousy. “I swear, if I wasn’t deeply committed to dick, I’d be all over you.” I laughed, heat blooming on my cheeks. “Oh my god, Rhea.” “No, seriously,” she grinned, flopping dramatically onto the bed and propping herself up on her elbows. “You’d make a fine lesbian partner. I mean, look at you. That soft skin, that waist, those tits. Tell me what guy’s gonna stare at you in this and not get aroused. If I had a dick, it would be standing at attention right now, no lie.” I tried to suppress my smile, but it spread anyway. “You’re ridiculous.” “Am I?” she shot back, deadpan. “You’re a walking wet dream, Arabella. You just don’t know it yet.” The first dress was black satin with a deep V that made my collarbones look like something out of a painting. I turned in the mirror, frowning. “I look like I’m trying too hard.” “You look like someone who eats diamonds for breakfast and steals husbands for fun.” I snorted. “That is... oddly specific.” “Okay, fine. Too serious. Try this one.” She threw a crimson dress. Sliding into the red dress felt like melting into something I didn’t recognize. The fabric clung to my hips like a promise. My legs looked longer. Rhea leaned against the wall with a slow grin. “Arabella Vale, if you don’t kiss someone tonight, I’m throwing you back into this closet and locking you in with the corsets.” I smoothed my hands down my thighs, nervous and electric. “What if I don’t feel anything? What if it’s just... empty?” “Then we’ll fill the night with glitter and kisses with one night stands that don’t matter. And if it still hurts to feel love, we’ll drown it in tequila and Taylor Swift. But you won’t know until you try.” She had a point. I tried on three more dresses. A silver fringe number that made me look like a disco ball. Pass. A leather bodycon that made me look like I was about to rob a billionaire. Tempting, but no. And then there was the dress. Tiny. Sheer in places. Midnight blue like the sky before a storm. It hugged my body like it was made for my skin. I stepped out. Rhea’s mouth dropped open. “Oh. My. Fuck.” “What?” “That dress. That dress is illegal. You just gave me a bi panic. You look like sin.” “Okay,” I whispered. Rhea blinked. “Okay?! Girl, this is not an okay dress. This is a ‘I’m going to ruin your life and smile while I do it’ dress.” I laughed again. Real, full, and reckless. “Then I guess I’ll wear this one.” She clapped. “Hell yes! My little depressive wallflower is finally blooming. Now sit. Makeup time.” I groaned. “Do I have a choice?” “Nope.” I sat cross-legged on her bed while she worked her magic. Lip gloss. Highlighter. Mascara, so lethal it should come with a warning. “Why do I feel like a makeover mannequin?” “Because you are one.” “Do I get my rom-com ending?” “That depends. Are you finally going to flirt with someone? Let yourself feel something?” I want you wild tonight. No filters. No regrets.” I met her eyes in the mirror. “Maybe.” ---The hours leading up to six passed far too quickly. Arabella hadn’t expected that. She thought the time would drag—stretch into something slow and almost unbearable, filled with second-guessing and overthinking. But, instead, it slipped through her fingers, one moment blending into the next until suddenly, she was standing in front of her mirror again. Dressed. Ready. Or at least… she was supposed to be. Her fingers hovered at her sides as she stared at her reflection, her gaze traveling slowly over the pale blue fabric that hugged her body in a way that felt unfamiliar. Different. The dress fell perfectly, the soft shimmer catching the light every time she shifted even slightly. The neckline dipped just enough to make her aware of it—aware of herself in a way she wasn’t used to. She looked… intentional. And that alone made her pulse quicken. Behind her, Rhea let out a low whistle. “Okay,” she said, stepping closer with narrowed eyes as she studied her refle
POV: Arabella --- THE FOLLOWING MORNING; --- “Oh my God!” The words burst out of Arabella before she could stop them. She sat upright on her bed so suddenly the blanket slid halfway to the floor, her eyes wide as the realization slammed into her like a delayed lightning strike. “I totally forgot.” Her hand flew toward the phone lying beside her pillow. She grabbed it quickly and unlocked the screen, her heart beating a little faster now as she scrolled through her messages. There it was. Julian. The message stared back at her from the screen, timestamped from the evening before. Arabella pressed her lips together as she opened the chat. "Are you still open to going on a date with me tomorrow?" For a second, she simply stared at it. Then she groaned softly and dropped back against the headboard. “Great, Arabella,” she muttered under her breath. Julian had sent that yesterday. And she had completely forgotten to reply. Not ignored. Not intentional
POV: Arabella --- The next day; --- Sunlight had already climbed higher in the sky, spilling across the floor of her room in wide golden strips that crept slowly toward the edge of her bed. Her brow furrowed slightly as the word drifted through her thoughts again, stubborn and unanswered. Arabella rolled onto her side and reached for her phone on the bedside table. “If the internet doesn’t know,” she murmured groggily, unlocking the screen,She pushed herself up against the headboard and opened her browser first out of habit, staring briefly at the empty search bar before shaking her head.“No… not that again.”Instead, she tapped another app.Google Maps.The screen brightened with the familiar map of the city, little streets and districts spreading outward in neat grids around the blinking blue dot that marked her location.Arabella shifted slightly, tucking one leg beneath her as she zoomed out a little and typed into the search bar at the top.Libraries near meThe map a
pov: ARABELLA ---Ah—! The sound tore out of her throat as Arabella jolted upright, breath ripping sharply into her lungs. For a moment, there was nothing but darkness. Not the darkness of a quiet room or a dim hallway, but a suffocating, endless void that still clung to the edges of her mind like cold mist refusing to lift. Her heart pounded violently, each beat loud enough to echo inside her skull. A dream. It had not faded yet. It had begun quietly. Too quietly. At first, there had only been silence. Not the peaceful kind that accompanies sleep, but a deep, ancient stillness — the kind that felt untouched by time itself. Arabella had found herself standing somewhere vast and unfamiliar, though her feet had not made a sound when she moved. Beneath her a stretched cold stone. "Black stone." Polished by centuries, smooth as if something powerful had once walked those halls long ago… and then stopped. The air itself felt heavy. Thick. Like the atmosphere
POV : THE ELDERS COURT ---- Murmurs followed after the departure of the high Eldreth in the elder council Sound returned in controlled threads, low exchanges carried through tight jaws, and measured breath. Confusion did not look like panic among the Eldereth. It looked like calculation Then, the Elders began to speak. Nyra rose first. She did not wait for formal dismissal. “The Vault speaks of betrayal,” she said, voice slicing cleanly through the murmurs. “And we plan to disperse?” “We were given surveillance,” Nyra corrected. “Not resolution.” Across the chamber, Cassian Virell remained seated, long legs crossed, expression thoughtful rather than agitated. “Resolution without clarity breeds spectacle,” he said smoothly. “And spectacle weakens authority.” Nyra’s eyes sharpened. “Authority weakens when betrayal goes unanswered.” Druvien Mal’Serak leaned back in his seat, one arm draped casually along the edge, though his gaze was alert. “How invigorating,”
POV : THE ELDERS COURT >>>>> The Elders were called. Not by word. The summons came as a shiver, running through every bloodline that mattered. A vibration beneath the chest that made the heart stumble, the spine stiffen, the mind tighten around a single, unyielding instruction: attend:everyone must be present. No exceptions. Even Druvien Mal’Serak, who rarely obeyed orders and Kaelith Malrath’Thorne, who had avoided the Court for reasons best known to him, The two brothers was present. Every other Elder arrived, some by shadow, some by speed telephaty, all by compulsion. Seraphine. Cassian Virell. Elder Valerian. Elder Nyra. Elder Marcellus. Elder Maelis. And others whose names carried weight by mere mention. No one knew why this meeting was called. Not fully. And yet every Elder felt the same premonition: something had shifted. Something old, something dormant, and something dangerously precise. when every Elder was required at once— Something was awakening.
POV: ARABELLA >>>>>>> It’s finally workdays again, after leaving the weekend behind and the PDFs of my supposed Birthmark- meaning cluttering my inbox like they were conspiring against me. My head aches from trying to make sense of it all, but here I am, shoulders tense, coffee in hand, pretend
The apartment smelled faintly of lavender when I finally pushed the door open. The late afternoon light slanted across the living room, casting long shadows that stretched toward the kitchen, where the kettle was already whistling. “Hello?” I called, dropping my bag onto the small bench by the do
The office had fully reclaimed its silence. Lucien sat, finally, in the leather chair behind his desk. The bourbon glass sat untouched beside him now, the last amber drop catching a glimpse sliver of light. He ignored it. He ignored everything that still smelled faintly of Duvesa. The moment sh
Dear Reader, Thank you for your time in reading this letter and for taking a moment to step into the world of Love Me Like a Curse, a story I have poured my heart into. I know your time is precious, and the fact that you’ve chosen to spend it reading this book—even for just a few chapters—is somet







